Archive for the 'Web Analytics' Category

Website Optimization Lifecycle

Lately, I’ve been working on a number of local small business websites that are trying to optimize their websites.  Some of these companies have existing websites, others are starting from scratch looking to build the best website platform that will scale to meet their needs.

In order to have a well rounded optimization strategy that can guide you in what you should do for your website, I always recommend taking a step back and looking at the ‘big picture’ – more specifically, where you are at in what I call the website optimization lifecycle.  Optimization really breaks down to the lifetime cost per visitor to convert (what does it mean to convert?).  During different stages of your website’s life, it’s more valuable to invest in different online strategies and to target different visitors.

Before discussing each optimization aspect, I’d like to take a minute to define what each one is:

  • Organic Search – This is a visitor that comes to your website via any search engine or other un-paid link.  In this phase, the goal is optimize your website to get the most organic traffic naturally.
  • Paid Traffic - These visitors get to your website through paid channels: banner ads, paid ads, paid links, etc.  The goal here is, again, just to get more visitors but this time you are paying for them.
  • Testing - Once a healthy stream of qualified and relevant visitors gets to your website, the goal is help them convert into customers more effectively. At this point you may be buying traffic or you may not be, but in order for proper testing to occur, you need a steady stream of visitors.

Note: Each one of these optimization methods should be measured through a fully implemented web analytics tool (Ominture, WebTrends, Google Analytics, etc).

I’ve illustrated the following optimization methods in different stages with the below graphic:

Website Optimization Lifecycle

Website Optimization Lifecycle

Step 1: Website Analytics

Any website optimization process must have a clearly identifiable measure of success.  An Analytics tool is needed to provide an unbiased and clear look into which efforts are most valuable based on a measurable standard (cost/visitor, etc) as well as provide data articulating which optimization efforts were most effective and profitable.  Before this information can be fully trusted, the tool must be properly configured to remove extraneous data.  In order for any optimization to take place, specific website activities must be defined as Conversions (or Goals) so that decisions can be made to effectively maximize Conversions. This is crucial. Without clearly defined goals to associate value, no measurable action can be justified against another.

This step is articulated by the Orange Stripe at the bottom of the above graphic. It should take place during website development and will provide the measurement for each subsequent optimization.

Step 2: Organic Search Optimizations

Organic optimizations require the most investment and take the longest to produce results, but the returns provided by organic search optimizations will not only pay out over time for organic search, but will ultimately lead to lower paid search prices as well when a website owner decides to purchase advertisements in paid search (more below).  When optimizing a website for organic search engines, three key aspects of a website must be considered in order to get the highest return on investment.

Is my website robot friendly?

Because search engines rely on robots (or spiders) to scan all text and automatically catalog each page, a website needs to be reachable and indexible.  Certain technologies like flash greatly reduce the ease by which search engines can crawl your website.  If a search engine spider can’t reach your website then any/all optimizations are wasted.

Is my website talking about the right topics in the right areas?

Because search engines initially based their algorithms on early HTML, the highest ROI is going to come from optimizing the simple HTML tags in your page using the most relevant and popular key terms.  Note that it is exponentially better to focus a little on each element than to try to work on just one.  Did you catch that? Hitting each of the 5 Main HTML Optimizatoin Areas a little bit dramatically improves the effectiveness of your combined page relevancy.

What are other websites in my community saying about my site?

Because search engines rely heavily on your online reputation, its important to keep in mind what other industry based websites are linking to you and what terms they use to tell others about your site. If possible, email your partners and encourage them to use more descriptive text to link to your website (vs. your company or brand name).

Step 3: Paid Advertising Campaigns

Once organic efforts have been maximized and a website is looking to attract additional, qualified visitors, the next step is to begin looking at paid advertising.  Organic optimizations will provide a website with a lower cost per visitor over time, but eventually the return on that effort will decrease to a point where it’s more valuable to tap into the paid advertising market.

Well targeted ads – using paid search for example – can provide qualified traffic to a website for reasonable cost.  In order to effectively understand how valuable a visitor is, a website owner must first decide how much a conversion is worth.  This is where defining a goal value on your site comes in handy. Once that goal value is defined, a webmaster can retro-actively figure out how much to spend trying to acquire that visitor. Using cost-per-acquisition will help you decide how much you should spend online (for example, if purchasing a visitor still provides a decent amount of profit then the smart webmaster would begin purchasing qualified traffic).

It’s also worthwhile to note that most paid search advertisers (Google, Bing, Yahoo!) use what’s called a “Quality Score”.  This quality score rates how well your ad corresponds to the landing page (and offer).  The better the correlation between the text on your landing page and the keywords you are purchasing the lower the price you pay for the ad.  This is a safeguard that search engines hope will provide relevance to the user so that visitors continue to use their search engine.  No one would enjoy clicking on an ad for soft puppies only to find out they are going to a promotional site for knives that cut through tin cans. Having a strong organic strategy in place (and executed) first will first guarantee strong organic rankings but then provide lower advertising costs for all relevant advertisements. A gift that keeps on giving.

Step 4: Ongoing Testing & Optimizations

No optimization plan would be complete without regular testing and user experience optimizations.  Free tools make entry into this phase easy, profitable, and effective.  Once you’ve been able to attract as many visitors to your site naturally (organic search) and adverting – both push and pull methods – its time to focus on the user experience on the site.

Keep in mind that when implementing paid methods it is even more important to make sure that any money you are spending on a visitor helps that visitor through the purchase path (or what ever your goal funnel is) as seamlessly as possible.

There are two primary forms of Testing:

  1. A/B Testing – This testing involves testing two primary layouts of a page and should only be done between two different layout designs.  All content and on-page imagery should be held constant while the layout (or overall design) should be noticeably different.
  2. Multivariate Testing – This testing involves keeping the layout of the page the same but alternating each of the elements with multiple creative options.  For example, changing the heading, alternating between two different graphics, having different sell text, and/or using bullets instead of paragraph content.

A website in the testing phase should begin with A/B Testing in order to confirm what type of layout/design a potential client is more attracted to, then follow up with ongoing multivariate testing to make sure that each element is fully optimized to reach their target clients.

When combining multivariate testing with paid traffic, its always best to pull out a significant sample size from entire campaign, run a multivariate test, then use the winning combination on the full advertising spend.  This will ensure that the greatest amount of people have the greatest chance of completing a desired action (conversion).

Google AdWords Qualified Individual!

That’s right, folks. After much studying and slaving away at the three year old out-dated questions, I have passed the Google AdWords Qualified Individual exam and become an Advertising Professional. This helps put POP on the map of being a Certified Adwords Advertising Professional.

Google AdWords Qualified Individual

For those of you unfamiliar with the web analytics industry, never fear, because this really has nothing to do with web analytics. This is more web advertising.

So let’s say you want to advertise on the web (because everyone’s doing it and you need a piece of the pie).  If your maxed out search engine efforts don’t land you on the first page of google or yahoo, there is always sponsored search (also referred to as paid search and search engine marketing).

Paid Search Keyword Google

 Thus you can pay to be at the top of the search results. Granted, this does put that “sponsored link” title above your ad and usually give your result a nice light yellow background but you get that sought after visibility and possible click through that could eventually lead to a sale or conversion.

Google, Yahoo, and MSN are a great place to start because you can begin with smaller denominations to test how profitable a sponsored search campaign will be.

Ongoing Website Performance Optimization (Paid & Organic)

The other day a co-worker sent this article about monthly, ongoing SEO work being dead. Lately, I’ve been contemplating the value of an ongoing search engine optimization versus a search engine marketing plan and their respective return on investments over time.  Everyone knows to begin doing SEO work on your website through meta data and title tags but how long should you be focusing on purely organic search results?  When should you begin looking into doing paid search through Google Adwords or Yahoo! Search Marketing?

In fact I rough plan to help decipher when a website should be focusing on organic search engine optimization and when they should focus on paid search engine marketing for the best ROI.

Pre-Launch: Spend lots on SEO development before you launch the site – Metadata standards, H1/H2/H3 Heirarchies, friendly urls, xml sitemap, 301 redirects, internal content rich urls, etc.  Build a solid foundation for good organic search crawling so that a year down the road you won’t need to uproot all your existing

SEO Phase 1: Confirm your indexation for major search engines, get search referring data from analytics tool, make sure those keywords are in your meta, content, and H1, start blogging regularly (weekly), sign up for Webmaster Tools so you can tell what search queries your site is showing up for (prepare to be surprised).

SEO Phase 2: Confirm that SEO practices for meta, H1, content, friendly urls, press releases, blog schedules, etc.  These should be checked as you develop your ongoing publishing process to ensure quality.

SEM Phase 1: With what you know from referring organic search data in your analytics tool, build paid search engine marketing campaigns on successful keyword searches and other keywords that should’ve been successful on search.  Make sure to use unique and relevant landing pages for each keyword group.

SEM Phase 2: Analyze and SEM Campaigns and looking deeper into competing campaigns and websites.  What are they doing that you could learn from?  Do this too, where neccessary.

MVT Phase 1: Use results of paid search campaigns and abandonment data (from analytics tool) to begin planning some multivariate testing options for your main landing pages.

MVT Phase 2: Continue with your paid search campaigns while implementing your different landing page variations.  Use your results to optimize the effectiveness of your campaigns.  Don’t forget to continue following best SEO practices.

Well, there you have it.  My ultimate plan for overall website performance optimization.  Feel free to comment and let me know what you think.

Will Travel for Analytics

Well, it’s been a busy two weeks. Joy and I went down to San Jose, California and checked out the Googleplex for a 3-day GAAC get together. I got to meet fellow Google Analytics folk and talk about some of the new features and drool a little bit more over Website Optimizer – oooh A/B Testing. Great to finally meet a few other people out there who use the tool and bounce a few ideas around.

 

Then, flew over to DC for eMetrics 2007 where I got more than my fair share of web analytics info sessions. I got to hear the one-and-only Avinash Kaushik speak and, yeah, I’d say he’s just about everything he’s cracked up to be. I also got to hear Jim Novo speak about behavioral targeting which was all the rage this year – seemed like every other speaker was talking more about it. If you haven’t heard, demographics are out, personas are in. I’m hoping to have a blog post about this soon – hopefully at Pop but we’ll see how fast those boys can get a blog up …. no, really.

Google Analytics Tools – Oct 16 2007

Google announced this morning that updates to the Google Analytics tool will be coming shortly.  My two highlights are that they unveiled event tracking capabilities and a more in-depth site search section within the GA Tool that allows for some better segmentation.   Some of the new updates trump what POP has already created manual work-arounds for (off-site link tracking), but overall, it’s good to see the web analytics industry progress.

At this point, my analytic experience is still pretty shallow so my comments remain fairly low level.  Hopefully as new analytics tools emerge I’ll continue to grow my analytics expertise.  In the meantime, feel free to comment and leave your feedback.

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