Check out our new blog post "3 Quick Steps to Set Up Email Reports in the New Google Analytics" at http://t.co/QFj2lH5L #seo #
Archive for the ‘Google Analytics’ Category
New Google Analytics Features Released
Today, the Google Analytics Blog detailed some of the new features that are out now and coming soon. Here is a rundown of what is included and why you need it.
More Goals
Previously you could only have 4 goals per profile. Now you can have up to twenty, made up of 4 sets of 5 goals. Additionally, you can now setup Engagement Goals which allow you to use Time on Site and Pages per Visit as goal-capturing metrics. This is valuable for many types of sites (like Blogs!) that may consider a Goal accomplished without actually capturing contact information or making a sale.
Advanced Filters
Advanced Filters allow you to create single one-off filters for different reports. Currently, you would need to use the Advanced Segments to accomplish this. Now, filtering top landing pages with over 10 visits and bounce rates over 80% is a snap. This will help you find the pain points in your site and make positive changes. This can also help you identify your top performing keywords and markets.
Automatic and Custom Alerts
If you use Google Alerts then you know how valuable it is to have this kind of automation. These alerts will allow you to track increases in certain activities or to certain pages on your site. They will be very useful when tracking different campaigns and when monitoring the effects of social media. These alerts can be viewed and grouped by date or by type, so you can create clear reports for the things you need to watch, and they can be emailed to you automatically. Alerts are not available yet but should be out by the end of the month.
Other features include Mobile tracking without javascript for older mobile browsers and more custom variables options for tracking members and logged-in status. These take a bit more work to setup but can give you even more details for your more advanced sites.
Many of these features are available today and the rest will be rolled out very soon. Check back with us at theSEMblog for more tips on how to use these great new tools.
SEO Status Report Metrics – SMX West 2009
SMX West 2009 – What are the SEO efforts from a technical standpoint? This session looks at "status report" metrics you can tap into such as link counts, page counts and more to measure value, set benchmarks and determine successes.
Moderator: Danny Sullivan, Editor-in-Chief, Search Engine Land
The first presentation of the session is from Seth Besmertnik, CEO, Conductor, Inc.
He brings up a few topics and how to dispel myths including, every keyword is equally important. There is a concept that all potential keywords are accounted for and known. Movement outside the first page does not matter – so myth that must be on the 1st page of SERP.
"Lack of metrics – 86% of all traffic going through Google is search engine clicks. But, 89% of spending budgets are on PPC. Why? Metrics should bridge the gap."
Chasing page rankings is counter productive, but still provides valuable insight. Rankings are good way to measure against competitors, but much of the progress happens before getting to this metric.
Action Optimization – The values of understanding small changes can be tested and focused for better metric performance. One example is Snippet Optimization for natural listings – the snippet from meta description can be multivariate tested. Can often find improvements from running 30 day testing of snippet by ranking. Run ranking reports showing ranking for keywords and movement traffic. If traffic increases, then metric is improved without drastically changing page rank. Next, run same against competitors and understand metrics available to create your scorecard. If you are ranking well for a keyword phase, testing will not let you fall far or fast, but A/B testing can help improve CTR.
Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOmoz on SEO Status Metrics that Matter.
Data driven metrics should remove guesswork. Do we really know how good data is from Yahoo, Google PR? No, but, we all use this data. "Quantified" from Quantcast is like Google Analytics, but public. SEOmoz took this data for actuals and ran comparison to Alexa and Compete.com. Confidence is approximately 95% by statistical correlation as follows.
Compete.com uses the "Unique People" as best estimator of traffic in the US with about 86% correlation. If estimating traffic worldwide, then Alexa "Reach" is a higher correlation with data about 80% correlated with actuals. Don't use or trust a single metric to be the key. Link popularity is still defining factor by nearly 75%, URL keywords next and content
Kelly Kochert, Assistant Vice President New Media, NSI
How well are we really doing? Ask the questions to tell your story?
Log File Analysis vs. JavaScript Tags tell different stories, and you may need both.
Analysis of SEO Traffic can be an example of telling a story by answering questions.
How much traffic? – do you see changes month to month, Seasonality or Year over Year (YOY)
From Where? – Does it align with market share? What search engines? Not showing well on Yahoo? what opportunities are there and then to be better on Yahoo, growing the slice of the pie for a larger share of overall traffic.
What moves the needle? Document start of major updates such as a linkbuilding campaign, site redesign.
Why? Keywords – align keyword traffic with ranking, this can show opportunities, misses and help to review new terms. Look at Branded vs non-branded and work on growth in non-branded.
Where? Understand the Entry pages from your analytics and are they aligned with keywords. Where do visitors go post-landing pages – these are opportunities.
What do they do? How long do visitors stay on a site and what pages have traction. Are they staying longer on the site and where did they go when they left the site. The abandonment rate is related and valuable only if know from where they are leaving the site.
What inbound links are working?
Referral sites and links give an opportunity to change anchor text. If getting good referral from a large site, evaluate if similar sites can be built as linking referrals and update anchor text on referral site. Build landing pages around the topic area.
Where are they from? Location and seasonality
What else? What are the engines doing and how often are they visiting including penetration (pages crawled versus indexed), look at reducing errors.
Brian Klais, Executive Vice President of Search, Netconcepts provides a presentation about Natural Search opportunities.
56% of Google queries serve 0 paid ads (Comscore), but have 10 results for the search results page. Stop talking tactics. Start talking Performance Metrics.
Click-through rate – Calculate your CTR as a benchmark, divide keyword market-size by keyword traffic. Compare CTR by SERP placement.
Acquisition costs – Compare PPC cost vs natural. Use Google's average CPC for each phrase, factor in our cost or resource time and average. You spend $0.75 per click vs. …. ? Focus on reduced acquisition cost.
Landing Page Yield – Determine available landing pages (crawled by the bots), what % of those pages are indexed, and yielding traffic. Searchers per page and CTR can help identify opportunities.
Landing Page Rankings – Engine placement of trafficked pages. YOY ranking analysis with number of pages and phrases on page1, page2, and page3.
Keyword Coverage – focus on non-brand pages and look specifically at these for YOY and MoM.
Incremental Traffic and Revenue – More than just "current' minus "previous" Can; presume non-brand rankings stay constant. YoY calculation should consider delta in KW volume, placement, traffic by keyword, sales by keyword. Proper attribution is often last click, but not necessarily the same in Sales.
Return on Ad Spend (ROAS) – Incremental revenue over incremental cost. Look beyond short-term revenue. Conversion rate variance, New-to-file customers, acquisition profitability and lifetime value of searcher.
For more information please contact the Search Engine Marketing Team at Schipul – sem@schipul.com
Google Helps Business Do More With Less
The amount of doom and gloom in the media can be a little overwhelming. If you don’t set your personal filters to edit out some of the economic content, it can really shape your attitude and leave you looking for a rock to hide under. There may not be any easy answers, but informed decisions can help focus your efforts. Looking for opportunities with measurable returns can help mitigate some of the economic pressure and stress. Google has taken an extra step and created a page of tools specifically oriented to the online marketer.
Google created Do More With Less to help create a strategy for succeeding in the recession. Understanding how your site and strategy is performing can help navigate the many choices for search optimization. A few of the free tools that we use often include:
Google Insights for Search – For the trendsetter in each of us, a look at what others are searching for and filter by time and categories.
Google Maps – Local search becomes even more important as clients look closer to home and business for the services they need. People often look to a vendor they can establish a relationship with to insulate against tougher times. Make sure your Google Map listing is correct and look at options for updating to reach new customers.
Google Analytics – A free tool tracking who visits your website, where they came from and how they interacted with your site while visiting. This is critical information for determining if you are providing the right content to the right market. For more detailed information, see Jason’s post on What’s New with Google Analytics from SES 2008.
These are basic tools and reviewing some of the others will help you gather the data needed to make informed decisions. Informed decisions can improve the success of your website. If you have questions, let us know and we can help develop a strategy for tough times, or even if they are not.
For more information please contact the Search Engine Marketing Team at Schipul – sem@schipul.com
What’s New With Google Analytics and Website Optmizer – SES San Jose 2008
After a great Keynote I am now at the second panel of the day for Avinash Kaushik of Google. He is presenting with Tom Leung pf Google Website Optimizer.
Avinash has an analogy on how to describe Bounce Rate – I came, I puked, I left. Us SEM nerds eat that stuff up. On the topic of bounce rate if you are running PPC you want to look at the terms that have a large bounce rate and either omit them or make sure that they are on your landing page. Kaushik states that if you are running campaigns don’t let Google write checks that your site can’t cash. Basically don’t over spend on PPC if you can’t make the money back through your site.
Using Google Analytics you can drill down into the long tail and get away from the ‘branded’ keywords on the left side of the graph into what he calls ‘category’ keyterms such as ‘red leather Donna Karen shoes in San Francisco’. This term is a clear indicator of someone who wants to buy. Its a little hard to optimize for these search terms but they do represent the majority of your buyers.
He says to be successful in Analytics you have to obsess but obsess efficiently. Analytics lets you analyze keyword positions in PPC and shows you how many pages a user has looked at depending on the position of your ad. This is extremely useful when bidding on keyterms.
He is a big proponent of Goals in Analytics on a way a measure your sites effectiveness. Goals can be set up and a monetary value can be assigned to this goal to further substantiate its effectiveness.
Kaushik is pointing out plugins for Google Analytics
Leung is up now talking about the cool tool that is Website Optimizer. This little tool from Google is a great thing that I wish more people would use. It is a free multi-variant tools to measure landing pages and test their effectiveness.
When running WO you create different variants of a landing page and you have to have these pages run the whole time. If certain variants don’t get any traffic you weren’t able to take them out of the equation but now they offer the ability to take them out or ‘pruning’ as Leung states.
The great thing about WO is the ability to scratch that itch that’s telling you to try something different on a landing page. Have a hunch that something else might work? Pit it against your original page. Have other people in the company submit ideas on that landing page.
Give it a try, it’s free!
If you have any questions about Website Optimizer, Google Webmaster Tools and/or Google Analytics a great video was created to help you find your way
For more information please contact the Search Engine Marketing Team at Schipul – sem@schipul.com