How to Improve Page Views for Bloggers
You just published what you think is your best work. A week later, the page views tell a different story. People land, read one paragraph, and leave. The problem isn’t your writing; it’s how you’re guiding readers through your site. More page views means readers are finding value across your content, not just in one post.
Why Page Views Matter for Bloggers
Page views are the most direct metric of whether readers find your blog worth exploring. Beyond raw traffic, page views reveal engagement patterns.
Ad revenue growth. Most monetization strategies (AdSense, Mediavine, affiliate links) reward volume. Every additional page view is another chance to serve an ad or make an affiliate sale.
Newsletter building. Readers who view multiple pages are more likely to subscribe. They’ve seen your depth and want more. A one-page visitor might never return; a five-page visitor is invested.
SEO benefits. Internal linking and high page views signal to search engines that your site has valuable content. Sites where readers browse extensively rank higher.
Content validation. Page view data tells you what resonates. The posts readers actually read (not just land on) reveal your true best content versus what flops.
How to Check in GA4
Setting up GA4 for a blog requires some custom configuration:
- Go to Reports > Engagement > Pages and screens
- Look at “Views” and “Average engagement time” together
- Create a segment for “Returning visitors” to see how loyal readers behave
- Set up a custom dimension for “Author” if you have multiple contributors
- Check “Sessions with conversions” and see how many page views those sessions include
The key is comparing page views for sessions that lead to conversions (newsletter sign-ups, comments, affiliate clicks) versus quick bounces.
The Easier Way
ClawAnalytics makes blog analytics simple so you can focus on writing:
Which topics should I write about next? If tech tutorials get 3x more page views than personal essays, you know where to focus your effort.
Why do some posts get traffic but no follow-up? If a post gets views but readers don’t explore other content, add better internal links or a related posts section.
When are readers most active? Schedule new posts for times when your audience is online. ClawAnalytics shows peak reading hours.
Which old posts still get love? Find evergreen content that continues driving views. Update and repromote these regularly.
What keeps subscribers reading? Compare page views for logged-in newsletter readers versus anonymous visitors. This tells you what makes loyal fans.
ClawAnalytics connects with popular blogging platforms, giving you insights without complicated setup.
Quick Wins
Add a “popular posts” widget. Show your best content in the sidebar or at the end of each post. This single change can boost page views by 15-25%.
Create internal linking sequences. Write posts in series. Someone who reads part one is much more likely to read parts two and three.
Optimize for time on page. Use images, subheadings, and scannable formatting. Readers who finish articles are more likely to click to another post.
Build a content upgrade. Offer a downloadable resource at the end of each post in exchange for email. This extends the session and increases page views.
Repromote old content. Update and link to your best posts from new content. Your older work deserves traffic too.