You launched your website three months ago. People say they found you online, but you have no idea how many visitors you actually get. Are you getting 50 visitors a day or 500? Where do they come from? Are the numbers going up or down? Without checking your traffic, you are running your business with a blindfold on.
Why Traffic Numbers Matter
Website traffic is not a vanity metric when you use it correctly. It tells you whether your marketing is working, which content resonates, and where to invest your time and money.
Traffic data answers critical questions:
- Is your SEO working? Check if organic traffic is growing month over month
- Are your ads profitable? Compare paid traffic costs against conversions
- Which content performs? See which pages attract the most visitors
- Where are visitors from? Understand your geographic reach
- Is something broken? A sudden traffic drop can signal technical problems
The key is looking at traffic in context. Raw page view counts mean little on their own. Traffic combined with engagement metrics and conversions tells the real story.
How to Check Your Traffic in GA4
Google Analytics 4 is the standard free tool for tracking your own website traffic. Here is how to find your key numbers:
Total visitors: Go to Reports, then Acquisition, then Overview. The Users metric shows unique visitors over your selected time period.
Traffic sources: In the same Acquisition section, click Traffic acquisition to see where visitors come from. You will see channels like Organic Search, Direct, Social, Referral, and Paid Search.
Top pages: Go to Reports, then Engagement, then Pages and screens. This shows which pages get the most views and how long visitors spend on each.
Trends over time: Change the date range in the top right corner to compare periods. Select “Compare” to see this month vs last month side by side.
Real-time traffic: Click Reports, then Realtime to see who is on your site right now. Useful for checking if a campaign launch or social post is driving immediate traffic.
If you do not have GA4 installed yet, add the tracking code to your website header. Most website builders like WordPress, Shopify, and Squarespace have built-in integrations that make setup straightforward.
Checking Competitor Traffic
Sometimes you want to know how much traffic a competitor gets. Since you cannot install analytics on their site, you need estimation tools.
SimilarWeb offers free basic traffic estimates including total visits, traffic sources, and top pages. The free version limits you to a few lookups per day.
Google Search Console shows your own organic search performance but also reveals which queries you compete for and your click-through rates compared to your position.
Keep in mind that all competitor traffic tools provide estimates, not exact numbers. Use them for directional understanding, not precise benchmarks.
The Easier Way
GA4 gives you the data, but finding specific answers often means clicking through multiple reports and comparing date ranges manually.
With ClawAnalytics, you skip the navigation entirely. Ask “how much traffic did I get this month compared to last month” or “which pages are growing fastest” and get a direct answer. When your boss asks for a traffic update, you get the numbers in seconds instead of building a custom report.
Quick Wins
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Set up a weekly traffic check. Pick one day per week to review your numbers. Consistency matters more than frequency. Monday mornings work well for reviewing the previous week.
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Watch trends, not absolutes. A website getting 1,000 visitors that is growing 15% monthly is in a better position than one getting 10,000 that is flat. Direction matters more than size.
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Track traffic by source separately. Your organic traffic might be growing while paid is declining. Looking at total traffic hides these shifts. Break it down by channel every time you check.
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Set up alerts for drops. In GA4, create a custom insight to notify you when traffic drops more than 20% compared to the previous week. Catching problems early prevents bigger losses.