After Alphabet (GOOG -1.96%) (GOOGL -1.97%) overtook Apple on Tuesday as the most valuable publicly traded company following the online search giant's better-than-expected results, investors are digesting all of the new information the company shared with investors.

Here's a look at seven impressive metrics from the report that may be behind the market's increased confidence in the company.

1. Revenue increased by 18% compared to the year-ago quarter. This is an acceleration from the 15% year-over-year revenue growth the company reported in the fourth quarter of 2014.

Further highlighting the strength of Alphabet's overall business, revenue growth was 24% in constant currency.

2. Google sites revenue was up 20% year over year. Sequentially, it was up 14%. This strong growth validates the health of Alphabet's core business, as its Google sites segment represents the lion's share of its overall revenue and operating profits.

The key driver for this important segment? "[S]ubstantial strength in mobile search," explained Google CFO Ruth Porat during Alphabet's fourth-quarter earnings call.

3. Paid clicks on Google sites soared 40%. This huge jump in paid clicks, which the company defines as the number of clicks advertising partners paid Google for, was driven primarily by the impact of YouTube's successful TrueView ad product.

Notably, the TrueView product was also a primary reason for the 16% year-over-year decline in cost-per-click, or the average amount paid per by advertising partners to Google per click, for Google sites. But the outsized gain in paid clicks was well worth the slight decline in cost-per-click, helping drive significant growth in Google sites' overall revenue.

Aggregate year-over-year percentage changes in paid click and cost-per-click across both Google websites and Google network members' websites was an increase of 31% and a decrease of 13%, respectively.

4. Six of Alphabet's consumer products have over one billion monthly active users. Those products are Search, Android, Maps, Chrome, YouTube, and Google Play. So, Facebook isn't the only company crushing it when it comes to users.

5. Time people spent watching YouTube in the living room more than doubled in 2015. Doubt no more: YouTube's addressable market now unequivocally includes cable network customers -- not just other online streaming services.

Image source: YouTube.

6. YouTube users watch hundreds of millions of hours of video everyday. This is likely well ahead of Facebook's recently reported metric on daily viewing hours of "more than 100 million." While YouTube's lead over Facebook on daily viewing hours isn't surprising, it's good to see that the lead is still probably significant.

7. Total small and medium-sized businesses advertising on YouTube doubled during the past two years. "Brands turn to YouTube to inspire and engage potential customers," said Google CEO Sundar Pichai during the Q4 call, "And it is brands of all sizes."

Overall, the market definitely has reasons to be optimistic about Alphabet's business. Impressive revenue growth and healthy user platforms suggest the company is firing on all cylinders.