Archive for December, 2008
Grow Your Business by tracking … Track Everything.
Traditional advertising mediums like print, TV, radio, etc are notoriously difficult to track. You cannot track how many people saw/heard your ad and whether they were interested, oblivious or, worse, annoyed.
But the web, and analytics, changed the game. So how should you be using your web analytics to grow your audience, and your business, online?
Track Everything
With web analytics on your site you can track:
Where your traffic is coming from by
– The referring website and page
– The search engine and keyword used
Your website visitors by
– Their location
– Their operating system, browser and monitor resolution
– Their network
Visitor behavior and actions by
– Duration of visit (time on site)
– Pages per visit (number of pages viewed)
– Bounce rate (percentage of users who viewed only one page before leaving)
– Conversion rate (percentage of users who completed a preset task)
If you’re planning on doing any kind of web marketing, be it through search engines, email or advertising on other websites, information on your past and current traffic is crucial. Not to mention you’ll want analytics in place so you can properly track the new traffic your promotions will, hopefully, bring in.
Tie Your Traffic Sources to Your Users’ Actions
When looking at your analytics data the behavior and action metrics mean little by themselves. If the bounce rate of your site overall is 75%, what does that tell you? Well, this is a pretty high bounce rate – you should at least be shooting to have a bounce rate lower than 50%. But does this tell you exactly what is wrong?
Likewise, if you have secured advertising or a listing on another website, the number of visits coming in from that site only gives you part of the picture.
Tying your bounce rate to a specific traffic source, on the other hand, can tell you a lot.
If a given traffic source is generating a bounce rate of 85% or more, for example, this indicates that users are not being satisfied. There are a few possibilities as to why:
The users may not be well-qualified – or the site where you are listed or advertising might not have the best audience for your content/offer.
The listing/ad may promise something that the entry page does not live up to (or, at least, the promise is difficult to locate once the user arrives at your site).
Your site is simply not usable, is unattractive or unprofessional, causing users to leave immediately (and most don’t come back)
Your users are not connecting with your content/offer.
There are other possibilities, but you’ll want to find the most likely answer here – and try to fix it. Then, using the same metrics (traffic source + bounce rate), you can see whether things improve moving forward.
Using metrics like these you can also get a sense of which advertisements are bringing you a return on your investment and which aren’t. With goal tracking in Google Analytics, for example, a conversion rate is added to just about every traffic metric, including referring websites. If you’re finding that a website is sending you plenty of traffic but none of it is converting, re-examine the referring website’s audience, how your site is being presented and the user’s experience when they click through.
The Point
Your website is more than a brochure. It’s an interactive tool for your users. The only true way to find out how they’re using it (or not using it) is to get web analytics set up properly on your website (including setting goal points to track conversions).
And the best way to improve your website in the aim of building your business is to use the information your web analytics give you.
If you aren’t tracking everything, taking time on a regular basis to understand what the data reveals about your users and adjusting your efforts based on this information, you’re missing an opportunity to optimize your advertising and get a better return on your budget.
Add comment December 25, 2008