Friday, November 30, 2012

Breaking Google Analytics Down for Success


Google Analytics gives a meticulous view of how users interact with your website. The information and analysis offered is exhaustive. At first glance it may actually seem overly analytical – Internet TMI in its purest form! But once you break down the scrutiny into bite-sized nuggets, Google Analytics tells you everything you’ll ever need to know about your users and your website. Panning for gold isn’t easy either, but the payoff is handsome.

To think about Google Analytics, you should first consider the 5 broad categories of information it provides. Some of the categories may be more useful than others, in terms of how you use the information. Some website owners will make great use of some of the information and no use of other information. Owners of large sites would be remiss not to use as much of the analytical information as possible. Smaller site owners will want to pick and choose initially while digging deeper into the analytics as they better understand what’s available.

Audience reveals who is using your website (demographical information) and how they interact with the site (site navigation and behavior inside the site). It also shows which computer types, networks, and operating systems they use. Knowing your customer is indeed one of the most important

Advertising helps you understand how Google AdWords impacts your site traffic. This particular category may be of no use whatsoever if you don’t advertise with Google. If you do, this information and analysis is supremely important. It’s indispensible really and will help guide your budget and determine your ROI.

Traffic Sources gives valuable analysis of how users find your website and where they are coming from (meaning which websites they are referred from). When you understand why and how users find your site, it helps you better define your marketing goals and objectives. It’s especially good analysis for marketing managers looking to understand how campaigns are working and for SEM managers looking to optimize SEM campaigns.

Content gives the story behind your website. It answers the critical questions: What are your visitors reading on your website? Which web pages do they prefer to land on, and stay on? Google Analytics can tell you which content is essential and which content should be re-written, re-designed, or re-directed. This information is of particular interest to content specialists, writers, editors, and designers looking to understand what is the most engaging material on the website.

Conversions is like Audience in that the information is only as useful as you make it. This category has to be set-up by the user. It’s entirely custom in that way. If you leverage this category you can draw-up predetermined goals (sign-ups, sales, etc.) and analyze the data. It is, of course, particularly useful if your site engaged in ecommerce.

Again, Advertising and Conversions are beyond the initial “stepping stones” of Google Analytics. It’s probably important to understand the other categories before investing too much time (and money) here. So for the purposes of this survey, I’ll focus my efforts where most analytics amateurs start: Audience, Traffic Sources, and Content.

How can Google Analytics help your business understand its audience, the customer? Danny Iny, co-founder and CEO of Firepole Marketing, writes in Forbes magazine that marketing is all about “figuring out who will be the ONE perfect customer for you, and what you need to offer them that they will absolutely adore (Wagner, 2012).” If that’s true – and I believe it is blatantly obvious – then the analytics offered about your audience is pure gold. Using this analysis, you can find reports that give you demographical information and, more importantly, new and returning visitor information. You can use this information to mold your product and marketing.

Imagine for a moment that you own an ice cream store. Then imagine if, by some magic, each and every customer who walks in your door has a sticky note on his/her head telling you who they are and where they live, their favorite flavor of ice cream, and how often they visit your store. That would be a business owner’s dream!

Well that’s exactly the kind of information Audience Reports give you. The report entitled New vs. Returning is particularly useful. It breaks down your visitors between those who visited your site for the very first time and those who’ve already visited your site and are returning. For most businesses, the goal is to get customers to return. So if and when you can use this report to increase returning visitors, to that extent this is a highly useful analytical tool.

The reports available in Traffic Sources are also very helpful. They show you how well your marketing efforts are working. To fully understand these reports, it’s important to grasp the 3 types of traffic sources Google monitors: Direct traffic, referring traffic, and search engine traffic:
Direct traffic represents those visitors who “arrive directly and immediately on your site” bypassing other websites or referrals. If you see a lot of direct traffic in your report, you have a strong brand and/or a strong offline marketing program.
Referring site traffic counts visitors that “click a link on another site and land on your site.” Referral traffic is indicative of online marketing success and/or strong social media.
Search engine traffic comes from visitors clicking on links on a search results page for any search engine – either organic or paid. If you see strong search engine traffic in your reports, this means you either have good SEO or good SEM – or a combination of both (Roggio, 2011).
Finally, the reports made available under Content are a treasure trove of information. I find the “content drilldown” reports to be particularly useful to marketers. This report shows you the pages of your website but grouped into your sub folders, rather than jumbled up with all your other pages. It makes it easier to review pages in one section. It also shows you how many visits you’ve had in a total section per time period (Mace, 2012). This information can be fabulously useful! If you notice trends and patterns in your total visits per page, this tells you what readers “like” the most. This may help you develop better products or better ways to market your products online. This is probably my favorite report in Google Analytics.
Google Analytics can be overwhelming. But if you focus your attention on singular reports, understand them over time, you can build an arsenal of tools that will help you grow your site and better your marketing.
Sources:

Iny, Danny. Forbes.com. July 31, 2012. Small Business + Small Marketing = Really Big   Losses. Retrieved November 26, 2012: http://www.forbes.com/sites/ericwagner/2012/07/31/small-business-small-marketing-really-big-losses/

Roggio, Armondo. PracticalEcommerce.com. July 18, 2011. Understanding Traffic Sources in Google Analytics. Retrieved November 26, 2012: http://www.practicalecommerce.com/articles/2916-Understanding-Traffic-Sources-in-Google-Analytics

Mace, Emily. VerticalLeap.com. August 16, 2012. Google Analytics Unraveled: Content Drilldown. Retrieved November 26, 2012: http://www.verticalleap.co.uk/blog/google-analytics-unravelled-content-drilldown/




1 comment:

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