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How to Track Your Link in Bio Clicks
How to track link in bio clicks: views vs clicks vs clicks-per-view, referrers, and countries, plus how to use analytics to reorder links and grow.
A bio link is one of the few places where you can see exactly what your audience does with the attention you earned. Someone tapped your profile, landed on your page, and either clicked something or left. Tracking that behavior turns guesswork into a feedback loop, and the loop is where the real gains come from.
You do not need a separate analytics platform or a pile of tracking scripts. mypage.cc has analytics built in, and the public page stays fast because the tracking is first-party and lightweight rather than a third-party tracker bolted on. Here is what to watch and how to act on it.
Views, clicks, and the number that matters most
Three numbers tell the core story.
- Views are how many times your page loaded. This reflects how much traffic your profile and posts are sending. If views are low, the issue is upstream, in your bio link placement or how often you point people to it.
- Clicks are how many times visitors tapped a link or button. This is the action you actually want, so it is the closest thing to a result.
- Clicks-per-view is clicks divided by views, and it is the most useful single metric. It measures how compelling your page is once someone arrives. A page can have high views and still fail if almost no one clicks. A high clicks-per-view means the page is doing its job, and a low one means something on the page is getting in the way.
Watching all three together stops you from drawing the wrong conclusion. Rising views with flat clicks means more people are arriving but the page is not converting them. Steady views with rising clicks means a change you made is working.
Where your visitors come from
mypage.cc also shows referrers and countries.
Referrers tell you which platform or post sent each visitor. If most of your clicks come from one channel, you know where to keep posting. If a channel sends lots of views but few clicks, the audience there may want something different from what your page leads with.
Countries show where your audience actually is, which often surprises people. If a large share comes from a city or region you did not expect, you can tailor your headline, offers, or hours to match. For a local business, this confirms whether your reach is landing where you can serve it.
Reading the page-level picture
Beyond the totals, look at how individual links perform relative to each other. A link with many views but few clicks is a signal, not a failure. Usually it means one of three things: the label is unclear, the link sits in the wrong spot, or the offer is not interesting. Each has a quick fix.
A link near the bottom that still gets clicked is telling you it deserves to move up. A link at the top that nobody taps may be wasting your best real estate. The point is to let the numbers, not your assumptions, decide the order.
Turning numbers into a better page
This is where tracking pays off. A simple, repeatable routine:
- Check clicks-per-view weekly. It is your headline metric. If it drops, something changed and you should look at what.
- Find your weakest top link. If the link in your prime spot underperforms, rewrite its label to be more specific, or swap it for one that earns more clicks elsewhere on the page.
- Promote what works. Move your best-performing link higher. Visitors scan from the top, so the order is one of the most powerful levers you have.
- Match content to referrers. Lead with what the audience from your biggest channel actually wants.
- Cut dead weight. A link that gets views and no clicks over several weeks is clutter. Remove it so the path to your main action stays clear.
Because everything on mypage.cc is reversible and autosaves, you can make these changes freely and watch the effect. Treat the page as something you tune rather than something you finish.
Track without slowing the page down
It is worth saying why the built-in approach matters. Most third-party analytics tools add scripts that slow your page, and a slow bio link loses people before they ever click, which corrupts the very data you are trying to collect. mypage.cc keeps public pages near-zero JavaScript and records events first-party, so you get the insight without the speed tax. There are no third-party trackers on public pages, which is better for your visitors and for your numbers.
On the Pro tier the analytics go further, with referrer breakdowns, per-link click-through rates, longer history, and more, but the core views, clicks, clicks-per-view, referrers, and countries are there to act on from the start.
Start measuring today
You cannot improve what you cannot see. Once your page has analytics, every decision about labels, order, and content stops being a guess. For more on what to put on the page in the first place, see our link in bio best practices, and if you are comparing tools, our Linktree alternative page covers how the analytics stack up.
Claim mypage.cc/yourname, let the AI draft a first version from one sentence, and you will have a real page with built-in analytics live in about two minutes. Start at mypage.cc.