I thought the hard part was creating products and getting them listed when I first opened my online store.
Spoiler: that was the easy part. The real challenge? Figuring out what was working — and what wasn’t. I’d look at my sales and wonder, “Why did things spike last Thursday?” or “Why isn’t anyone clicking on this product?”
Turns out, the answers were in the data. I just didn’t know where to look — or what it meant.
If you’re in that same boat, don’t worry. This guide will walk you through e-commerce analytics step-by-step, in plain English. No tech jargon. Just the stuff you actually need to grow your store.
What Are E-Commerce Analytics? (And Why They Matter)
Let’s keep it simple:
E-commerce analytics = data that shows how your store is performing.
It tells you:
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Who’s visiting your store
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What they’re doing while they’re there
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What they’re buying (or not buying)
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And how much money you’re making or losing
Why it matters? Because gut instinct can only get you so far. Numbers don’t lie — and when you learn how to read them, they’ll guide every decision you make, from pricing to product launches.
To learn how to go deeper with tools, check out the 7 best tools for store performance tracking. These can give you a strong foundation without overwhelming you.
The Most Important Metrics (For Beginners)
Here are the first metrics I learned to watch and they made all the difference:
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Traffic: How many people visit your store
→ Use this to track growth and campaign reach -
Conversion Rate: What % of visitors buy
→ Industry average: 1–3%. If you’re lower, your product pages might need work -
Average Order Value (AOV): How much the average customer spends
→ Helps you plan upsells or bundles -
Bounce Rate: How many people leave after seeing just one page
→ High bounce = low engagement or bad landing page -
Cart Abandonment Rate: People who start checkout but don’t finish
→ Fix with reminder emails or better checkout UX -
Refund Rate: Watch this to catch product or expectation issues early
If you’re working on sales recovery, don’t miss this step-by-step guide on how to reduce cart abandonment using data.
Track these monthly and jot notes on what may have caused any spikes or drops.
Where You’ll Find This Data?
Most platforms give you basic stats right out of the box:
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Payhip: Dashboard shows total sales, product performance, traffic sources
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Shopify: Offers deeper analytics and app integrations
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WooCommerce: Use plugins like Metorik or Google Analytics
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Google Analytics: Add a simple tracking code and unlock gold — traffic, conversions, time on page
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Email platforms (Mailchimp, ConvertKit): Track open rates, click-throughs, and sales from campaigns
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Social media insights: Not perfect, but helpful to see what content drives clicks
If you’re using Payhip, here’s a simple guide to tracking sales on Payhip for store analytics and reporting.
You don’t need all of them — just start with one or two.
How to Read and Use Your Data?
Analytics don’t mean much if they sit untouched.
Here’s how I make it manageable:
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Pick two metrics to focus on per month — for example: traffic + conversion rate
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Review weekly or biweekly — not obsessively every day
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Look for patterns, not one-time flukes
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Tie spikes/drops to actions: Did you run a promo? Launch a new product? Change your pricing?
Want to take this further? Learn how to create monthly reports for your store so you can stay consistent and focused.
The goal isn’t perfection, it’s direction.
Beginner Mistakes I Made (So You Don’t Have To)
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Chasing vanity metrics like page views or likes
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Changing too much at once with no way to know what worked
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Ignoring bounce rate until I realized my product page was overwhelming
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Not setting goals, tracking is pointless if you don’t know what you want to improve
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Getting overwhelmed by trying to measure everything. Don’t do that.
Start small. One insight at a time.
Quick Wins to Get Started
Here’s what I recommend for total beginners:
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Set a basic goal: e.g. “Raise conversion rate to 2.5% this month”
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Add UTM tracking links so you know where traffic’s coming from
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Check analytics once a week and write a 3-line summary
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Compare this month to last month: traffic, sales, and top products
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Celebrate small wins, analytics should feel empowering, not stressful
Final Thoughts
If data makes your eyes glaze over, you’re not alone. But once you understand the basics of e-commerce analytics, it becomes one of the most valuable tools in your business.
It helps you see what’s working, stop what’s not, and grow with clarity.
You don’t need a full dashboard or a fancy system. Just start with traffic, conversion rate, and a simple goal. Your numbers are already telling a story, all you have to do is listen.


