How To Use Website Analytics
Ok, now that you have a website what is it doing for your business?
In today's global world, it's a widely-accepted fact that if you have a business card you should probably have a website. It doesn't matter what your company is selling - a website, however modest, has become a standard for credibility and first impressions.
So the real question is "what is your website doing for your business"? Most people get a certain "deer in the headlights" look in their eyes when I ask this question. To be fair, it's not a question we're used to hearing. But that's not all that's going on here.
Traditional advertising mediums - print, TV, radio, etc. are notoriously difficult to track. Sure, you'll know how often the phone is ringing or how many people come in with a coupon clipped from the Sunday paper, but what you don't know is how many people saw/heard your ad and whether they were interested, oblivious or, worse, annoyed.
Business owners are used to this. We all know we need to advertise - it's a necessary cost of doing business - so we buy that half-page ad in the Yellow Pages or the local newspaper, we sponsor an event or a little league team, we have a radio commercial written and we hope for the best. This has been a given in marketing since the beginning. 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 Internet marketing 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.
When reviewing your analytics data look at the behavior and action metrics. For example, if the bounce rate of your website or a certain web page has a 75% rate, then what 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.
Your website is more than a brochure or business card. 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.
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.
Once again,
Good luck on your Search Engine Marketing Adventures.
Regards,
Matt - Your SEM Guro for the day............
Rioforma.com
In today's global world, it's a widely-accepted fact that if you have a business card you should probably have a website. It doesn't matter what your company is selling - a website, however modest, has become a standard for credibility and first impressions.
So the real question is "what is your website doing for your business"? Most people get a certain "deer in the headlights" look in their eyes when I ask this question. To be fair, it's not a question we're used to hearing. But that's not all that's going on here.
Traditional advertising mediums - print, TV, radio, etc. are notoriously difficult to track. Sure, you'll know how often the phone is ringing or how many people come in with a coupon clipped from the Sunday paper, but what you don't know is how many people saw/heard your ad and whether they were interested, oblivious or, worse, annoyed.
Business owners are used to this. We all know we need to advertise - it's a necessary cost of doing business - so we buy that half-page ad in the Yellow Pages or the local newspaper, we sponsor an event or a little league team, we have a radio commercial written and we hope for the best. This has been a given in marketing since the beginning. 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 Internet marketing 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.
When reviewing your analytics data look at the behavior and action metrics. For example, if the bounce rate of your website or a certain web page has a 75% rate, then what 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.
Your website is more than a brochure or business card. 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.
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.
Once again,
Good luck on your Search Engine Marketing Adventures.
Regards,
Matt - Your SEM Guro for the day............
Rioforma.com











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.
mpcoc
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this is really powerful tools in SEO optimization
thank you
ihackr
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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 .
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Google analytics is very helpful in checking your site stat. It has a good presentation of your traffic.
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A very crucial and helpful information regarding the Website Analytics. Using this analytics can certainly help us to gain the attention over the internet, and can help you gain some desired customers. But only this wont help you gain a good position over the search engines. You need to implement some other marketing strategies to popularize the website. And for optimizing and marketing websites, SEO marketing companies may be considered as a boon to those websites. They help you ameliorate your business publicity by appropriate Search Engine Optimization Company. . Using the services of an experienced SEO company will give you exactly the results you need. SEO companies are trained to generate a steady continuous flow of quality traffic in order to achieve more revenue for your business. This is one of those factors that many of the people are ignorant of. I am a physicist, and run my own clinic. Marketing was a part that generally doctors are unaware of. I made one website which I though would help me ameliorate my business, but it doesn’t make a great difference as it was far not found on search engines. Then, I came across a website designing and marketing company named as www.medicalwebexperts.com, with which I had a contract for advertising and optimizing my website to make it google-friendly. The main problem with my website was found to be improper website coding, which resisted my website to be listed in top most search. The company did well in reconstructing my website, making it popular using SEO techniques. The benefits are slowly coming into action. Website helped me getting a good sum of patients at my doorstep. Web marketing really helped my business work, making my investments in SEO worthy.
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Nice post!
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Thank you very much for this tools! Very interesting article!
Thanks!
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