How to Track Device Breakdown for Bloggers
You just published your best article yet. It gets 2,000 views in 24 hours. But then you check device breakdown and realize most readers are on phones reading a 3,000-word article with tiny text and no images loading properly. This hurts both reader experience and your income.
Why Device Breakdown Matters for Bloggers
Bloggers earn money through ads, affiliate links, and email signups. All three depend on engagement. Mobile users might skim while desktop users might read deeply and convert. If you treat all traffic the same, you optimize for nobody.
Device breakdown also affects content format. A listicle might work great on mobile, but a long-form analysis needs desktop readers. Knowing your audience helps you create content that fits their consumption habits.
Site speed matters more on mobile. Slow-loading pages drive mobile readers away fast. Device data tells you whether investing in speed improvements will actually pay off.
How to Check in GA4
In GA4, open Users > Tech > Devices. You will immediately see the percentage split. Focus on these key metrics:
Session duration by device shows how long readers stay. Pages per session reveals browsing behavior. Bounce rate indicates whether your site delivers what mobile visitors expect quickly.
Look at your top articles by device. You might find that technical tutorials perform on desktop while lifestyle content dominates mobile. This shapes your content calendar.
Check your email signup forms separately by device. If mobile signups are low, your form might be too small or placed poorly on small screens.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics makes device insights actionable. You see not just which devices bring traffic but which drive email signups and ad clicks. This tells you exactly where your monetization efforts should focus.
The dashboard shows device-specific conversion rates. You can ask “Which devices generate the most email subscribers” or “Which device has the highest ad revenue per visitor” and get instant answers.
ClawAnalytics also tracks how device usage changes over time. If mobile traffic keeps growing, you know to prioritize mobile optimization in your content strategy.
Quick Wins
Make these three improvements this week. Test your blog on your own phone. Actually read an article from start to finish. Note what is annoying. Optimize images for mobile by using modern formats and appropriate sizes. Move your email signup form to appear earlier on mobile articles since users scroll less than desktop readers.