Editing Google Analytics User Access–When It’s Not Your Website

A friend of mine was considering buying a website and asked my opinion on it. After checking to see that the site did in fact have Google Analytics installed (just click your right mouse button and look for ‘view page source’), I told him to ask the seller to add me to their Google Analytics account.

In case you aren’t aware, you can share read-only access to your Analytics account stats for any website in your account.

I looked at the site, gave my friend a thumbs-down (way too little traffic for the asking price!) and then attempted to remove myself as a user, so that the site in question would no longer show in the list of sites in my own Analytics account.

After granting someone read-only access to the Google Analytics stats for a website you own, removing their access is simple enough, but I just spent too long looking for a way to remove someone else’s website from my Analytics account so that it  would no longer show in the list of sites in my Analytics admin.

A little Googling didn’t help me, even searching more recent results, so let’s see if I can help someone else here without getting too convoluted in my explanation.

Go into your Google Analytics account and–on the desktop dashboard–look for the gear icon in the far left bottom corner. In the upper left hand corner in the pulldown menu find the website you want to remove from the list of websites in your admin area–the site in the case owed by someone else.

Now, simply click on “User Management” in the Account column:

google analytics user access

Assuming you do not own the site you have selected, you will now see the following. Click the blue “Remove myself from this account” button and you are done!

User management remove myself from this account

Fake Word Generator

Marc Liyanage has a neat web-based tool that allows you to Create Fake Words. This tool is handy when looking for a unique Top-Level Domain (like I did with braxio.com).  The need for new business names is on the rise because nowadays many “businesses” are little more than websites that fulfill a need in one niche or another. Here’s an enormous problem though: too many people spend weeks (or even months!) searching for that “perfect” catchy business name. A fake word generator helps you come up with a catchy brandable name for your idea so that you can quickly move on to the hard stuff, which is getting the business actually going!

It’s not unusual for a single person to need a name for their one-person service business; freelancers and self-employed consultants seem to be rising quickly in numbers since the Internet has made it so easy for people to market their services online. In any case it’s nice to know that there is a tool that can very easily generate fake words that we can then register as domains if they’re available, and get on with the business of running our business.

Most dictionary words have already been registered, so using a fake word generator can be a big help!