Analytics Glossary

A comprehensive A–Z glossary of digital marketing and web analytics terms explained in clear, marketer-friendly language.

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Digital marketing today runs on data. From tracking website behaviour to measuring ad performance, understanding analytics is no longer optional. It is the foundation of smart marketing decisions. Yet the world of web analytics is filled with technical jargon, platform-specific terminology, statistical concepts, and constantly evolving privacy standards. For beginners, it can feel overwhelming. Even experienced marketers often struggle to keep up.

That is why we created this comprehensive Digital Marketing & Web Analytics Glossary. It is designed to explain every essential measurement, attribution, reporting, experimentation, and performance term in clear and practical language. Whether you are a student, performance marketer, founder, marketing manager, or business owner, this glossary will help you understand how modern measurement truly works.


How to Use This Analytics Glossary

This glossary is structured to help you navigate from fundamentals to advanced concepts without confusion.

0–9 Terms
Numeric and data-related concepts such as first-party data, attribution windows, and statistical benchmarks that are frequently used in performance marketing.

A–Z Core Terms
The foundational analytics vocabulary every digital marketer should know. These include metrics, reports, attribution models, tracking methods, ecommerce analytics, and statistical concepts.

Advanced & Enterprise-Level Concepts
Deeper topics such as algorithmic attribution, marketing mix modeling, incrementality testing, server-side tracking, and predictive analytics. These are essential for growth-focused and data-driven teams.

You can use this glossary in two ways:

• Look up a specific term whenever you encounter something unfamiliar.
• Browse alphabetically to strengthen your overall analytics knowledge.

Our goal is simple. To make complex analytics understandable, practical, and directly applicable to real-world marketing decisions.

1P Data (First-Party Data)

Data collected directly from your own users through your website, app, CRM, or email list.

Why It Matters: First-party data is the most reliable and privacy-compliant foundation for modern measurement.

2P Data (Second-Party Data)

Another company’s first-party data shared through a trusted partnership.

Example: A brand collaborating with a retailer to analyse shared customer behaviour.

3P Data (Third-Party Data)

Data collected and aggregated by external providers across multiple websites or platforms.

Why It Matters: Its usefulness is declining due to privacy regulations and browser restrictions.

360-Degree Customer View

A unified profile combining data from multiple touchpoints such as website, ads, CRM, and offline interactions.

Related: Data Stitching, Customer Data Platform (CDP)

7-Day Click / 1-Day View Attribution

A common paid media attribution window where conversions are credited within seven days of a click or one day of an ad view.

Related: Attribution Window

80/20 Rule (Pareto Principle in Analytics)

The principle that roughly 80 percent of results often come from 20 percent of inputs.

Example: A small set of campaigns may generate the majority of revenue.

95 Percent Confidence Level

A statistical benchmark indicating that there is only a 5 percent probability results occurred by chance.

Related: Statistical Significance

100 Percent Sampling

Reports generated using the full dataset instead of a sampled subset.

Related: Data Sampling

A/B Testing

A method of comparing two versions of a page, ad, or element to determine which performs better.

Why It Matters: Improves decisions using data instead of guesswork.

Active Users

The number of users who interacted with your website or app during a defined period.

Algorithmic Attribution

An advanced attribution model that uses machine learning to assign conversion credit based on actual contribution rather than predefined rules.

Anomaly Detection

Automatic identification of unusual spikes or drops in data.

Why It Matters: Helps detect tracking errors or campaign performance issues early.

Assisted Conversion

A conversion where a channel contributed earlier in the journey but was not the final touchpoint.

Related: Attribution Model

Attribution Bias

A distortion in reporting caused by limitations in tracking or platform reporting rules.

Attribution Drift

Gradual changes in how conversions are attributed due to platform updates or tracking changes.

Attribution Model

A rule that determines how credit for conversions is assigned across touchpoints.

Attribution Window

The time period during which a conversion is credited to a specific interaction.

Attribution Comparison Report

A report that compares how different attribution models assign conversion credit.

Why It Matters: Helps marketers understand how model choice affects performance reporting.

Audience Activation

The process of deploying audience segments into advertising platforms for campaign targeting.

Audience Trigger

An automated rule that adds users to an audience when they meet specific conditions.

Audience Overlap

The percentage of users who appear in multiple audience segments.

Average Engagement Time

The average amount of time users actively interact with content.

Average Order Value (AOV)

The average revenue generated per transaction.

Formula: Revenue ÷ Number of Orders

Baseline Performance

The starting benchmark used to measure improvements in campaigns.

Bayesian Testing

A statistical approach to experimentation that updates probability as data is collected.

Behavior Flow

A visual representation of the paths users take across your website.

BigQuery Export

Exporting raw GA4 data into a data warehouse for advanced analysis.

Related: Data Warehouse

Blended ROAS

Total revenue divided by total marketing spend across all channels.

Bounce

A session where a user leaves without triggering further interaction.

Bounce Rate

The percentage of sessions that result in a bounce.

Bot Traffic

Visits generated by automated programs rather than real users.

Brand Lift Study

A study measuring how advertising impacts brand awareness, recall, or perception.

Budget Pacing Analysis

Monitoring campaign spend relative to allocated budget over time.

Calculated Metric

A custom metric created using formulas from existing metrics.

Cardinality

The number of unique values within a dimension.

Channel Grouping

The classification of traffic sources into categories such as Organic or Paid.

Churn Rate

The percentage of users who stop engaging over a given period.

Client ID

A unique anonymous identifier assigned to a browser.

Cohort Analysis

Analysing behaviour of grouped users over time.

Confidence Interval

A statistical range indicating where the true result likely falls.

Conversion

A completed desired action such as a purchase or signup.

Conversion Funnel

The series of steps users take toward completing a conversion.

Conversion Lag

The time between first interaction and final conversion.

Conversion Modeling

Using statistical methods to estimate conversions when direct tracking is incomplete.

Conversion Path Report

A report showing the sequence of interactions leading to a conversion.

Conversion Probability Modeling

Using statistical techniques to estimate the likelihood of a user converting.

Conversion Rate

The percentage of users who complete a desired action.

Cost Per Acquisition (CPA)

Total campaign spend divided by the number of conversions acquired.

Cost Per Click (CPC)

The average cost paid for each ad click.

Cost Per Mille (CPM)

The cost per 1,000 ad impressions.

Cross-Domain Tracking

Tracking users across multiple domains as one continuous session.

Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)

Total marketing spend divided by the number of new customers acquired.

Customer Data Platform (CDP)

A system that centralises customer data from multiple sources to create unified profiles.

Customer Journey Mapping

Visualising how users interact across touchpoints before converting.

Data Attribution Logic

The framework used to determine how conversion credit is distributed.

Data Clean Room

A secure environment for analysing aggregated data from multiple sources.

Data Freshness

The time lag between user interaction and data availability in reports.

Data Loss Prevention

Processes designed to prevent loss of tracking data due to technical or privacy limitations.

Data Governance

Policies ensuring data accuracy and compliance.

Data Lake

A storage system holding large volumes of raw data.

Data Layer

A structured JavaScript object used to pass tracking data.

Data Modeling

Organising raw data into structured reporting formats.

Data Retention Period

The length of time analytics platforms store user data.

Data Sampling

Using a subset of total data when generating reports.

Data Stitching

Combining data from multiple sources into a unified view.

Data Thresholding

Limiting data visibility to protect user privacy.

Data Warehouse

A centralised system for storing structured analytics data.

Deep Linking

Directing users to a specific page within a website or app.

Deferred Deep Linking

Routing new app users to specific content after installation.

Deterministic Attribution

Assigning conversion credit using exact user-level tracking data rather than probability.

Dimension

A descriptive attribute of data such as device type or source.

Drop-Off Rate

The percentage of users exiting at a specific stage of the conversion process.

Ecommerce Tracking

Tracking product views, add-to-cart actions, and completed purchases.

Engaged Session

A session that includes meaningful interaction.

Engagement Rate

The percentage of sessions that meet engagement criteria.

Engagement Score

A calculated metric combining multiple engagement indicators into one score.

Engagement Time per Session

The average active engagement time recorded during each session.

Enhanced Measurement

Automatic event tracking features available in GA4.

Event

A tracked user interaction such as a click or form submission.

Event-Based Attribution

Assigning conversion credit based on specific tracked events.

Event Count

The total number of times a specific event is triggered.

Event Deduplication

Preventing duplicate event counts across platforms.

Event Parameter

Additional contextual information sent with an event.

Event Schema

The defined structure used to collect and organise event data.

Event Value

A monetary value assigned to a tracked event.

Exit Rate

The percentage of users who leave from a specific page.

Experimental Design

The structured planning of tests to ensure valid and reliable results.

ETL (Extract, Transform, Load)

The process of moving marketing data from multiple platforms into reporting systems.

Federated Learning

A privacy-focused machine learning method where models are trained using decentralised data instead of centralising user information.

Why It Matters: Supports performance modelling in a privacy-restricted environment.

First Interaction Attribution

An attribution model that assigns full credit to the first touchpoint in a conversion journey.

A tracking approach that relies on cookies set by your own domain rather than third parties.

Why It Matters: Improves measurement stability as third-party cookies decline.

First-Party Data

Data collected directly from your own users through your website, app, or CRM.

Forward Attribution

Assigning credit to future conversions based on current behavioural signals.

Why It Matters: Helps forecast long-term campaign impact.

Frequency Analysis

Measuring how often users are exposed to a specific ad or campaign.

Frequency Cap Analysis

Evaluating optimal ad exposure frequency before diminishing returns occur.

Friction Point Analysis

Identifying obstacles in the conversion funnel that prevent users from completing actions.

Funnel Analysis

Examining how users move through defined steps toward a conversion.

Funnel Visualization Report

A visual report showing user progression and drop-offs within a conversion funnel.

GA4 (Google Analytics 4)

The latest version of Google Analytics built on an event-based data model.

Related: Event, Engaged Session

Geo Lift Testing

A method of measuring campaign impact by comparing performance in exposed geographic regions versus control regions.

Why It Matters: Provides true incremental performance insights.

Goal Completion

A recorded instance of a defined conversion action.

Goal Value

A monetary value assigned to a non-revenue conversion to estimate its business impact.

Google Signals

A feature that enables cross-device reporting using aggregated Google account data.

Granularity

The level of detail available in reporting data.

Gross vs Net Revenue

Gross revenue represents total sales, while net revenue accounts for refunds, discounts, and returns.

Growth Attribution

Identifying which marketing activities contribute most to overall business growth.

Growth Rate

The percentage increase in traffic, conversions, or revenue over time.

Heatmap Tracking

A visual representation showing where users click, scroll, or interact on a page.

Hit

A recorded interaction sent to an analytics platform, such as a page view or event.

Hit-Level Data

Raw interaction-level data captured for each user action.

Holdout Group

A control group excluded from a campaign to measure incremental impact.

Hypothesis Testing

A statistical method used to determine whether experiment results are significant.

Identity Graph

A system that links multiple identifiers to represent a single user profile.

Identity Resolution

Connecting user behaviour across devices and sessions into one unified identity.

Impression Tracking

Recording when an ad or product is displayed to users.

Impression Share

The percentage of total available impressions your ads received.

Incremental Lift

The additional conversions generated directly because of a marketing campaign.

Incrementality Testing

A testing method that measures the true impact of campaigns beyond platform-reported data.

Intent Signal

User behaviour indicating a high likelihood of conversion, such as repeated product views.

Interaction Rate

The percentage of impressions that result in engagement.

Invalid Traffic (IVT)

Traffic generated by bots, fraud, or non-human sources.

IP Anonymization

A privacy feature that masks part of a user’s IP address.

Item Scope (GA4)

Event-level data specific to individual products within ecommerce tracking.

Journey Analysis

Mapping and analysing the complete customer journey across touchpoints before conversion.

Key Event

A high-value action marked as important within analytics platforms, such as purchases or lead submissions.

Related: Conversion

Key Performance Indicator (KPI)

A measurable value used to evaluate marketing performance against objectives.

Example: Conversion Rate or ROAS.

Landing Page Report

A report showing the first page users visit during a session.

Lag Analysis

Analysing delays between user interaction and conversion.

Last-Click Attribution

An attribution model that assigns full credit to the final interaction before conversion.

Last Non-Direct Click Attribution

An attribution model that ignores direct traffic and credits the last non-direct interaction.

Lead Attribution

Assigning credit to marketing touchpoints responsible for generating leads.

Lead Quality Score

A metric used to evaluate the likelihood of a lead converting into revenue.

Lift Analysis

Measuring the incremental improvement in performance caused by a campaign.

Lifetime Value (LTV)

The total predicted revenue generated from a customer over their relationship with a brand.

Lookback Window

The time period during which interactions are eligible for attribution credit.

Looker Studio

A data visualisation platform used to build marketing dashboards from multiple data sources.

Macro Conversion

A primary business goal such as a completed purchase or qualified lead submission.

Machine Learning Model

An algorithm that identifies patterns in data to make predictions or automate decisions.

Marketing Analytics Stack

The collection of tools used for tracking, reporting, and analysing marketing performance.

Marketing Efficiency Ratio (MER)

Total revenue divided by total marketing spend.

Marketing Mix Modeling (MMM)

A statistical method used to evaluate how different marketing channels contribute to overall revenue.

Measurement Protocol

A method of sending offline or CRM data into analytics platforms.

Media Efficiency

Measuring how effectively advertising spend generates results.

Media Mix Attribution

Assigning credit across different media channels based on overall impact.

Metric

A quantitative measurement used to evaluate performance.

Micro Conversion

A smaller action indicating user intent, such as adding to cart or newsletter signup.

Modeled Conversions

Conversions estimated using statistical methods when direct tracking is limited.

Model Comparison Tool (GA4)

A GA4 feature that allows comparison of different attribution models.

Model Validation

Testing whether predictive models produce accurate results.

Multivariate Testing

Testing multiple variables simultaneously to determine the best-performing combination.

Multi-Channel Attribution

Distributing conversion credit across multiple marketing channels.

Multi-Touch Attribution

An attribution model that assigns partial credit to multiple touchpoints.

Net Revenue

Total revenue after deducting refunds, discounts, and returns.

New Users

Visitors interacting with your website or app for the first time.

New vs Returning Users

A comparison metric showing first-time visitors versus repeat visitors.

Noise Filtering

Removing irrelevant or distorted data such as spam or bot traffic.

Normalized Data

Standardised data formatted consistently for accurate comparison across sources.

Offline Conversion Tracking

Tracking conversions that occur outside the website, such as phone or in-store purchases.

Omnichannel Attribution

Assigning conversion credit across online and offline channels in a unified model.

On-Site Search Tracking

Tracking what users search for within your website.

Optimization Framework

A structured approach for continuously improving marketing performance using data.

Organic Traffic

Visitors who arrive through unpaid search engine results.

Outlier Detection

Identifying unusually high or low data points that differ significantly from normal patterns.

Page Depth

The number of pages viewed within a single session.

Page View

A recorded instance of a webpage being loaded in a browser.

Path Exploration

An advanced report that visualises how users move between pages or events.

Path Length

The number of interactions or touchpoints before a conversion.

Performance Baseline

The benchmark used to evaluate improvement or decline in campaign results.

Post-Click Attribution

Assigning credit to conversions that occur after a user clicks an ad.

Post-View Attribution

Assigning credit to conversions after a user views an ad but does not click.

Power Analysis

A statistical calculation used to determine the sample size required for reliable experiment results.

Predictive Audience

An audience segment created using machine learning predictions, such as likely purchasers.

Predictive Metrics

Machine learning-based metrics such as purchase probability or churn probability.

Probabilistic Attribution

An attribution approach that assigns credit based on statistical likelihood rather than exact user-level tracking.

Privacy Threshold

A reporting limitation applied to protect user anonymity when sample sizes are small.

Purchase Probability

A predictive metric estimating the likelihood that a user will complete a purchase.

Query Exploration

An advanced analytics feature allowing custom data analysis beyond default reports.

Rage Click

Repeated rapid clicks on an element indicating user frustration.

Real-Time Report

A live report showing current active users and recent interactions.

Referral Traffic

Visitors arriving via links from other websites.

Regression Analysis

A statistical method used to identify relationships between variables, such as spend and revenue.

Reporting Identity

The method analytics platforms use to unify users across devices.

Reporting Lag

The delay between user interaction and data appearing in reports.

Revenue Per User (RPU)

The average revenue generated per user.

Retention Cohort

A group of users tracked over time to measure repeat engagement.

Retention Rate

The percentage of users who return during a defined period.

Return on Ad Spend (ROAS)

The revenue generated for every unit of advertising spend.

Revenue Attribution

Assigning revenue credit across marketing channels based on contribution.

Revenue Leakage

Lost revenue due to tracking gaps, checkout errors, or attribution misalignment.

Sampling Rate

The percentage of total data used in a report when full data processing is limited.

Scroll Depth

The percentage of a page a user scrolls through.

Scroll Tracking

Tracking how far users scroll on a webpage.

Search Query Data

Data showing the keywords users searched before visiting your website.

Segmentation Analysis

Breaking down performance data by specific audience segments.

Segment

A subset of users grouped by shared characteristics or behaviour.

Server-Side Tracking

A tracking setup where data is sent from your server instead of the user’s browser.

Session

A group of user interactions occurring within a defined timeframe.

Session Duration

The total time a user spends during a session.

Session Replay

A recording of user interactions on a website.

Session Timeout

The period of inactivity after which a session automatically ends.

Share of Conversion

The percentage of total conversions attributed to a specific channel.

Signal Loss

Loss of tracking data due to browser restrictions or privacy settings.

Single-Touch Attribution

An attribution model that assigns credit to only one interaction.

Source / Medium

The origin of traffic and its marketing channel classification.

Spend Efficiency

The ratio between marketing spend and business outcomes.

Standard Deviation

A statistical measure indicating how spread out data points are from the average.

Statistical Bias

A systematic distortion in data that affects experiment or reporting accuracy.

Statistical Power

The probability that a test will detect a real difference if one exists.

Statistical Significance

The likelihood that experiment results are not due to random chance.

Tag

A snippet of tracking code placed on a website to collect analytics data.

Tag Manager

A platform that allows marketers to deploy and manage tracking tags without editing website code.

Test Control Group

A group used as a baseline to compare against an exposed test group.

Test Variant

An alternate version used in experimentation.

Time Decay Attribution

An attribution model that gives more credit to interactions closer to conversion.

Time to Conversion

The average time taken for a user to convert after their first interaction.

Total Addressable Market Tracking

Measuring performance relative to the total potential audience size.

Tracking Consistency

Ensuring that events and conversions fire correctly across all pages and devices.

Tracking Plan

A documented measurement framework outlining events, goals, and tracking structure.

Traffic Acquisition Report

A report showing how users arrive at your website.

Traffic Filtering

Excluding internal traffic, bots, or spam from reports.

Traffic Quality Score

A metric assessing how likely incoming traffic is to convert.

Unassigned Traffic

Traffic that cannot be categorised properly due to missing or incorrect tracking parameters.

Unified Measurement Framework

A structured system that integrates data from multiple platforms into a single reporting model.

Uplift Modeling

A statistical technique used to estimate the incremental impact of marketing on specific audience segments.

User Acquisition Report

A report showing how new users were acquired across different channels.

User Explorer

A reporting view that displays individual user journeys and event history.

User Flow

A visual representation of how users navigate through a website.

User ID Tracking

A method of identifying users consistently across devices using a unique identifier.

User-Level Reporting

Detailed reporting that tracks individual user behaviour across sessions.

User Lifetime Prediction

A machine learning-based estimate of a user’s future revenue potential.

User Properties

Persistent attributes associated with users, such as subscription type or membership level.

Validation Rules

Checks implemented to ensure tracking data is accurate and consistent.

Vanity Metrics

Metrics that look impressive but do not directly impact business outcomes.

Variance

A statistical measure indicating how far values differ from the average.

Viewability Rate

The percentage of ad impressions that were actually viewable by users.

View-Through Conversion

A conversion that occurs after a user sees an ad but does not click it.

Webhook

An automated system that sends real-time data from one platform to another when specific events occur.

Weighted Attribution

An attribution model that distributes conversion credit proportionally across multiple interactions.

Window Length

The defined time period used for attribution or conversion measurement.

Weighted ROAS

A modified ROAS calculation that assigns different importance levels to revenue sources.

Windowed Attribution

An attribution method that assigns credit based on defined time windows after interactions.

XML Feed Tracking

Tracking performance of traffic generated through structured product data feeds.

Cross-Device Measurement

Tracking user behaviour across multiple devices for unified reporting.

Year Over Year Analysis

Comparing performance metrics with the same period in the previous year.

Zero-Party Data

Information intentionally shared directly by users, such as preferences or survey responses.

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