The Google Analytics interface provides many ways of analyzing your goal conversions, including goal set tabs, funnel visualizations, and goal flow reports. The Analytics 360 Suite also provides custom funnels that allow you to create retroactive funnels based on advanced criteria. However, the BigQuery integration with Google Analytics allows users to deal with even more specialized use cases. Below are a few:

Apply Goals Retroactively

Goals are defined in the Google Analytics Admin section and any changes only apply moving forward. However, the goal conversions are not carried over as a field in BigQuery. Instead, all goals must be defined by the analyst in a query or user defined function when the analyst creates a report. This gives the analyst flexibility to apply new goals to historical data based on the current needs of the organization.

Fix Broken Historical Conversion Rates

Since goal definitions are applied retroactively, broken goals and conversion rates in historical data can be fixed in BigQuery reports.

Create More Complicated Conversion Rules

Goals in Google Analytics can be created based on the URL of a webpage; an event category, action, label, or value; the amount of time a user spends on the site; or the number of pages the user views during a session. While these rules cover the majority of use cases, occasionally more complicated rules are needed. Below are a few examples:

Partial form completion – User fills out fills out the first page of a form but does not complete it

– User fills out fills out the first page of a form but does not complete it Condition on earlier steps – User completes a conversion immediately after interacting with a promotion

– User completes a conversion immediately after interacting with a promotion Condition on custom dimension – Goal was completed by a certain type of user

Measure User-Level Goal Conversion Rates

Google Analytics computes goals at the session level. If a user converts twice within the same session, this will only be counted as 1 goal completion. However, if a user converts in two different sessions, this will count as 2 goal completions.

This logic works well for many types of goals, such as Ecommerce or donation related goals. For other types of goals however, it makes more sense to de-duplicate conversions by user rather than by session. For example, application submissions or subscribing to a service or email list are more accurately measured by converted users rather than converted sessions.

View Goal Funnels for Lengthy Conversion Cycles

By default, goal funnels in Google Analytics are based on a single session. Within the Google Analytics interface, custom funnels (for Analytics 360 users only) offer a powerful way to get around this, although they can only include up to 5 steps. Free users of Google Analytics can use user-level segments. However, these can only cover up to 93 days at a time. Funnels in BigQuery can go back as far as you have data and can contain as many steps as you need.

Understand Which Channels Move Users Through the Funnel

In addition to viewing the drop-off rate at each step of the funnel, BigQuery contains details about what the user did in between each funnel step. For example, how many people moved between funnel steps within the same session versus additional sessions? If the user required an additional session, which marketing channel brought them back during that session?

Analyze Time Spent on Each Form Field

BigQuery can also help you analyze the amount of time spent on each step of the funnel. This is often of particular importance to companies who want to analyze how long it takes users to complete each section of a form.

View Goal Funnels Across Devices

The user ID view in Google Analytics ties together sessions across devices for logged-in users. However, this view excludes all users who did not log in, which may be a substantial percentage of your traffic. In addition, the user ID view does not retroactively apply the user ID to prior sessions on that device.

Once a user logs in to a device, BigQuery can tie together all sessions from that device and combine that data with sessions for users that did not log in. This allows for more advanced analysis for companies with long and complex buying cycles.

Bring in Offline Conversion Data

Offline conversion data can be streamed in real-time to Google Analytics through the measurement protocol. However, this requires developer hours to integrate your backend systems with Google Analytics. Through BigQuery, you can directly easily upload a CSV of offline conversion data, user information, or data around other marketing efforts.

Export User-Level Conversion and Traffic Information

Through the BigQuery API, you can export detailed, user-level activity and conversion information to other reporting and statistical analysis tools. Many tools such as Tableau, Data Studio, Power BI, Google Sheets, Excel, R, and Python connect with BigQuery and allow for advanced data analysis and visualization.

With the raw data from Google Analytics inside of Google BigQuery, you can extend the capabilities of Google Analytics reporting and analyze your conversions in many different ways, opening up insights that are driven from the underlying Google Analytics data but unavailable within the Google Analytics interface.