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What replaces it now is what we call an “engaged session,” and by default, that is a much more precise way to measure how users interact with your website or app. A session is considered engaged when any of the following actions are taken by the user: Keeping your website or app open in the foreground for 10 seconds. Completing an event marked as a conversion on your website/app. Viewing two or more pages or screens. Engagement rate is a new metric that shows the percentage of sessions that were engaged sessions.
GA4’s bounce rate is just the inverse of the Engagement rate. In addition, new metrics have emerged to help understand your audience engagement better. Engaged Sessions Per User: This is the average number of sessions each user engages in. Average Algeria WhatsApp Number Engagement Time: stays in the foreground of the user’s browser or mobile phone. These metrics make it much easier for us to understand our website performance and ensure we’re targeting and engaging successfully with our audience. What we didn’t like: views are gone The one thing that disappointed us and really confused us was that GA4 removed views.

There are no views anymore, and we don’t have any straightforward alternative to precisely what the Universal Analytics views feature does in GA4. There are only two data filter options at the Property level and these only cover internal traffic and developer traffic. We used to rely a lot on views on Universal Analytics, having different views for different regions, business separations, domains, or segments of our website, and the blog had its view, too. GA4 removed views without any actual replacement. Views do not exist today in GA4 and it is unclear if they will ever exist exactly as we know them in Universal.
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