: Google Analytics reporting 5% of users using IE on one site. Most other sites I track are still around 40%. What gives? I have Google Analytics (GA) tracking set up for a number of websites,
I have Google Analytics (GA) tracking set up for a number of websites, many I help friends with, did as consulting in the past, etc, and the one for the company I am working with now.
In this case, GA is reporting only about 5% of users using IE for my current site, where others are seeing around 40%.
The site works OK in IE, but it hasn't been our focus, since it's new and we're trying to do HTML 5 except where it really breaks things badly.
I could understand why a visitor might leave the site -- some fancier navigation and forms are kind of lame with IE8 or less (fine with IE9). But I am looking at pure visits.
I looked only at new visits -- people who have never seen the site before, and still a very small percentage of IE. I segmented out for just desktop users. I removed one large source of ad traffic. But all the numbers show the same thing -- low (5%) and falling IE usage over time. The site is public and useful for normal people, not geeks. We get a significant volume -- more than several thousand visits a day. And we have confirmed generally that GA is tracking usage approximately correctly by comparing to other tracking tools.
I am mystified. Any theories welcomed!
Tom
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I believe the primary cause was an issue with our ads from StumbleUpon. While this doesn't explain everything (since we had low percentage usage before), it seems a likely cause, since a lot of our traffic is from them.
One of our fine engineers found this link, which claims that IE traffic from StumbleUpon is very, very low. insights.chitika.com/2011/stumbleupon-com-where-internet-explorer-goes-to-die/
And one of the excellent folks at StumbleUpon shared this document which explains why. www.stumbleupon.com/pd-help/track-discrepancies/ Due to StumbleUpon's implementation, third party cookies are passed around, and IE's default setting for 3rd party cookies blocks this. We can fix that by implementing special privacy policy server settings.
Hopefully this helps others avoid excessive head-scratching.
As always, IE is just a great joy, and opportunity to learn new and wonderful things. ;-)
Use IETester to view your website in different versions of Internet Explorer. Verify that they all load properly. If they don't, maybe that's what's hurting stats from some of those versions. If they do, and you really want to dig into this, visit some unique pages for each one (maybe with a made up parameter or something) and check back later in GA to see which of those pages recorded hits.
Have you tried your sites loading in IE 6 ? Most IE users (especially in China) are using IE 6 / IE6-core browsers. I think IE6 has no support on HTML5, therefore they left the site immediately ( or even the browser crashed :P ).
p.s. why do you care about IE user visits?
UPDATE : Like your attitude to treat customers well. If you doubt the results of GA, try installing another analytic framework to verify.
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