Do you measure the impact of your website changes?

Updated by Tiago Araújo [SSW] 2 months ago. See history

123

When you make a change to your website, whether it's a new layout, a rewritten headline, or an updated CTA, it’s important to validate its impact with real user data.

Use a combination of tools to gather both quantitative data (Google Analytics) and qualitative insights (Hotjar and Microsoft Clarity). This way, you're not guessing how the change performed - you're measuring it from multiple perspectives.

What to do

  1. Note the date of the change
    • Record when the change went live (e.g. in your task tracker or changelog)
    • Select a time range to compare results (e.g. 30 days before and after the change)
  2. Compare the data (Quantitative)
    Use Google Analytics to check:
    • Pageviews
    • Bounce rate
    • Time on page
    • Conversions
    • Explorations in GA4 (if deeper analysis is needed)
  3. Watch how users behave (Qualitative)
    • View session recordings
    • Check heatmaps for clicks and scrolls
    • Identify issues like rage clicks or confusion
    • Collect feedback through short surveys
  4. Write a summary
    • Combine insights from all 3 tools
    • Share what worked, what didn’t, and what you'll improve next

Tip: Google Analytics shows what changed, Hotjar shows how users interact, and Clarity highlights shows pain points.

acknowledgements
related rules