If you're building your first e-commerce store, you might think that getting a lot of traffic to your site is always good. While traffic is usually good, it helps if you can figure out whether your traffic is actually buying. When you send e-commerce data to Google Analytics, you can figure out exactly which traffic is buying. You could see that users from Facebook typically spend $5–10 whereas users who come from your newsletter spend $50–100. Now that you have the numbers, you can make more informed decisions.
This is one of the steps that I recommend for every single e-commerce store. Even if you don't plan on using the data, it will only take a few minutes to set up. Moreover, if you decide you want to use the data down the line, you will have a huge backlog of data.
You should already have a free Google Analytics account set up for your website. You should also be using a plugin to send your non-e-commerce traffic data to Google Analytics. A good plugin to do that is Google Analytics by Yoast.
The ability to track Google Analytics data used to be included in WooCommerce, until WooCommerce 2.1. At that point, the functionality was put into a free plugin for the ease of updating both WooCommerce and the Google Analytics Integration plugin. We need to install that plugin and then configure a few settings.
WooCommerce Google Analytics Integration
plugin.There is one setting we need to configure in your Google Analytics account. You need to enable E-Commerce tracking. It should take a few clicks to enable the setting. You can follow their official instructions at https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/1009612?hl=en.
Alright, we've got the plugin installed—your Google Analytics account is configured and ready. We just need to check a few boxes to send the right data to Google Analytics.
If this is the only integration you've added, then Google Analytics Integration will pop up. If you've added multiple integrations, you'll have to click on Google Analytics.
With Universal Analytics, there's a new feature called Enhanced E-Commerce, which gives you more data you can use. This feature is on the roadmap for the Google Analytics plugin and should be completed in early 2015. Once that feature is available, you should absolutely use it to track as much data as possible.
There is a WooCommerce Google Analytics Pro plugin, which is currently in development. It does the same thing but uses advanced server-side tracking to send the data to Google Analytics. This can be useful for getting more accurate data. From what was heard of the reports at the time of this writing, this plugin should be released by mid-2015.