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HomeAnalytics eCommerce Analytics Metrics: What to Track and Why

eCommerce Analytics Metrics: What to Track and Why

Alla Vovnenko on May 4, 2026
Analytics
16 Min Read

Table of Contents

  1. Why eCommerce Metrics Matter
  2. Traffic Quality Metrics
  3. Revenue Metrics
  4. Conversion & Micro-Conversion Metrics
  5. User Behavior Metrics
  6. Shopping Funnel Metrics
  7. Retention & Customer Loyalty Metrics
  8. Product Performance Metrics
  9. Marketing Efficiency Metrics
  10. Search & Merchandising Metrics
  11. Customer Experience Metrics
  12. Building a Metrics Dashboard
  13. Final Thoughts: Metrics That Actually Drive Growth

Why eCommerce Metrics Matter

eCommerce generates data for almost everything.

Visits, product views, add-to-carts, checkouts, purchases, refunds — every click leaves a trail. Which sounds great, until you open your analytics and realize there are hundreds of metrics staring back at you, all looking important.

Spoiler: not all of them are. That’s the difference between data and metrics.

Data is everything that happened. Metrics are the parts worth paying attention to.

Because raw numbers rarely explain much on their own.

Traffic can go up while revenue stays flat. Conversion rate can improve while average order value drops. Sales can grow while retention quietly gets worse in the background — which is always a fun thing to discover later.

That’s why metrics matter.

They help answer the questions behind the numbers:

  • Are we bringing in the right traffic?
  • Are visitors actually shopping?
  • Where are they dropping off?
  • Which products are doing the heavy lifting?
  • Are customers coming back?

The goal of eCommerce analytics isn’t to collect more data.

There’s already plenty of that.

The goal is to reduce guesswork and make better decisions — ideally before changing three things at once and having no idea which one broke conversion.

In this guide, I’ll break down the core eCommerce metrics by category and explain what they actually tell you — and when they’re worth paying attention to.

1. Traffic Quality Metrics

Once traffic lands on your site, the first question is simple: did these people come here for a reason, or did they just accidentally fall into my funnel?

That’s basically what traffic quality metrics help answer.

Some metrics tell you if people are interested. Some tell you if they’re curious. Some tell you if they’re serious enough to start shopping.

And some tell you your paid campaign found the completely wrong audience, which is always fun to discover after spending money.

Here are the core ones worth watching:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
SessionsTotal number of visits to the siteUseful for measuring traffic volume, but says nothing about quality by itself
UsersTotal number of unique visitorsHelps understand audience size beyond repeat visits
Engagement RatePercentage of sessions that involved meaningful interactionA fast way to judge traffic relevance
Bounce RatePercentage of sessions with little or no engagementOften the first red flag
Pages per SessionAverage number of pages viewed per visitShows how much users explore before leaving
Average Engagement TimeAverage active time spent on siteHelps measure attention and content relevance
Product View RatePercentage of sessions that reached product pagesShows whether visitors move beyond entry pages
Add-to-Cart RatePercentage of sessions that included cart activityStrong signal of buying intent
Conversion RatePercentage of sessions that resulted in a purchaseThe clearest signal that traffic is commercially relevant
Returning Visitor RatePercentage of visitors who come backWhat does it tell you

2. Revenue Metrics

Revenue is one of the first metrics I check because it shows the direct business outcome.

But revenue alone does not explain performance.

A store can grow revenue through more traffic, better conversion, or higher average order value. The number may look the same, but the reason behind it matters because it changes what you should optimize next.

That is why revenue metrics are useful, they help explain where revenue comes from and what drives it.

Here are the revenue metrics I pay attention to:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Total RevenueTotal sales generated in a periodThe main business outcome
Average Order Value (AOV)Average amount spent per orderShows customer spending patterns
Revenue per Visitor (RPV)Average revenue generated per visitorHelps measure traffic value
Revenue per SessionAverage revenue generated per visitUseful for measuring traffic efficiency
Revenue by ChannelRevenue split by acquisition sourceShows which channels actually drive sales
Revenue by ProductRevenue generated by individual productsShows which products carry the business
Revenue by CategoryRevenue generated by product categoryHelps identify category trends and opportunities

Revenue tells you what happened, the surrounding metrics help explain why it happened, and that is usually where the useful decisions start.

3. Conversion & Micro-Conversion Metrics

Conversion metrics show how visitors move through the buying journey.

The purchase is the main conversion, but it usually happens after several smaller actions like viewing products, adding items to the cart, and starting checkout.

That is why I look at both macro-conversions and micro-conversions.

Here are the core conversion metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Conversion RatePercentage of sessions that result in a purchaseThe clearest measure of store efficiency
Add-to-Cart RatePercentage of sessions with cart additionsShows buying intent before purchase
Checkout Start RatePercentage of sessions that begin checkoutMeasures movement into the final buying stage
Checkout Completion RatePercentage of started checkouts that end in purchaseHelps identify checkout friction
Cart Abandonment RatePercentage of carts that never convertShows where buying intent breaks down
Product View RatePercentage of sessions with product viewsMeasures product discovery and shopping intent

The purchase shows the outcome. Micro-conversions help explain the path that led to it, and that is usually where the useful optimization opportunities are.

4. User Behavior Metrics

User behavior metrics help explain what visitors actually do after landing on your store and before making a purchase or leaving.

Traffic metrics can tell you people arrived, and conversion metrics can tell you whether they bought, but neither explains what happened in between. That middle part is usually where things get interesting, and occasionally where they fall apart.

This is the part of analytics where I usually end up asking questions like: Why are people viewing six products, using search twice, adding something to cart, and then disappearing like I asked them for a commitment?

Behavior metrics help answer that.

They show how people browse, search, scroll, and move through the store. They also help surface friction before it shows up as a revenue problem.

Here are the core behavior metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Pages per SessionAverage number of pages viewed per visitShows how much users explore the store
Average Engagement TimeAverage active time spent on siteHelps measure attention and content relevance
Product Detail ViewsTotal number of product page viewsShows product interest and browsing depth
Search Usage RatePercentage of sessions with site searchMeasures active product discovery
Search Exit RatePercentage of search sessions ending without further actionHelps identify weak search results or poor product relevance
Scroll DepthHow far users scroll on key pagesUseful for measuring page engagement and content visibility
Exit RatePercentage of sessions ending on a specific pageHelps identify where users drop off

Behavior metrics rarely point to the problem directly, but they usually point you toward the area where the problem lives, which is often the hardest part to figure out.

5. Shopping Funnel Metrics

Shopping funnel metrics help measure how efficiently users move from product discovery to purchase.

In theory, the path looks simple: view product, add to cart, start checkout, complete order.

In reality, the path is rarely that clean.

People compare products, leave to check something else, come back, remove items, add them again, and sometimes abandon the cart completely because shipping costs appeared at the worst possible moment.

Funnel metrics help show where customers drop off and where the buying process creates friction. Instead of guessing why conversion is low, you can see which step is losing people.

Here are the core shopping funnel metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Product View to Cart RatePercentage of product views that lead to add-to-cartShows how convincing product pages are
Add-to-Cart to Checkout RatePercentage of carts that move into checkoutMeasures purchase intent progression
Checkout Completion RatePercentage of checkouts that result in purchaseHelps identify checkout friction
Cart Abandonment RatePercentage of carts that never convertShows where buying intent drops off
Checkout Abandonment RatePercentage of started checkouts that do not finishHelps spot friction in payment, shipping, or form completion
Funnel Completion RatePercentage of users who complete the full buying journeyMeasures overall funnel efficiency

Funnel metrics are useful because they narrow down the problem.

If product views are strong but add-to-cart is weak, the issue is often product presentation, pricing, or trust.

If add-to-cart is strong but checkout completion is weak, the issue is usually somewhere in the checkout experience.

Finding where users leave is often the fastest way to find what needs fixing.

6. Retention & Customer Loyalty Metrics

Getting the first purchase is hard. Getting the second purchase is usually where the business becomes more stable.

Retention metrics help measure whether customers come back, how often they buy again, and whether the relationship grows over time. A store that depends only on new customer acquisition has to keep spending just to maintain momentum, which gets expensive fast.

Loyal customers behave differently. They buy faster, trust more, and usually need less convincing.

Here are the core retention and loyalty metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Repeat Purchase RatePercentage of customers who make another purchaseShows how often customers return
Customer Retention RatePercentage of customers retained over a periodMeasures long-term customer stability
Purchase FrequencyAverage number of orders per customerHelps measure buying habits
Time Between PurchasesAverage time between ordersShows how often customers come back
Customer Lifetime Value (LTV)Total revenue generated by a customer over timeHelps measure long-term customer value
Returning Customer RevenueRevenue generated by returning customersShows how much revenue depends on loyalty
Churn RatePercentage of customers who stop buyingHelps identify customer loss over time

Retention metrics help answer an important question: was the purchase a one-time transaction, or the start of a customer relationship?

That difference matters because growth is much easier when customers come back on their own instead of making you earn their trust from scratch every time.

7. Product Performance Metrics

Not all products contribute equally.

Some products drive most of the revenue, some attract traffic but never convert, some mostly exist to support organic visibility, and some quietly sit in the catalog like decorative furniture, taking up space and doing very little.

Product performance metrics help separate those roles and make merchandising decisions less based on instinct and more based on actual performance.

They show which products attract interest, convert well, and generate revenue. They also help identify products that get attention but fail to sell, which is usually where the uncomfortable questions start.

Is the product overpriced? Is the content weak? Are the images bad? Is demand lower than expected? Sometimes the product is fine and the problem is everything around it.

Here are the core product performance metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Product Conversion RatePercentage of product page views that result in a purchaseShows how effectively a product converts interest into sales
Product RevenueTotal revenue generated by a productHelps identify top-selling products
Units SoldTotal quantity sold per productShows product demand beyond revenue
Product View RatePercentage of sessions that include a product viewMeasures product visibility and interest
Add-to-Cart Rate by ProductPercentage of product views leading to cart additionsShows buying intent at the product level
Product Abandonment RatePercentage of product interactions that do not convertHelps identify weak product performance
Revenue by CategoryRevenue generated by product categoryHelps compare category-level demand and performance

Product metrics help answer one of the most useful eCommerce questions: which products are actually doing the work? The answer is rarely “all of them,” no matter how optimistic the catalog looks.

8. Marketing Efficiency Metrics

Traffic and revenue are useful, but they do not tell you whether growth is efficient.

A campaign can bring traffic and generate sales while still being expensive enough to make the whole thing feel less impressive once you look closer.

Marketing efficiency metrics measure how much it costs to acquire customers and how much value those customers generate in return. This matters because growth is not just about increasing sales. Growth also has to make financial sense.

It is easy to celebrate revenue from a campaign until you realize you spent almost the same amount to get it. That is usually the moment when marketing performance starts looking less exciting and more mathematical.

Here are the core marketing efficiency metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Customer Acquisition Cost (CAC)Average cost to acquire one customerHelps measure acquisition efficiency
Return on Ad Spend (ROAS)Revenue generated for every dollar spent on adsMeasures paid channel efficiency
What does it tell youTotal revenue divided by total marketing spendShows overall marketing efficiency
Cost per Acquisition (CPA)Average cost to generate a conversionUseful for campaign-level performance
Revenue by ChannelRevenue split by acquisition sourceShows which channels actually drive business
Conversion Rate by ChannelConversion rate segmented by traffic sourceHelps compare traffic quality across channels

Marketing efficiency metrics help answer a simple question: is the growth worth the cost?

That question becomes especially important when scaling, because spending more only works if efficiency stays healthy. Otherwise, growth starts looking a lot like expensive maintenance.

9. Search & Merchandising Metrics

In eCommerce, product discovery is a big part of conversion.

If people cannot find the right products, the rest of the funnel does not matter much.

That is why I group search and merchandising together. Search shows what customers are trying to find, and merchandising influences what they actually discover. When both work well, product discovery feels easy. When they do not, users start refining filters, changing queries, or leaving the site entirely.

Search data is especially useful because it shows intent very clearly. A visitor may browse category pages casually, but typing a specific query usually means they know what they want, or at least think they do.

Here are the core search and merchandising metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Search Usage RatePercentage of sessions using on-site searchShows how often users actively search for products
Search CTRPercentage of search result impressions that get clickedMeasures how relevant and appealing search results are
Search Conversion RatePercentage of search sessions resulting in a purchaseShows how effective search is at driving sales
Zero-Result Search RatePercentage of searches returning no resultsHelps identify gaps in catalog or search logic
Search Exit RatePercentage of search sessions ending without further actionShows where search fails to move users forward
Search Refinement RatePercentage of searches followed by another searchHelps identify weak initial results or unclear relevance
Filter Usage RatePercentage of sessions using filters or sortingMeasures product discovery behavior
Collection Page Conversion RateConversion rate from category or collection pagesShows how effective merchandising is on listing pages
Product Discovery RatePercentage of sessions reaching product pages from search or collectionsMeasures how efficiently users find products

Search and merchandising metrics help answer one of the most practical eCommerce questions: can customers find what they want without working too hard for it?

If the answer is no, they usually leave and find it somewhere else, which is very efficient for them and not especially helpful for your revenue.

10. Customer Experience Metrics

Customer experience metrics help measure how easy and clear the shopping experience feels.

A store can have good traffic and strong product demand, but if customers struggle to find information, trust what they see, or complete their purchase smoothly, conversion suffers anyway.

The difficult part is that customers rarely tell you directly what feels broken. They usually show it through behavior, or by reaching out to support with questions the website should have answered already.

That is why these metrics matter, they help identify friction that does not always show up clearly in traffic or conversion reports.

Here are the core customer experience metrics worth tracking:

MetricWhat it tells youWhat I usually look for
Site SpeedAverage page load and interaction speedHelps identify performance friction
Refund RatePercentage of orders refundedCan signal expectation gaps or product experience issues
Support Contact RatePercentage of orders or sessions resulting in customer support contactHelps identify missing information or unresolved friction
Checkout Completion RatePercentage of started checkouts that result in purchaseShows how smooth the final purchase process is
Exit Rate by Key PagePercentage of sessions ending on important pagesHelps identify pages where customers give up
Search Exit RatePercentage of search sessions ending without further actionShows whether customers find what they need

Support contact rate is one of my favorite overlooked metrics.

If customers keep asking the same questions about shipping, product details, sizing, or returns, the problem is usually not the customer. The website failed to answer something clearly, and customers had to do extra work to fill the gap.

That extra work often costs conversion.

Building a Metrics Dashboard

A dashboard should help you make decisions, not create more things to monitor.

It is tempting to track everything because the data is available, but too many metrics usually create noise instead of clarity. I prefer building dashboards around questions, not around every metric I can pull into a report.

One of the most important things is to focus on trends, not just absolute numbers.

A single number rarely means much on its own, and even year-over-year comparison can be misleading when viewed as a one-time snapshot. Trends show direction over time, which makes it much easier to spot changes early and understand whether performance is improving, slowing down, or quietly breaking somewhere.

In practice, this is rarely one dashboard.

It is usually a set of dashboards built for different purposes, plus weekly or monthly reports that give a broader performance overview.

For example:

  • A traffic dashboard for acquisition and channel quality;
  • A conversion dashboard for funnel performance;
  • A product dashboard for merchandising decisions;
  • A retention dashboard for repeat customer behavior.

And then a higher-level report that connects all of it.

The goal is not to monitor everything every day.

The goal is to have the right reports in place, spot trends early, and understand what is changing before it becomes a bigger problem.

Final Thoughts: Metrics That Actually Drive Growth

Not every metric deserves equal attention. Some metrics look good in reports but do very little to help make decisions. The useful ones are the metrics that help explain what is changing and what needs action.

That is why I do not look at metrics in isolation. Traffic, revenue, conversion, behavior, retention, and product performance all connect. Looking at them together gives a much clearer picture of what is actually happening.

The goal of eCommerce analytics is not to collect more numbers. The goal is to understand the business well enough to make better decisions, fix problems earlier, and find growth opportunities before they become obvious.

Alla Vovnenko on May 4, 2026 Analytics
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Alla Vovnenko

eCommerce Mechanic

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This blog is based on my experience building and working on eCommerce websites, from scratch to revenue-generating stores. I work across everything eCommerce involves, but especially love analytics, SEO, and conversion optimization, and have a soft spot for on-site search.

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