This post describes a method for reporting on scroll tracking in the Universal Analytics (UA) version of Google Analytics. Setting up scroll tracking as an event in GA gives you the ability to see how far people scroll down pages. This data is very useful for identifying content that isn’t performing well, and specifically where you are losing visitors. Until I figured out the report described below, I spent a lot of time exporting and combining data to get to a similar view. This report gives me everything I need, beautifully lined up in columns and rows!
I also recommend setting up an event to track zero-percent scrolls. This event is equivalent to a page view, but it will make your scroll tracking report more useful. To do this, in Tag Manager:
Add a new Google Analytics tag.
Set Track Type to Event.
For Category, use the same event category as your other scroll tracking events, the category is just ‘Scroll’ if you followed Benjamin’s post.
If you are just getting scroll tracking set up, you’ll probably want to wait a week or two to accumulate data.
Once you have some data, you are ready to analyze scroll depth! Benjamin Mangold also has a great webinar on this, but I’m going to show you a cool report he doesn’t cover:
In Google Analytics, go to Behavior > Events > Pages.
Set the report type to Pivot
Set Pivot by to Event Action
Set Pivot metrics to Unique Events
Add an Advanced Filter to include only Event Actions that contain a percent symbol
Voilá! If it all worked, your report should look something like this:
Nico loves marketing analytics, running, and analytics about running. He's Two Octobers' Head of Analytics, and loves teaching. Learn more about Nico or read more blogs he has written.