GA4 Engagement Analysis: Pages That Drive Revenue

By MCP Analytics Team | March 10, 2026

Overview: What You'll Learn

If you're relying on GA4's default reports to understand which pages matter most to your business, you're looking at the wrong numbers. Pageviews tell you what's popular, but they don't tell you what's valuable.

In this tutorial, I'll walk you through how to identify the pages that actually drive engagement, conversions, and revenue. We'll go beyond vanity metrics and build an analysis that answers the question: "Which content should I invest more in?"

By the end of this guide, you'll have a clear ranking of your pages by their true business value—not just their traffic volume.

Why GA4's Default Reports Miss the Point

Let me walk you through this step by step. When you open GA4's Pages and Screens report, you see something like this:

The default sort is by pageviews. So naturally, you think: "Our cat photos are crushing it! Let's make more of those."

But here's what the default report doesn't show you:

High traffic doesn't mean high value. Before we build a model or make decisions, let's just look at the data—the right data.

What You'll Build: Engagement Rate + Conversion by Page

We're going to create an analysis that shows:

  1. Page-level engagement rates – What percentage of visitors actually interact with each page?
  2. Conversion rates by page – Which pages drive your key actions (signups, purchases, downloads)?
  3. Revenue attribution – Which pages contribute to actual revenue?
  4. Traffic source context – Where is your valuable traffic coming from?

The simplest explanation is often the most useful: a page that converts 10% of 1,000 visitors is more valuable than a page that converts 1% of 10,000 visitors.

Prerequisites

Before we start, make sure you have:

Note: There's no such thing as a dumb question in analytics. If you're not sure whether you have conversion tracking set up, go to Admin → Events in GA4 and look for events marked as conversions. If you don't see any, you'll need to set those up first before this analysis will be meaningful.

Step 1: Export GA4 Page-Level Data

Let me walk you through this step by step. We need to export the right data from GA4.

1.1 Create a New Exploration

  1. Log into your GA4 property
  2. Click Explore in the left sidebar
  3. Click the Blank template to create a new exploration
  4. Name it "Page Engagement Analysis"

1.2 Set Your Date Range

In the Variables panel on the left:

  1. Click the date range selector
  2. Choose Last 30 days (or your preferred period)
  3. Make sure you have enough data—at least 1,000 total pageviews for meaningful patterns

1.3 Add Dimensions

Under Dimensions, click the + button and add:

1.4 Add Metrics

Under Metrics, click the + button and add these critical metrics:

What is an "engaged session"? In GA4, a session is considered "engaged" if it lasts longer than 10 seconds, has a conversion event, or has 2+ page views. It's a better measure of real interest than just pageviews.

1.5 Configure Your Table

  1. In the Tab Settings panel, make sure Technique is set to "Free form"
  2. Drag Page path + query string to Rows
  3. Drag all your metrics to Values
  4. Click the Rows per page dropdown and select "500" (to get as much data as possible)

1.6 Export the Data

  1. Click the download icon in the top right (looks like a down arrow)
  2. Select "Download as CSV"
  3. Save the file to your computer as ga4-page-engagement.csv

Your exported CSV should look something like this:

Page path + query string,Views,Users,Engaged sessions,Engagement rate,Conversions,Total revenue
/,15420,8234,6891,44.72%,234,12450.00
/blog/getting-started,8921,6543,5234,58.67%,89,0.00
/pricing,3456,2890,2456,71.06%,456,45600.00
/case-study/acme-corp,1234,987,891,72.21%,123,67800.00

Step 2: Upload to MCP Analytics GA4 Module

Now we're going to analyze this data properly. The MCP Analytics platform will help us see patterns that are hard to spot in spreadsheets.

2.1 Access the Analysis Tool

  1. Go to mcpanalytics.ai/analysis
  2. Log in or create a free account
  3. Click "New Analysis"
  4. Select "GA4 Engagement Analysis" from the template library

2.2 Upload Your Data

  1. Click "Upload Data"
  2. Select your ga4-page-engagement.csv file
  3. The system will automatically detect your columns
  4. Verify the mapping:
    • Page dimension → Page path column
    • Engagement metrics → Views, Users, Engaged sessions, etc.
    • Conversion metrics → Conversions, Revenue
  5. Click "Start Analysis"
Data Privacy Note: Your data is processed securely and never shared with third parties. You can delete your analysis at any time.

2.3 Wait for Processing

The platform will automatically:

This usually takes 30-60 seconds for typical website data (100-500 pages).

Step 3: View Your Page Engagement Rankings

Once processing is complete, you'll see your analysis dashboard. Let's look at what it shows you.

3.1 The Value Quadrant View

The first visualization shows four quadrants:

Quadrant Traffic Engagement/Conversion What It Means
Stars High High Your best content—protect and promote these
Hidden Gems Low High Great content that needs more visibility
Traffic Traps High Low Popular but not valuable—needs optimization
Low Priority Low Low Consider removing or completely revamping

3.2 Pages Ranked by Business Value

The second view shows your pages sorted by a composite score that considers:

This ranking tells you where to focus your efforts. The top 20% of pages often drive 80% of your results—this is where we apply Pareto analysis principles to identify your most impactful content.

3.3 Statistical Confidence Indicators

Each page gets a confidence rating:

Understanding statistical significance: A page with 5 conversions out of 10 visits shows a 50% conversion rate, but we can't trust that number—it's too small a sample. A page with 500 conversions out of 1,000 visits also shows 50%, but this is reliable. The platform uses statistical significance testing to help you focus on patterns that are real, not random noise.

Step 4: Interpreting Results—High Traffic ≠ High Value

Now comes the important part: understanding what the data is telling you. Let's look at some real patterns I see over and over again.

4.1 The Traffic Trap Pattern

You'll often find pages like this:

Page: /blog/10-social-media-tips
Views: 25,000
Engagement Rate: 18%
Conversions: 12
Revenue: $0

What this tells us: This page ranks #1 for traffic, but people aren't engaging. They're clicking, skimming, and leaving. It's not moving your business forward.

Why this happens: Often these are pages optimized for SEO clicks rather than user value. The headline promises more than the content delivers, or the content doesn't connect to your business goals.

4.2 The Hidden Gem Pattern

Then you'll find pages like this:

Page: /guides/enterprise-implementation
Views: 890
Engagement Rate: 87%
Conversions: 234
Revenue: $125,000

What this tells us: This page ranks #47 by traffic, but it's actually your most valuable content. People who find it are highly engaged and convert at a 26% rate.

Why this happens: This content speaks directly to your ideal customer's needs. It just needs more visibility.

4.3 Understanding Engagement Rate

Before we build a model or make decisions, let's understand what "good" looks like:

Context matters: a blog post with 40% engagement might be normal, but a product page with 40% engagement is concerning—people should be highly engaged with your product.

4.4 Understanding Conversion Rates

Conversion rates vary wildly by page type and industry. Here's what I typically see:

Page Type Typical Conversion Rate What "Good" Looks Like
Blog posts 0.5-2% Above 2%
Landing pages 2-5% Above 5%
Product pages 1-3% Above 3%
Case studies 5-15% Above 10%
Pricing pages 10-30% Above 20%

Don't compare your blog post conversion rate to your pricing page conversion rate—they serve different purposes in your funnel.

Step 5: Action Items—Double Down on High-Converting Pages

Data without action is just numbers. Here's what to do with your insights.

5.1 For Your "Star" Pages (High Traffic, High Value)

Strategy: Protect and amplify

  1. Never break these pages. Before you redesign your site or change your URL structure, protect these URLs. Set up monitoring to alert you if traffic drops.
  2. Build more like them. What makes these pages work? Is it the topic? The format? The depth? Create similar content.
  3. Maximize their reach. These pages deserve more promotion—email campaigns, social media, paid advertising. They've proven they convert.
  4. Optimize the conversion path. These pages are already working. Small improvements to the call-to-action or form can multiply results.

5.2 For Your "Hidden Gem" Pages (Low Traffic, High Value)

Strategy: Increase visibility

  1. Improve internal linking. Link to these pages from your high-traffic pages. Add them to your navigation if they're truly valuable.
  2. Boost SEO. Update titles, meta descriptions, and content to rank for relevant keywords. These pages have proven they convert—they just need more visitors.
  3. Promote actively. Feature them in newsletters, social media, and paid campaigns. The ROI will be high.
  4. Study why they work. What makes visitors engage and convert? Apply those lessons to other content.

5.3 For Your "Traffic Trap" Pages (High Traffic, Low Value)

Strategy: Fix or redirect

  1. Audit the content quality. Does it deliver on the promise of the headline? Is it genuinely useful?
  2. Strengthen the connection to your business. Add relevant calls-to-action, link to product pages, or explain how your service solves the problem discussed.
  3. Improve the content depth. Thin content gets bounces. Make it comprehensive and valuable.
  4. Consider the visitor intent. Maybe these visitors aren't your target audience. That's okay—but then you're wasting time optimizing for the wrong traffic.

5.4 For Your "Low Priority" Pages (Low Traffic, Low Value)

Strategy: Delete, redirect, or completely revamp

  1. Ask: Does this page need to exist? If it's not driving traffic or value, it's cluttering your site.
  2. Consolidate similar pages. Multiple weak pages on the same topic should become one strong page.
  3. 301 redirect to better content. If you're removing pages, redirect them to related content that actually works.
  4. Free up your resources. Stop maintaining pages that don't contribute. Focus on what works.

Bonus: Compare Traffic Sources by Page Performance

If you included "First user source/medium" in your export, you can go deeper: which traffic sources send visitors who actually engage and convert?

6.1 Why This Matters

Not all traffic is equal. You might find:

6.2 How to Analyze This

In MCP Analytics, you can filter your page analysis by traffic source:

  1. Click the "Filter by Source" dropdown
  2. Select a traffic source (e.g., "google / organic")
  3. See which pages perform best for that specific source

You might discover that your blog posts convert well from organic search but poorly from social media. That tells you where to focus your promotion efforts for each piece of content.

6.3 Source-Specific Insights

Look for patterns like:

This is similar to how we use ensemble methods in analytics—combining multiple signals (page quality + traffic source) gives you better predictions than either alone.

Ready to Find Your High-Value Pages?

Stop guessing which content matters. Upload your GA4 data to MCP Analytics and see exactly which pages drive engagement, conversions, and revenue.

Start Your Free Analysis →

Verification: How to Know It Worked

You'll know your analysis is working when:

  1. You see clear patterns. Your pages should cluster into the four quadrants—stars, hidden gems, traffic traps, and low priority. If everything looks the same, you might need more data or clearer conversion tracking.
  2. The rankings surprise you. If your highest-traffic pages are also your highest-value pages, you're either very lucky or your conversion tracking isn't working. Usually, you'll discover that some low-traffic pages are your real stars.
  3. You can articulate clear next steps. "We need to promote the /enterprise-guide page more aggressively" is better than "we need more traffic."
  4. Your team makes different decisions. Instead of writing more content like your high-traffic blog posts, you might decide to create more content like your high-converting case studies.
Expected Output Example: After running this analysis, a typical SaaS company might discover that their highest-traffic blog post (10,000 views/month) converts at 0.3%, while a technical guide (800 views/month) converts at 12%. That one insight—promoting the technical guide more heavily—could generate 10x more leads without creating any new content.

Troubleshooting: Common Issues

There's no such thing as a dumb question in analytics. Here are the most common issues people encounter.

Issue 1: "My conversion rates are all 0%"

Cause: Conversions aren't properly configured in GA4.

Fix:

  1. Go to Admin → Events in GA4
  2. Find events you want to track (form_submit, purchase, sign_up, etc.)
  3. Toggle "Mark as conversion" for relevant events
  4. Wait 24-48 hours for data to accumulate
  5. Re-export and re-run your analysis

Issue 2: "All my pages look equally good/bad"

Cause: Not enough data, or not enough variance in your content.

Fix:

  1. Extend your date range to 60 or 90 days
  2. Make sure you have at least 1,000 total pageviews in your dataset
  3. Check that you're analyzing pages with different purposes (blog posts, product pages, case studies, etc.)

Issue 3: "My homepage dominates everything"

Cause: This is normal—homepages get the most traffic but often aren't the most valuable pages per visitor.

Fix:

  1. Look at engagement rate and conversion rate, not just total volume
  2. Filter out the homepage to see which interior pages are performing best
  3. The homepage should be a gateway to your valuable content, not the destination itself

Issue 4: "I don't have revenue data"

Cause: E-commerce tracking isn't set up, or you run a non-transactional business.

Fix:

  1. If you have e-commerce, set up GA4 e-commerce tracking
  2. If you don't have e-commerce, focus on engagement rate and conversion events (lead forms, sign-ups, downloads)
  3. Not every business has direct revenue tracking—conversions are your key metric instead

Issue 5: "The numbers don't match what I see in GA4"

Cause: GA4 applies different filters and sampling in different views.

Fix:

  1. Make sure your date ranges match exactly
  2. Check if you have filters applied in GA4 (like excluding internal traffic)
  3. Small differences (1-2%) are normal due to data processing delays
  4. If differences are large (>10%), verify you're looking at the same metrics

Issue 6: "I have too many pages to analyze"

Cause: Large sites with thousands of pages can be overwhelming.

Fix:

  1. Focus on pages with at least 100 views in your date range
  2. Group similar pages (e.g., all blog posts, all product pages) and analyze by category first
  3. Use page path filters in GA4 to export specific sections of your site
  4. Start with your top 100 pages by traffic—that's where most impact lives

Next Steps: Where to Go From Here

You now have a repeatable process for identifying your most valuable content. Here's how to build on this foundation:

Make This a Monthly Habit

Run this analysis monthly to spot trends:

Go Deeper with A/B Testing

Once you know which pages matter, optimize them systematically. Test different headlines, calls-to-action, and content structures to improve engagement and conversion rates. Learn more about proper A/B testing methodology to ensure your improvements are real.

Connect to Other Data Sources

Combine GA4 data with:

Share with Your Team

This analysis is most powerful when it changes how your team thinks:

Learn More Analytical Techniques

If you found this analysis valuable, you might enjoy learning about:

Final Thoughts

Before we build a model or make decisions, let's just look at the data. That's what we've done here. We've moved beyond vanity metrics (pageviews) to look at what actually matters: engagement, conversions, and revenue.

The greatest value of a picture is when it forces us to notice what we never expected to see. You might have expected your highest-traffic pages to be your most valuable. The data probably told you something different.

That's the beginning of understanding. Now you know where to focus. You know which pages to promote, which to optimize, and which to stop wasting time on.

Let me walk you through this one more time: export your GA4 data, upload it to MCP Analytics, and see which pages actually drive your business forward. Then take action on what you learn.

There's no such thing as a dumb question in analytics—if you get stuck or want to discuss your results, reach out. We're here to help you become a more confident data thinker.