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Cross-Domain Tracking - Google Analytics - Google Code. Excellent Analytics - Free Google Analytics Excel Plug-In. About Excellent Analytics “I’ve been using GA for quite some time and fetching data from GA was the most boring part of the job. But with Excellent Analytics, things became interesting again. [..] Thanks for bringing out such a great tool. Great work!” - user comment Excellent Analytics is an Excel addin that lets you import web analytics data from Google Analytics into a spreadsheet. Excellent Analytics exists in two versions: open source (the one you can read about on this page) and Pro (which is sold by Next Analytics and is based on a completely different codebase.)

The Pro (paid) version from Next Analytics is updated more frequently, and there are no guarantees provided for the open source version. Excellent Analytics has been around since 2009. Download Excellent Analytics To download the open source version, click here. Why is this page hosted on Outfox.com? The open source version of Excellent Analytics came to be because of the same guys who founded Outfox, that’s why. Support? 1.) Custom Variables - Google Analytics - Google Code. Insightr InSite: Comparing Free Analytics (Visual) How much do you pay for web analytics? I was just cruising through the just published WebTrends 9 update and thinking about how the web analytics vendor market is evolving. “9″ looks neat and I’m sure glad to see some really important metrics like bounce rate appear in the UI. Still, I always scratch my head when I see vendors make statements like “[the] data visualization tool in Webtrends Analytics 9 lets anyone – even analytics novices – quickly and easily understand changes in key metrics” and then put up a feature list like this one.

Still, it’s nice to see WebTrends making some moves so congratulations to Jascha, Casey and the entire Portland crew for getting the update out the door! Anyway … I said I had been thinking about the evolution of the web analytics vendor market. A lot of my thinking this past week has been colored, well, purple, thanks to the announcement of Yahoo’s Web Analytics Consulting Network (the YWACN or, as I think about it “the Yack’n!”.) I mean, if you think about it, Yahoo! Sweet, thanks Yahoo! Woopra - Website Tracking and Analytics. Compete. Google Answers Bounce Rate Questions. Some questions about how bounce rate relates to SEO came up over at Webforumz.com, where our own Mike McDonald was kind enough to step in and try to get some answers about. Mike asked some questions to a couple of Googlers, and the following responses are the result of that.

This should shed a little light on how Google takes bounce rate into account. First Mike got a response from Google Search Evangelist Adam Lasnik: If you’re talking about bounce rates in the context of Google Analytics, I’m afraid you probably know as much as I do. If you’re talking about bounce rates in the context of Google web search and webmaster-y issues, then we really don’t have specific guidance on bounces per se; rather, the key for webmasters is to make users happy so they find your site useful, bookmark your site, return to your site, recommend your site, link to your site, etc. Mike McDonald: What is the duration for a single page visit until it is no longer considered a bounce when a visitor leaves?

Crazy Egg – Overview.