Google Analytics 4 is the replacement for Universal Analytics (Google Analytics 3). GA4 is a new product designed to better track user activity in a changing digital environment. Although it may sound like a mere upgrade, it really is an entirely new product that will require major adjustments.
Universal Analytics (UA) was designed when smartphones were few and cookies were plentiful. Its data model was tied to “sessions,” which are periods of use by a single user on a single device. This no longer gives an accurate picture of how users are interacting with websites. GA4 is designed to track user interactions more granularly, and tie those interactions to sessions as well as individual users – even if they use multiple devices. GA4 is capable of doing this while still following current and planned data privacy legislation.
Universal Analytics (UA) properties will stop processing data on July 1, 2023. Google has stated that access to historical data in UA will remain at least until January 1, 2024.
The differences are too numerous to list in a single article, but some key points are:
No. Comparing UA to GA4 is like comparing apples to oranges. While there is some overlap, most metrics and dimensions have changed slightly or entirely.
Right now! Since UA and GA4 do not have the same data structures, direct historical comparisons are not possible between the two without significant manual work. Since UA will stop processing new data on July 1, 2023, your GA4 properties will either have to inaccurately compare historical data to UA or have enough historical data on their own beyond that date. This means GA4 should ideally be set up before July 1, 2022.
If you waited too long to migrate to GA4, first off, don’t beat yourself up – the vast majority of website providers and plugin vendors are behind as well. Several large providers have stated they will not be able to roll-out GA4 compatibility until March 2023. This doesn’t mean that you’re helpless! If you already have a Universal Analytics account and use Google Tag Manager, it shouldn’t take more than an afternoon to create a GA4 property and get it started collecting data. Although you won’t be able to track every interaction, you can start tracking the important ones right now. It will be a pain comparing data between UA and GA4 until your GA4 properties have enough historical data on their own, but the faster you get GA4 up and running, the less of a pain it will be!