Google Analytics 4: A Complete Guide for Beginners | Jamil Monsur
Google Analytics 4: A Complete Guide for Beginners | Jamil Monsur
Analytics & Measurement

Google Analytics 4:
A Complete Guide for Beginners

By Jamil Monsur Updated February 2026 18-minute read Beginner friendly

Imagine running a shop with no way to know how many people walked through your door — or why they left without buying. That is what owning a website without analytics feels like. This guide changes that.

What Is Google Analytics 4?

Google Analytics 4 (GA4) is Google's free website and app analytics platform — the tool that tells you who is visiting your website, where they came from, what they did while they were there, and whether they took the actions that matter to your business.

GA4 was officially released in October 2020 and became the mandatory standard when Universal Analytics (UA) was shut down in July 2023. If you still have not migrated to GA4, you are operating without data — and that puts your competitors ahead of you.

From Sessions to Events: The Big Shift

The most important difference between old Universal Analytics and GA4 is how data is collected. Universal Analytics grouped everything into sessions. GA4 is built around events — every interaction is recorded individually: a page view, a scroll, a click, a video play, a form submission. This gives you a far richer, more granular picture of user behaviour.

💡 Plain-English Explanation
In Universal Analytics, you knew someone visited your contact page. In GA4, you know they visited it, scrolled 75% down, watched a video for 45 seconds, and then tapped your phone number — all as separate, analysable events.

GA4 vs Universal Analytics: Key Differences

Feature Universal Analytics Sunset 2023 Google Analytics 4 Current
Data ModelSession-basedEvent-based
Cross-platformWebsite onlyWeb + iOS + Android
Primary Quality MetricBounce RateEngagement Rate
PrivacyBasic complianceBuilt for GDPR / CCPA / privacy-first
Machine LearningLimitedBuilt-in predictive insights
Custom ReportsStandard reports onlyAdvanced Explorations
Data RetentionUp to 50 months2–14 months (configurable)
StatusShutdownActive standard

Why Google Analytics 4 Matters for Your Business

Without analytics, every marketing decision you make is a guess. With GA4, those decisions become evidence-based. Here is why GA4 is critical for businesses of every size.

GA4 and SEO Performance

GA4 is deeply connected to your search engine optimisation performance. When linked with Google Search Console, you can see not just which pages receive organic traffic, but how users behave after they arrive. A page ranking on page two that sees users leave in 10 seconds is a clear signal that the content is not matching search intent — and a direct opportunity for on-page SEO improvement.

GA4 and Content Marketing

GA4's engagement reports reveal which blog posts and landing pages are genuinely resonating with your audience. Combined with a strong content marketing strategy, this data tells you what to write more of — and what to stop writing. See also: how to write SEO-friendly content and understanding search intent.

GA4 and Paid Advertising

If you are running Google Ads, GA4 is the measurement engine that tells you whether your campaigns are working. Link GA4 to your Google Ads account to track the complete journey from ad click to conversion and calculate your true return on ad spend.

A Real-World Local Business Example

Consider a Sydney-based plumbing company investing in both organic SEO and Google Ads. Without GA4, they just know traffic is coming. With GA4, they can discover:

  • 60% of website traffic is mobile — meaning mobile speed is a priority (see: website page speed optimisation)
  • Organic search users convert at 3× the rate of social media users
  • Their 'Emergency Plumber Sydney' landing page has low engagement — a content issue
  • A blog post about burst pipes spikes in winter — a targeting opportunity

Each insight translates directly into smarter, more profitable decisions. This is why GA4 is the backbone of any serious local SEO strategy.

Setting Up Google Analytics 4 — Step by Step

Setting up GA4 from scratch takes about 30 minutes. Follow these steps carefully and you will have tracking running on your website today.

Step 1: Create or Sign Into Your Google Account

You need a Google account to use GA4. If you use Gmail or Google Workspace, you already have one. Go to analytics.google.com to begin.

Step 2: Create a New GA4 Property

1
Click "Start Measuring"

On the GA4 homepage, click the button to begin the account setup process.

2
Enter Your Account Name

Use your business name. One account can hold multiple properties (websites).

3
Configure Property Settings

Enter a property name, select your reporting timezone (e.g. Australia/Sydney), and choose your currency.

4
Enter Business Details

Select your industry category and business size. This configures relevant default reports.

5
Choose Business Objectives

Select goals like generating leads, driving sales, or raising awareness. You can change these anytime.

⚠️ Critical
Always select the correct timezone when creating your property. If you choose incorrectly, your session data will not align with your business hours — and this cannot be corrected for historical data.

Step 3: Set Up a Data Stream

After creating your property, GA4 prompts you to create a Data Stream — the pipeline that sends data from your website into GA4. Select Web, enter your website URL, and click Create Stream. GA4 will generate your unique Measurement ID (formatted as G-XXXXXXXXXX). Keep this handy.

You will also see Enhanced Measurement — turn all options on. This automatically tracks scrolls, outbound clicks, file downloads, video plays, site search queries, and form interactions without any additional code.

Step 4: Install the Tracking Code

Option A — Google Tag Manager (Recommended)

Create a free account at tagmanager.google.com. Install the GTM container on your website. Inside GTM, create a new Google Tag, enter your GA4 Measurement ID, set the trigger to All Pages, and publish. This is the most flexible approach and pairs perfectly with technical SEO work.

Option B — WordPress Plugin

Install the free Site Kit by Google plugin from the WordPress plugin directory. Follow the on-screen prompts to connect your Google account and GA4 property. Site Kit automatically installs the tracking code on every page.

Option C — Manual Installation

Paste the Global Site Tag (found in Admin → Data Streams → View Tag Instructions) into the <head> section of every page on your website.

Step 5: Verify Your Installation

Open your website in a new incognito window. Return to GA4 and click Reports → Realtime. If your visit appears within a minute or two, your installation is confirmed. You can also use the free Google Tag Assistant Chrome extension to verify tags on any page.

✅ Do This First
Change your data retention setting to 14 months immediately after setup. Go to Admin → Data Settings → Data Retention → change from 2 months to 14 months → Save. This is one of the most important first steps most beginners miss entirely.

Understanding the GA4 Interface

The GA4 interface looks very different from Universal Analytics. Here is a plain-English guide to navigating it.

Left-Hand Navigation Overview

  • Home — Your daily dashboard with key metrics at a glance. Customisable to show what matters most to you.
  • Realtime — What is happening on your website right now, including active users, pages being viewed, and live events.
  • Reports → Lifecycle — The core reporting area: Acquisition, Engagement, Monetisation, and Retention.
  • Reports → User — Demographics and Technology reports showing who your users are and what devices they use.
  • Explore — GA4's custom reporting workspace, far more powerful than standard reports.
  • Advertising — Attribution and conversion reports, especially useful if you run paid search advertising.

Key Terminology Explained Simply

Events
Every interaction GA4 tracks — page views, clicks, scrolls, form submissions. Everything in GA4 is an event.
Parameters
Extra data attached to an event, like which page was viewed or which button was clicked.
Active Users
The primary user metric in GA4 — people who had an engaged session on your site.
Sessions
A group of user interactions within a time frame. Resets after 30 minutes of inactivity.
Engagement Rate
% of sessions where the user stayed 10+ seconds, viewed 2+ pages, or triggered a conversion. Replaces Bounce Rate.
Conversions
Events you have flagged as key actions — form submissions, phone clicks, purchases, etc.
Dimensions
Descriptive attributes: page title, country, device type, traffic source.
Metrics
Numbers: 500 users, 2.3 min engagement time, 12 conversions.

Key GA4 Reports Explained

GA4 has dozens of reports. Here are the ones you will use most often and what to look for in each.

Realtime Report

Shows active users, the pages they are viewing, events firing, and their locations — all updating in real time. Use it to verify a new installation is working, monitor the first hours of a new campaign, or confirm a conversion event is firing after you set it up. This is your live SEO monitoring window.

Acquisition Reports

Answers the most important question in digital marketing: where does my traffic come from? Two key reports:

  • User Acquisition — where new (first-time) users came from.
  • Traffic Acquisition — where all sessions came from, including returning visitors.

Traffic is grouped into Channel Groupings — Organic Search, Direct, Referral, Paid Search, Organic Social, Email, and more. Understanding which channels drive the most valuable traffic — not just the most traffic — is one of the highest-value insights GA4 offers. This directly informs your competitor analysis and channel strategy.

Engagement Reports

What do users actually do on your website? Engagement reports tell you:

  • Pages and Screens — your most visited pages ranked by views, engagement time, and conversions. Essential for SEO auditing.
  • Events — all tracked interactions with their count.
  • Conversions — how often your most important events occur.
  • Landing Pages — which pages are the 'front door' to your site and how well they convert. Links directly to your local landing page performance.

Retention Report

Shows how many users return after their first visit and how engagement changes over time. High retention means your content is delivering ongoing value. For local content marketing, this is a key health metric.

Demographics and Technology Reports

Who is your audience? Age, gender, location, language. What devices do they use? For local businesses, geographic data confirms you are reaching your target service area. Technology reports are critical for design decisions — if 70%+ of your audience is on mobile (common for local service businesses), this should drive your mobile-first design and page speed priorities.

Events and Conversions in GA4

Events and conversions are the engine room of GA4. Without setting up conversions, you have analytics data but no way to measure whether your marketing is actually working.

The Three Types of Events

  • Automatically Collected Events — tracked from day one with no setup: page_view, session_start, first_visit.
  • Enhanced Measurement Events — enabled via your Data Stream settings: scroll, click (outbound links), file_download, video_start, video_complete, view_search_results.
  • Custom Events — events you define yourself for business-specific actions like quote requests or location-specific form submissions.

How to Set Up Conversions

A conversion is simply an event you have flagged as important. To mark one: go to Admin → Events, find the event, and toggle Mark as conversion. That event now appears prominently across your reports.

The most important conversions to set up for a local service business:

  • Contact form submissions
  • Phone number clicks (especially valuable on mobile)
  • Direction requests and map clicks
  • Email link clicks
  • Quote request completions

These conversions feed directly into your local SEO reporting and Google Ads optimisation.

💡 Pro Tip
After setting up a new conversion, use the Realtime report to verify it is firing. Complete the action yourself (submit a test form, click the phone number) and watch for the event in the Realtime view within a few seconds.

Custom Events via Google Tag Manager

For actions GA4 does not track automatically — like a specific button click or a multi-step form completion — use Google Tag Manager to create custom events. When naming custom events: use lowercase, use underscores instead of spaces (e.g. quote_form_submission), and never use GA4's reserved event names.

GA4 Explorations: Custom Reporting

Standard reports answer standard questions. When you need to answer a question the standard reports cannot — this is where Explorations come in.

Explorations is GA4's advanced custom reporting workspace: a blank canvas where you can pull in any combination of dimensions and metrics, apply segments, and visualise data in multiple ways. Access it via Explore in the left navigation.

Types of Explorations

  • Free Form — a drag-and-drop table builder. The most commonly used exploration type.
  • Funnel Exploration — visualises the steps users take towards a conversion. Shows exactly where drop-offs occur — invaluable for improving your local landing pages.
  • Path Exploration — shows the sequence of pages users follow through your site. Reveals how users navigate and where they go before and after key pages.
  • Segment Overlap — compares up to three audience groups to understand the relationship between device type, traffic source, and conversion behaviour.
  • User Lifetime — analyses the long-term behaviour of user cohorts. Most useful for subscription businesses or repeat-purchase models.
💡 Key Benefit
Data in Explorations is less sampled than in standard reports, making it more accurate for detailed analysis. Always use Explorations when you need precise data for important decisions.

Connecting GA4 with Other Google Tools

GA4 becomes significantly more powerful when connected with other platforms. These integrations take minutes to set up and provide outsized analytical value.

Google Search Console

Search Console tracks how your site appears in Google search results — queries, impressions, clicks, and average position. When linked to GA4, you get a combined view of SEO and behaviour data in one place. This is essential for small business SEO and tracking keyword performance.

To link: Admin → Search Console Links → Link. Allow 24–48 hours for data to appear. Also read: how to set up Google Search Console for your website.

Google Ads

Linking GA4 to your Google Ads account allows you to import GA4 conversions directly into your campaigns, use GA4 audiences for remarketing, and track post-click user behaviour in detail. To link: Admin → Google Ads Links. You need admin access on both accounts.

BigQuery

For advanced users: BigQuery is Google's cloud data warehouse. Most small businesses will never need it, but if you outgrow GA4's 14-month data retention or need to run complex SQL queries on raw data, BigQuery is the natural next step. The export from GA4 to BigQuery is free.

GA4 and Privacy: What You Need to Know

Privacy is no longer an afterthought — it is a legal and reputational requirement. Here is what every GA4 user needs to understand.

GA4's Built-In Privacy Features

IP anonymisation — meaning that the full IP addresses of your visitors are never stored — is enabled by default in GA4 and cannot be turned off. This is a significant improvement over Universal Analytics, where it had to be manually configured. GA4 also uses a first-party data approach, reducing reliance on the third-party cookies that browsers are increasingly blocking.

Cookie Consent

In Australia, the Privacy Act and Australian Privacy Principles govern how businesses collect and use personal information. In Europe, GDPR requires explicit consent. In California, CCPA gives users opt-out rights.

If your website attracts visitors from regulated regions, implement a cookie consent banner. GA4 supports Google Consent Mode v2, which adjusts tracking based on a user's consent choices — tracking consenting users fully and using anonymous modelled data for non-consenting users. This protects your data completeness while respecting user rights.

Data Retention Settings — A Critical Default

By default, GA4 retains user-level data for only 2 months. This means you cannot analyse data older than 2 months in Explorations. Change this to 14 months immediately: Admin → Data Settings → Data Retention → 14 months → Save.

⚠️ Important
This change only affects data collected going forward — it cannot retroactively recover data that has already been deleted under the 2-month default. Set it up correctly from day one.

Common GA4 Mistakes Beginners Make

Avoid these mistakes from the start and your GA4 data will be accurate, reliable, and genuinely useful.

1. Not Verifying the Tracking Code

Installing the code is not enough — always verify it is firing correctly using the Realtime report or Google Tag Assistant before trusting any GA4 data.

2. Leaving Data Retention at 2 Months

Change it to 14 months on day one. This cannot be stressed enough.

3. Setting No Conversions

Without conversions, you have data but no score. Define what success looks like for your business — form submissions, phone clicks, enquiries — and mark those events as conversions immediately.

4. Not Filtering Your Own Traffic

Your own visits distort your data. Create an internal traffic filter to exclude your office and home IP addresses: Admin → Data Streams → Configure Tag Settings → Internal Traffic. Then activate it under Admin → Data Filters.

5. Not Linking Google Search Console

The combination of GA4 and Search Console is one of the most powerful free SEO tools available. Linking them takes five minutes and dramatically improves your ability to understand organic performance. See also: common SEO mistakes small businesses make.

6. Comparing GA4 Data to Universal Analytics Data

Because the data models are fundamentally different, direct comparisons are not valid. Session counts, user counts, and other metrics will all differ — this does not mean GA4 is wrong. Establish a new baseline in GA4 and measure progress against that going forward.

7. Relying Only on the Home Dashboard

The home screen is a starting point. The real intelligence is in Acquisition, Engagement, and Conversion reports — and especially in Explorations. Build a habit of going deeper.

Need help setting up GA4?

Our team sets up Google Analytics 4 correctly from day one — including conversion tracking, Search Console linking, and custom event configuration tailored to your business.

Get a Free Quote

Practical GA4 Tips for Small Business Owners

You do not need to spend hours in GA4 every day. Here are focused habits that deliver consistent value.

Focus on 3–5 Key Metrics

Resist the temptation to track everything. For most local service businesses, the five metrics that matter most are: Active Users, Organic Search traffic, Conversions, Top landing pages by conversion rate, and Acquisitions by channel. Master these before expanding. This focus is the foundation of effective local SEO optimisation.

Build a Weekly Analytics Habit

15 minutes every Monday morning. Check traffic and conversion trends, flag anything unusual, and identify one insight to act on this week. Consistency beats occasional deep dives every time.

Use Date Comparison

GA4 allows you to compare two date ranges side by side. Use it to compare this month vs last month, or this quarter vs the same quarter last year. Context is everything in analytics.

Combine GA4 with Search Console for SEO

Cross-reference organic search traffic with conversion data. Which organic landing pages convert? Which receive traffic but generate zero conversions? These answers reveal exactly where to focus your content and local SEO efforts. For a structured approach, see our SEO audit and reporting service.

Set Up Automated Insights

GA4 uses machine learning to flag unusual data patterns — sudden traffic spikes, conversion drops, or unexpected audience shifts. Review the Insights section of your home dashboard regularly. They serve as an early warning system for both problems and opportunities.

GA4 Glossary: Key Terms Reference

Bookmark this quick-reference guide to GA4 terminology.

Account
Top-level container in GA4. One account can hold multiple properties.
Property
A GA4 unit representing one website or app. Each has its own data stream and reports.
Data Stream
The pipeline sending data into your GA4 property — web, iOS, or Android.
Measurement ID
Your unique GA4 tracking ID, formatted as G-XXXXXXXXXX.
Event
Any interaction tracked by GA4. Everything in GA4 is an event.
Parameter
Additional data attached to an event — e.g. page_title, click_url, video_title.
Conversion
An event you have marked as a key business action — form submission, purchase, phone click.
Session
A group of interactions within a time period. Resets after 30 minutes of inactivity.
New User
A visitor who has never been tracked by GA4 on this property before.
Active User
The primary user metric in GA4 — someone who had an engaged session.
Engagement Rate
% of sessions that were engaged (10+ seconds, 2+ pages, or a conversion). Replaces Bounce Rate.
Dimension
A descriptive attribute: page title, country, device type, traffic source.
Metric
A number: 500 users, 2.3 min engagement time, 12 conversions.
Exploration
GA4's custom reporting workspace — more flexible and precise than standard reports.
Segment
A filtered subset of data for analysis — e.g. mobile users only, or organic search visitors.
Audience
A defined group of users for remarketing or analysis — e.g. people who visited your pricing page.
Channel Grouping
How GA4 categorises traffic: Organic Search, Paid Social, Direct, Referral, Email, etc.
Attribution
How GA4 assigns conversion credit across multiple marketing touchpoints.

Frequently Asked Questions

The most common questions we receive about Google Analytics 4.

Is Google Analytics 4 free?
Yes. GA4 is completely free for the vast majority of businesses. A paid enterprise version called Google Analytics 360 exists for very large organisations with advanced needs, but the standard GA4 product is free with no usage limits for typical websites.
Is GA4 hard to learn for beginners?
GA4 has a steeper initial learning curve than Universal Analytics because the interface and data model both changed significantly. However, with a structured guide like this one, most business owners can understand the essential reports and set up meaningful conversion tracking within a few hours.
How long does it take for GA4 to show data?
The Realtime report shows data within seconds of installation. Standard reports typically populate within 24–48 hours. Some reports (like retention) require at least a few days of data before they are meaningful.
Can I use GA4 on multiple websites?
Yes. You can create multiple properties within one GA4 account — one for each website or app. Each property is entirely independent with its own data streams, reports, and conversion definitions.
What happened to Universal Analytics?
Google sunset Universal Analytics on July 1, 2023. It stopped processing new data on that date. All website owners were required to migrate to GA4. Historical UA data remained accessible for a period, but GA4 is now the only supported version.
How is GA4 different from Google Search Console?
GA4 tracks what users do on your website — behaviour, sessions, conversions. Google Search Console tracks how your website performs in Google search results — impressions, clicks, keyword rankings, and indexing. They are complementary tools and are most powerful when linked together. See: setting up Google Search Console.
Do I need a developer to set up GA4?
Not for a basic installation. For WordPress sites, the Site Kit by Google plugin installs GA4 without any coding. For advanced custom event tracking, Google Tag Manager is recommended — which most business owners can learn with some practice — or a developer can help.
How do I know if GA4 is installed correctly?
Open your website in an incognito browser window, then check the Realtime report in GA4. If your visit appears within a minute, tracking is working. You can also use the free Google Tag Assistant Chrome extension to verify tags on any page.
Can GA4 track phone calls and form submissions?
Yes, with the right setup. Form submissions can be tracked using Enhanced Measurement or custom events via Google Tag Manager. Phone call clicks (when a user taps a tel: link on mobile) can be tracked as a custom event. Actual phone call tracking from offline calls requires a third-party call tracking tool that integrates with GA4.
Does GA4 replace Google Search Console?
No. They are two different tools that serve different purposes and work best together. GA4 measures on-site behaviour. Search Console measures search visibility and indexing. For comprehensive SEO measurement, you need both — see our SEO analytics monitoring service.

Conclusion

Google Analytics 4 is the most powerful free analytics tool ever made available to small business owners. Once properly set up, it gives you a clear, detailed picture of who is visiting your website, where they are coming from, what they are doing, and whether they are taking the actions that grow your business.

The key takeaway from this guide is this: data-driven businesses grow faster than businesses that rely on guesswork. GA4 makes data-driven decision-making accessible to every business regardless of size or budget.

Your next step is simple. If you have not yet installed GA4, do it today using the step-by-step setup instructions above. If GA4 is already on your site, spend 15 minutes this week in your Acquisition and Engagement reports and find one insight you can act on immediately.

For a complete view of your digital marketing performance, combine GA4 with our SEO analytics monitoring, SEO audit and reporting, and local content marketing services. Ready to go deeper? Our beginner's guide to SEO is the natural next step after mastering your analytics.

JM
Jamil Monsur
Jamil Monsur is a digital marketing expert with over 11 years of experience growing businesses online. He specialises in SEO, Google Analytics, content strategy, and local digital marketing for businesses across Australia. Based in Sydney, his agency helps small and large businesses build powerful online presences that generate measurable results.

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