TRUNING DATA INTO DECISIONS WITH MARKETING ANALYTICS.
Your marketing is generating data every single day. The question is whether you’re using it, or just collecting it. Find out the importance of utilising your marketing analytics to drive business decisions.

What are marketing analytics?
Marketing analytics is the process of collecting, measuring and interpreting data from your marketing activity to understand what’s working, what isn’t, and what to do next.
Every time someone visits your website, clicks an ad, opens an email or finds you on Google – that’s data. Analytics tools capture that data and turn it into information you can act on.
The problem most businesses have isn’t a lack of data. It’s too much data, presented in a way that’s hard to make sense of, with no clear connection back to actual business decisions.
Good analytics cuts through that. It tells you what matters, what it means, and what to do about it.
Why analytics matters more than most businesses realise
Making marketing decisions without data is expensive. You end up spending money on channels that aren’t working, ignoring channels that are and having no way to prove whether any of it is making a difference.
With proper analytics in place, everything changes:
You stop guessing. You know which channels are driving traffic, which are driving enquiries, and which are driving revenue. That knowledge alone changes how you allocate your budget.
You spot problems early. A sudden drop in organic traffic, a spike in bounce rate, a paid campaign that’s stopped converting – analytics catches these things before they become expensive.
You find opportunities. Analytics often reveals things businesses didn’t know. Keywords they’re ranking for without trying, audiences that convert better than expected, content that’s driving more traffic than anything else.
You can prove ROI. When someone asks whether the marketing is working, you have an answer backed by data rather than a feeling.
The main analytics tools and what they tell you
There are several analytics tools that most businesses should have in place. Each one tells you something different, and together they give you a complete picture.
Google Analytics 4 (GA4)
GA4 is the most important analytics tool for most businesses. It tracks everything that happens on your website – who visits, where they came from, what they do when they get there and whether they complete the actions you want them to complete.
Key things GA4 tells you:
- How many people visit your website and when
- Where your traffic comes from (organic search, paid ads, social media, direct, referral)
- Which pages people visit and in what order
- How long people spend on your site and which pages they leave from
- Whether people are completing your goals (contact form submissions, phone clicks, purchases)
- Which devices people are using (desktop, mobile, tablet)
- Basic demographic and geographic information about your audience
GA4 replaced the older Universal Analytics in 2023 and has a steeper learning curve. Many businesses have it installed but aren’t using it properly or are misreading the data it produces.
Google Search Console
Search Console is specifically about how your website performs in Google search. While GA4 tells you what happens when people arrive at your site, Search Console tells you how they found you in the first place.
Key things Search Console tells you:
- Which search terms people are using to find your website
- How often your site appears in search results (impressions)
- How often people click through to your site from those results (clicks)
- Your average position in search results for different keywords
- Which pages are getting the most search visibility
- Technical issues that might be affecting your search performance
- Which other websites are linking to yours
Search Console is one of the most underused free tools available. Most businesses either don’t have it set up or never log in to look at it, and they’re missing genuinely valuable insight as a result.
Microsoft Clarity
Clarity is a free behaviour analytics tool that shows you how people actually interact with your website, not just whether they visited, but what they did when they got there.
Key things Clarity tells you:
- Heatmaps (where people click, tap, and scroll on each page)
- Session recordings (actual recordings of real user sessions so you can watch how people navigate your site)
- Rage clicks (where people are clicking repeatedly in frustration, usually indicating something isn’t working as expected)
- Dead clicks (where people are clicking on things that aren’t links)
- Scroll depth (how far down pages people actually read)
Clarity is particularly useful for understanding why a page isn’t converting. If people are leaving a contact page without submitting, watching session recordings often reveals exactly why.
Meta Business Suite Analytics
If you’re running Facebook or Instagram activity, organic or paid, Meta’s own analytics tell you how your content and ads are performing across both platforms.
Key things Meta analytics tell you:
- Reach and impressions for your organic posts
- Engagement rates (likes, comments, shares, saves)
- Follower growth and demographics
- Ad performance (clicks, conversions, cost per result)
- Audience insights (who your followers and ad audiences actually are)
Google Ads
If you’re running Google Ads, the platform has its own detailed reporting on campaign, ad group, keyword, and ad performance. Crucially this needs to be connected to GA4 so you can see what happens after someone clicks your ad – not just whether they clicked.
Email Platform Analytics
Most email marketing platforms (Mailchimp, Klaviyo and others) provide detailed analytics on campaign performance including open rates, click rates, unsubscribe rates, and revenue attribution for ecommerce businesses.
Not sure if your marketing analytics are set up correctly?
Most businesses aren’t, and it means they’re making marketing decisions on incomplete or inaccurate data. A Marketing Audit includes a full review of your analytics setup and tells you exactly what needs fixing.
