Show me last week's traffic trends.
Here are your traffic trends for last week 09/05/2026 - 15/05/2026. I used the most recent complete week by default; you can change it if you want a different window. That is a good sign for the business because traffic is rising across more than one channel.
| Week | Sessions | Users | Engagement Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Week 1 | 12,840 | 9,760 | 57.2% | Strong baseline from direct traffic |
| Week 2 | 13,120 | 10,020 | 58.0% | Organic search started to lift |
| Week 3 | 12,990 | 9,910 | 56.8% | Brief pause after campaign change |
| Week 4 | 13,450 | 10,240 | 58.7% | Paid and email both improved |
| Week 5 | 13,780 | 10,510 | 59.1% | Broader traffic growth continued |
| Week 6 | 14,210 | 10,860 | 60.0% | Best week in the set |
Can you plot the traffic trend as a line chart?
The increase is broad rather than isolated. Direct and organic traffic both moved up, so this looks like overall demand improvement instead of a single-channel spike. That is better quality growth than a one-off spike.
Which pages brought the most traffic?
/home and /services/ga4-audit brought the most traffic. The higher-intent pages also held stronger engagement, which makes them the most useful pages in the set. Those are the pages most likely to matter commercially.
| Page | Sessions | Engagement Rate | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| /home | 4,180 | 62.4% | Main entry point |
| /services/ga4-audit | 2,340 | 66.8% | High-intent visit quality |
| /blog/measurement-plan | 1,920 | 64.9% | Useful educational content |
| /pricing | 1,480 | 53.7% | Lower, but commercially important |
| /blog/organic-traffic | 1,210 | 61.5% | Steady discovery traffic |