The Short Answer
To check your website traffic, connect Google Analytics 4 to your site, then use either GA4 built-in reports or a simpler dashboard like ClawAnalytics. GA4 gives you raw data, while ClawAnalytics transforms it into answers you can understand in seconds.
Step by Step in GA4
- Go to analytics.google.com and sign in with your Google account
- Click Admin in the bottom left, then create a Property if you have not already
- Install the GA4 tracking code on your website (or use Google Tag Manager)
- Wait 24-48 hours for initial data to collect
- Open GA4 and navigate to the Reports section
- Click on Traffic Acquisition to see where your visitors come from
- Use the date picker in the top right to select your desired time range
- Compare periods using the Compare tool to see trends over time
The Faster Way with ClawAnalytics
ClawAnalytics connects to your GA4 account and lets you ask questions in plain English. Instead of clicking through multiple menus, you simply type what you want to know.
Example questions you can ask:
- How many visitors did I get this month compared to last month?
- Which day had the most traffic last week?
- Show me my traffic trend for the past 30 days
This approach saves time and makes data accessible without training in analytics.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Checking data too soon: GA4 needs 24-48 hours to process new data, so avoid analyzing traffic within hours of installing the tag
- Ignoring the date range: Always verify the date picker is set to the period you want to analyze
- Focusing only on total visitors: Bounce rate, session duration, and conversion rates matter just as much as raw traffic numbers
- Not comparing periods: Looking at traffic in isolation without comparing to previous periods hides trends and seasonal patterns
What to Do With This Data
Once you understand your traffic patterns, use those insights to make decisions. If a particular page gets consistent visitors, consider creating related content. If traffic drops on certain days, examine what might be causing it. Share key metrics with your team regularly to keep everyone aligned on website performance.
Use this data to set realistic goals. If you averaged 1,000 visitors last month, aim for 1,200 next month and track your progress. Traffic data is most valuable when it drives action, not just curiosity.