Google Analytics Key Metrics – Bounce Rate
Check your website bounce rate regularly – here’s why….
Google Analytics has a huge amount of information but perhaps one of the most important elements for understanding how your dental practice website is performing is called ‘Bounce Rate’. In today’s blog we’ll take a quick look at bounce rate, why it’s helpful and what to do if the data you’re seeing is adverse.
What is Bounce Rate?
A web pages bounce is recorded in Analytics when a user lands on a page but then ‘bounces’ elsewhere immediately with out viewing any further pages on your site. This is typically found when a user uses Google to search for a product or service, clicks on a link but then quickly navigates elsewhere – often back to Google to try again.
Immediately we can see that the bounce rate is great indicator of how engaging/useful a page is for a user – pages which are interesting will typically create long dwell times and encourage users to view other pages within the same site. Pages which hold no interest for the user will typically exhibit much higher bounce rates.
The bounce rate of a website is aggregated in the headline performance figures within Google Analytics, but importantly you can also drill down to bounce rate at the page level. So it makes sense to look closely at these figures, particularly for those pages on your website which you deem to be most important.
Bounce rate and Google ranking
An engaging web page is not just important to help grab the attention of your site visitors; it’s also extremely important for Google search positions too. Although Google hasn’t confirmed directly, there are plenty of studies which indicate that Google likely uses bounce rate to indicate the quality and usefulness of a web pages for uses, and then promotes those pages in the search results which perform well. Conversely, pages with high bounce rates are pushed back. So here we are not just considering user experience, but Google ranking too – and it makes sense that both of these should work hand-in-hand.

The speed at which your website loads has always been important, but with the improvement in broadband speeds and the introduction of 4G mobile data, many web designers have forgotten this core principle and continue to publish sites which don’t meet accepted performance criteria – i.e. they load way too slowly other than on fast networks.
I recently read a blog post from a dental coach where he noted that a few of his clients had significantly wound back their spend on external marketing in favour of prioritising their internal marketing efforts. What we didn’t learn was whether this initiative actually worked, but it’s certainly worthy of more discussion. Just before we take a look at this “strategy” in more detail, let’s recap in the broadest sense, on what those marketing terms actually mean. These are not concrete definitions (indeed there are several different views on what internal marketing means) but they will serve for the purposes of this discussion:
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I was recently asked to comment on a couple of SEO reports which had been given as examples to a dentist who was
So you’ve just launched a new website and sat wondering what to do next to start making progress in Google? One option is to pay a marketing agency to start
As you’ve possibly gathered if you’ve read other articles in this blog, I spend much of my time working on