SEOSEO News

How to compare hourly sessions in Google Analytics 4 to track the impact from major Google algorithm updates


Hourly tracking in Google Analytics 4

I was just asked on Twitter if there was an easy way to compare Google organic traffic hourly like you can in Universal Analytics. That’s a great question, and that’s a super useful report to have as major algorithm updates roll out. You can typically start to see the separation over time as the update rolls out (if your site was heavily impacted by a major update like broad core updates, Product Review Updates, etc.)

So I fired up GA4 and created a quick exploration report for analyzing hourly traffic. Here is a short tutorial for creating the report:

1. Fire up GA4 and click the “Explore” tab in the left-side menu.

Explore tab in Google Analytics 4

2. Click the “Free Form” reporting option.

Free form exploration reporting in Google Analytics 4

3. Click the plus sign next to “Segments” to add a new session segment. Then create a segment for Google Organic by adding a new condition, selecting “Session source/medium” and then adding a filter for “google/organic”.

Creating a segment for Google Organic in Google Analytics 4
Selecting session source and medium and then filtering by Google Organic when creating a new segment in GA4

4. Add that segment to your reporting by dragging it to the “Segment Comparisons” section of the report.

Adding a segment to the reporting in Google Analytics 4

5. Set “Granularity” to Hour.

Selecting Hour as the granularity for the reporting in Google Analytics 4

6. Add a metric and select “Sessions”. And then drag “Sessions” to “Values”.

Adding sessions as a metric in Google Analytics 4

7. Change the visualization to line chart by clicking the line chart icon.

Changing the visualization of the reporting to line graph in Google Analytics 4

8. For timeframe, select “Compare” and choose a day. Then choose the day to compare against. Note, GA4 isn’t letting me choose today (which is a common way to see how the current day compares to a previous day). So, you’ll have to just compare the previous day to another day. Sorry, I didn’t create GA4.

Comparing timeframes in Google Analytics 4

9. Name your report and enjoy comparing hourly sessions.

I hope you found this helpful, especially since the March 2023 broad core update is currently rolling out. Have fun. 🙂

GG



Source link

Related Articles

Back to top button
error

Enjoy Our Website? Please share :) Thank you!