Saturday, August 18, 2012

Why are there discrepancies between Adwords and GA data?

When you've finished integrating Google Adwords with Google Analytics, you will notice that the number of Clicks reported by Adwords does not always result into Visits.  In simpler words the Clicks do not match Visits metrics.  You will notice similar data like the below screenshot. 



There are several reasons for these differences. First thing to remember is that Adwords tracks "Clicks" whereas Analytics tracks "Visits". 


Second, it is possible that some visitors who click on ads may have JavaScript or Cookies turned off. You may wonder how do these two cause discrepancies in the data. 


Let's take JavaScript first. Once the user has JavaScript turned off in their browsers, they are untraceable in Google Analytics, so you will not only loose the data on who is seeing the correct Adwords ads, you wont even know that they visited your site in the first place. If you are noticing that your leads are low, you might want to check your web server logs, and compare the number of visitors to your landing page to the number that Analytics shows. This would at least give you an idea of how many people you aren’t tracking in Analytics, and since the reason is likely that their JavaScript is turned off, you would also know that they didn’t see your Adwords ads. 


Now coming to Cookies. A Cookie is a snippet of text that is sent from a website’s servers and stored on a web browser. Like most websites and search engines, Google uses cookies in order to provide a better user experience and to serve relevant ads. When a cookie is set on your browser, it allows Google to gather information about your browser's interaction with a given ad. So if you don't want Google to get detailed information on what ads you clicked then you can click the "opt-out" button. Note: This opt out is only specific to the browser which you are using. 


Analytics uses its own set of cookies to track visitor interactions. These cookies are used to store information, such as what time the current visit occurred, whether the visitor has been to the site before, and what site referred the visitor to the web page. To disable this type of cookie, some browsers will indicate when a cookie is being sent and allow you to decline cookies on a case-by-case basis. 


You’ll also see differences between Analytics and AdWords if the Google Analytics Tracking Code on your landing page doesn’t execute. In this case, AdWords will report the click but Analytics will not record the visit. 


Invalid clicks is another point for data discrepancy. Invalid clicks may also cause reporting differences because while Google AdWords automatically filters invalid clicks from your reports, Google Analytics will still report the visits. 


Keep in mind that the adwords data is uploaded once a day to Analytics so the results for each may be temporarily out of sync. 

There are some other common issues too:

a) Sometimes Destination URLs or in other words PLPs are not tagged.  Make sure that auto tagging is enabled in adwords otherwise your visits will be recorded under organic and not CPC.


b) If your site uses redirect then campaign data can be lost.  Redirects often obstruct the GA tracking code from launching. Therefore the visit will not be recorded as coming from Adwords, but Adwords will still report the clicks. 

Saturday, January 14, 2012

What is a Click Density Analysis report? (Also known as 'In-Page Analytics' reporting)

What is it? - The In-Page Analytics report shows the number of clicks on each link on a page. It also shows other helpful information such as Revenue from clicks on a link, Goal Conversions, and so on. 
The In-Page Analytics report shows % Page Views, Time on Page, Time to the Page, % Exits, and Keywords that brought people to the page. In a nutshell, it's everything you would ever want to know to judge the performance of a page

What is it telling you? - When you look at the  In-Page Analytics  report, you are looking for clusters of heavy clicks. Look for the top two or three most clicked links, and try to reconcile that against links that you want visitors to click. 

What to look for?
1) Look at links that ultimately drive high conversions
E.g. Do more people convert on the site when they click Product Comparison on the home page or when they go directly to a product page?

2) Try to follow a few heavy clicks and see what people do next. Walk in their shoes, and experience your own website. 

3) Check out referrers to each page; that could explain Bounce and Exit Rates

4) Look at Average Time to this Page. If it takes too long for people to find your key pages, then you have a problem with your core site navigational elements or merchandising. 

What do you do next? Identify improvements to your pages. Consider merchandizing and cross-sell and up-sell opportunities now that you know what people like. For example, no one is clicking your blinking promotion in the middle of the page because it looks like an ad!

If your tool allows, segment the clicks. Where do people who convert click vs. everyone else or vs. everyone from a search engine or an email campaign?

Also, by segmenting the data, you not only understand things in aggregate, all Visitors, but now you can start to understand different types of people on your site.

Hope this post helps in understanding this type of report better.  If you need any help with this kind of reporting, drop me a note and I'll be glad to respond back. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Why Brands should have profiles on Google Plus?

Just want to make you aware about news from Search world, and present key highlights from post written by Google Senior VP of Engineering - Vic Gundotra. 

Facebook and Google continue race for domination in digital world. Facebook advantage is the number of active users and access to incredible amount of data. Google advantage is people search behaviour and ability to rate credibilty and page rank of all websites. Google Plus was created to compete with FB and they have just announced 2 next steps which are extremely important from search perspective. Brand profiles and activities created in Google Plus network will be indexed faster - which gives huge advantage vs Facebook FanPage, where you can actually rank only with one properly optimized URL. It's an important change, and we should not ignore it. Google also introduced new Search tool called "Direct Connect", user will be able to add special feature "+" to the page he/she wants to "stay in touch" with and from now on will have direct connection. 



Why key brands should have profiles on Google Plus:

1. To own at least one more postition on Google Search Shelf and be when she/he is looking for us
2. To test all new features presented by Google
3. To be the leader of innovations in digital

You can access full article by clicking here: http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2011/11/google-pages-connect-with-all-things.html?spref=fb



Sunday, October 30, 2011

Understanding Customer Behavior through PPC data

You should always look for trends when you look at your web metrics data. Focusing on aggregate numbers just doesn't  make sense in any way.  For example knowing that I get 1000 unique visitors to my website in a month wont help me much.  But knowing where they come from, what time of the day, which days of the month (weekends or weekdays), what content they visit, how much they consume of it, is really meaningful.

Always focus on customer behavior rather than aggregate metrics. You can do some cool PPC analysis by applying that principle.
The setup is quite simple. Let's measure how long it takes for someone to convert from the first time they visit your website. The report is called Days to Purchase. Look at the figure below. You'll notice, top right, that it is segmented to show only Paid Traffic.

This data is for a travel website. It might strike you as odd that only 46 percent of the people make a purchase on the same day, simply because airline tickets and hotels and cruises all tend to get more expensive with each passing day. That's odd behavior for Visitors.
OK, let's find out whether we see the same behavior with traffic from other sources. Below figure shows the report for Direct Traffic.


Whoa! With Direct Traffic, 71 percent purchase on the same day. That is normal behavior for Visitors for a travel site. So, what is up with the PPC traffic? Why don't they behave like normal people? If the behavior from PPC traffic is so odd, then how can we treat them better or differently?
These are all great questions, and they're the reason why I recommend this type of analysis. Each traffic stream is unique!
In this case, the travel website took this data and reviewed the landing pages for its PPC campaigns. At the time of the previous report, it was geared toward converting Visitors quickly ("Buy now! Book now! Give us your money, now!").
The first action the marketers took was to soften the calls to action, because they realized a good chunk of the traffic does not want to buy right away. Then the marketers added a new feature, Save Your Itinerary. They realized Visitors would come back, so they might as well make it easy for them.
Finally, the marketers added another feature: "Email me if price goes up by x percent," where x was a number that the Visitors could input when saving an itinerary. This was a very clever move because the travel agency then had the contact information for the Visitors and could email them when the price went up by 10 percent or 20 percent or whatever number the customer input. This caused the customers to return and make a purchase sooner, and the customers were happier because they felt the site was watching out for them.
The net return for closely analyzing PPC customer behavior was that it brought forward Conversions to fewer days to purchase and tripled Conversion Rates. That's not too shabby for a simple segmented report, right?

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Internal Site Search Analysis and points to consider


Almost all web analytics clicks data is missing one key ingredient: customer intent.


The keywords that people type into search engines such as Google, Bing, and Yahoo! contain a modicum of intent. The real gold is the search engine that you surely have on your website. What? No, you don't? You are the last website on the planet not to have an internal site search engine?


If you directly understand the intent of Visitors on your site, you can better understand the causes for success or failure on your site.


Here's an example. You can look at the top 10 most viewed pages on your site and understand what people who came to your site wanted. How would you know which pages your Visitors wanted to see? If Visitors can't find those pages, then your web analytics tool won't record that action.


One way to overcome the challenge of intent is to look at your internal site search data and see what customers typed into your site search engine. You should perform three clusters of actionable analysis with your internal site search data: site search usage, site search quality, and segmenting.

You need to create customised reports to understand the following:

· What customers typed into your site search engine?
o Report for internal site search keywords usage – broken down by each month
o Where there any seasonal effect or seasonal searches

· Your site Search Usage 
o How much is the search function used - You should find out, out of the total visitors coming to the site – how many visitors actually use this function?

· Internal Site Search Quality
o  Find out whether your site search engine delivers quality results
o Bounce Rate for site search
o Bounce Rate for each keyword searched
o The other way to think about search quality is to measure the number of search results pages that are viewed by the visits so we want  - Results Page Views/Search
o Time After Search (i.e. time spent on our website after doing the search)
o Search Depth (number of pages viewed after searching your site)
o % of Search Refinements (Search Refinements helps understand how Visitors refine their queries to get optimal results)

That wasn't so hard, was it? You can do three simple and effective types of analysis on one of the most valuable sources of data in your possession. So why wait? open your web analytics tool and start creating your customized reports.


Sunday, October 23, 2011

Points to consider when optimising for Google Panda

Google loves awesome content. They also love quality search results. They love big money. Bad search results unfortunately means Google will earn less money as searches will not be relevant to the users query. So if your site is of a lower quality or lower user experience and you rank well, somebody visits your site through a Google search result and they are unhappy, this cost Google money. People are less likely to use Google for their queries and this makes Google sad. So to overcome this situation, Google made some update to their algorithm.

This new update is called Google Panda. So Google Panda is an algorithm change which looks at a handful of changes:

a) Do you have thin or otherwise low quality content?

b) Do you have duplicate content either onsite or cross site?

c) Do you have too many advertisements or affiliate links and their ratio is higher compared to the amount of content on your site?

d) Do you have links from devalued domains?

e) Do you have slow loading pages which impact user experience?

Above are a few things which Panda focuses on when deciding where to rank your sites. So at the end of the day Panda can be summarized in one word and that’s “Usability”. Knowing that Google will continue to look for sites which have the best user experience and will penalize sites which don’t factor the above points, your site will definitely not rank well in this new algorithm update if you don’t start addressing these issues. So revaluate your site and ask yourself the above questions. If answer is yes to anyone of them, you have some SEO work to do my friend.

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Why is SEO important for companies like P&G?

A friend and colleague recently asked me why SEO is important. I sent him to a series of articles I recently wrote that starts with the basics of “What is SEO“.

He read it, and came back asking the same question: “Your article says WHAT Search Engine Optimization is, but… I’m still not sure WHY it’s important, or I’ll rephrase why SEO is important for big companies like P&G. They spend millions of dollars marketing their products, so should they even bother!”
Now I was the one scratching my head. I thought the answer was obvious. But, maybe you have the same question. So I tried approaching the topic from his perspective, and realized there is more he may need to understand about marketing in general.
When a consumer decides to purchase a product there is a typical purchase cycle (see diagram).




Every marketing channel has a different role to play in this purchase cycle. At the highest level, there are 2 types of media; Creative and Directive.
Creative Media:
Creative types of media are intrusive, meaning the advertising is not user initiated.
Common types of creative media would be:
a) newspaper
b) radio
c) television
d) billboards
e) vehicle wraps
f) online advertising
f) etc.
This type of media has many purposes that for the most part revolve around awareness building, creating interest, brand or product positioning, or branding.
Directive Media:
Directive types of media on the other hand are most useful only once the consumer has been made aware of the product and has already recognized they have a need (made possible by creative media channels)
So in reality directive media is user initiated i.e. phase three in the diagram (evaluation!). It is during this stage that SEO is very important. The consumer has seen the ad on television or in print (or any other media), wants more information about it, and the next thing you know they are searching online.
The Synergies:
SEO has the ability to improve the effectiveness of all types of marketing campaigns. So if you’re going to advertise your product, make sure your website is well optimized before the TV channels start airing your ads. SEO has the ability to improve the effectiveness of every other type of marketing campaign, and equally important is the concept that all other media have the ability to positively impact results from SEO.
The Issue:
The problem with the creative media is that they work only as long as you are working. As soon as you stop investing in other media types, or stop paying for ads, the traffic to your website stops. That’s why SEO is so golden — when you stop working, the elements you have set in place keep working to attract new traffic to your site. And new traffic means potential income.
Question for you:
Would you advise your client to use marketing techniques that they have to continually work, or techniques that continually work for them?
Hopefully you choose the second. P&G is going to market their products anyway, right? Why not market in a way that will actually increase your website traffic, not just maintain the status quo.
Don’t fret, SEO isn’t the big mysterious monster people make it out to be. Our goal is to help marketers refine and expand their marketing efforts. It’s important to realise SEO is “ongoing” - it never stops. Many brands have yet to realize the consequences of going dark in search. When managing budget challenges, stopping search activities may seem like a low risk decision, however, pausing search support can have some major impacts on P&G’s business. “Going dark” in search essentially throws away the dollars previously invested and the success gained.