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Chris Bongers
Chris Bongers

Posted on • Originally published at daily-dev-tips.com

Do we really need analytics?

Like many people, I started using Google Analytics because why not? It's a great way of tracking how many visitors the website got.

At one point, a whole debate around privacy and Google Analytics is even illegal.

I didn't even think about it and started looking for alternatives immediately.

Eventually, I decided to go with Fathom, as you can read in this article.

Don't get me wrong. I love Fathom or even Plausible.
But hear me out on this.

Why do you need analytics?

I was talking to a good friend and discussing some blog costs.

At that point, I was paying 140$ a year for Fathom, which started to sound like quite a lot.

He then threw the ball back and asked me what I used the analytics for?
(He comes from an SEO background)

I mentioned I use it to measure the website's growth, but that's about it.

All I do is open up the analytics from time to time (ok, quite often) and look at how many people visit and interact with the site.

You'll quickly realize it's simply a vanity metric. I don't act on it.
It's not like I'll do anything differently if the numbers change or if an article does way better.

So, do we really need analytics?

Alternative ways

My website drives 87% of the traffic through Google, taking that into account. I can get a good overview of visitors via my Google Search Console.

Considering it's not super stable, it's another vanity metric that doesn't change how I run the website.
However, I like to keep track of the articles that do well, which is an excellent source.

Second, I'm also using Carbon ads on my website to re-coop some of the costs of running this website.

The cool thing about them is that they also track impressions on the ads.
So knowing the ads are shown on every article page, I can get a good glimpse of the total number of visitors.

The last metric might be the best one.
Newsletter subscribers!

If I start losing or no longer gaining newsletter subscribers, it mostly means people no longer like my content, or there might be a bug.

These people want to interact with my content, so a much more valuable metric to be aware of.

What made me think about this

I got an email from Fathom the other day that I'm almost exceeding their first-tier (the 140$ a year one).

That meant I'd have to pay 240$ a year to know that there are x amount of visitors on my website.

That was where I thought, ok, let's quit the analytics and not chase vanity metrics!

So, for now, I'll run down my yearly subscription, but then I'll remove the analytics and cut down yet another JavaScript I didn't need in the first place.

When do you need analytics?

I'm sure many of you are going to rampage reasons one should have analytics, and yes, there will be some valid ones.

The ones I could think of where analytics are a must:

  • AB Testing features
  • You analyze flows within the website
  • You optimize well-performing articles
  • You track referrals

Again, these depend on your website, and in many cases, there are other ways of tracking these metrics.

I'm looking forward to all the comments showing why I need my analytics again πŸ˜….

Conclusion

Quite a different article and I'm hoping to spark a conversation with everyone.

Do we really need analytics?

Thank you for reading, and let's connect!

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Top comments (6)

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waylonwalker profile image
Waylon Walker

I dropped all analytics over a year ago, mostly for users privacy. Whether I believe in GA or not I know others that prefer to be hidden and I respect that. For everyone else that uses Google as their search it give me practically the same top pages.

I turned on Cloudflare Pages Analytics for a few months this year just to feel it out, It seems more accurate. WAAAAY higher traffic because its getting all the crawlers, page refreshes, assets and everything, but filtering down to uniqes did not seem to yield me much different than Google Search Console. I don't think I was too far off of that 87% you mention here.

If I were a company trying to pay employees and get some sort of ads and sponsors on my pages I don't think this would be good enough, but for my weekend warrior hobby, Google search console is enough for me.

note I also use ahrefs, but I think they just pull data from the google search console.

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

Yeah ahrefs is mostly linked.
Oh trust me even with sponsors it would be enough.

you would still be able to measure clicks for instance if needed.
I think rough estimates via search console or carbon for instance are still accurate.

And like you said cloudflare web analytics is even a better alternative to get close to your real numbers. (also using this for some time now to see how it behaves, actually mostly to measure LCP)

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dimitrisbor profile image
DimitrisBor

You can also make your own analytics. It’s not very hard to write your own events keeping your code to a minimum to what you really need. Or you can use an open source alternative to GA. There are many out there.

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

I'm aware, my main argument would be what do you even need it for?
If the answer is vanity metrics you probably can do without πŸ’–

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lexlohr profile image
Alex Lohr

I find that in too many cases, telemetry and analytics data is collected, but rarely used to support in the decision-making process.

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dailydevtips1 profile image
Chris Bongers

Exactly, most people really don't act on it.
Yet we all thrive to see the vanity metrics.

I actually feel so much better now that I removed it.
Less stressful