Home Wealth Project
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Extensive Research On How To Build Wealth From The Comfort Of Your Own Home.
Sep 6th
Get a top search engine ranking in 3 Easy Steps. Increase your website traffic with this straightforward guide. Affiliates – promote this SEO EBook and earn 60% commission. Affiliate Resources – http://www.3stepstosearchenginesuccess.com/affilia tes.php
3 Steps to Search Engine Success Book – Search Engine Optimization SEO
Jan 22nd
It’s interesting how a product or service that dominates a market becomes so familiar to consumers’ minds that its brand loses some of the cachet that motivates purchase.
We often say “Excel” without ever saying “spreadsheet,” let alone “Microsoft.” And do you say “tissue” or “Kleenex” in your neck of the woods? The more ubiquitous something becomes, the more likely it is to be taken for granted.
Google has such a challenge. Its successful domination of the search engine market has created a corporate directive to seek new growth opportunities and avoid losing marketplace buzz; Fortune magazine published a cover story on this buzz concern and Google’s strategy to expand beyond its core business. The end result has been new offerings and incremental services like Caffeine, Chrome, and a little ol’ phone operating system called Android.
Interestingly, one offering, Google Analytics, has similar dominance issues. It is on more than 62 percent of websites, yet its potency to manage marketing campaigns for small business owners is lost because many neglect to use its full capabilities.
Enter Justin Cutroni, Director of Digital Intelligence at Webshare. A veteran among analytics consultants, Cutroni gets to the essence of marketing with Google Analytics, a new O’Reilly guide for Web analytics users. I met Justin years ago through a Google Analytics Boot Camp training at Epik One, a Vermont-based analytics company. A wonderful strategist, he provides the right experience level in this book for those looking to know more than “What is a bounce rate?”
Better Web experiences through measuring data
The book is structured in a similar informational vein as Dennis Mortensen’s Yahoo! Web Analytics. Eschewing the basic how-to process — Google already provides a number of online videos and starter presentations — Cutroni’s Google Analytics offers techniques and topics for advanced usage without being overly theoretical or recommending actions that can only benefit an enterprise.
Cutroni tries to avoid bogged-down text — and succeeds. Google Analytics is a solid guide for small business technical workers who need a refresher on analytic technicalities, as well as an enlightener for business owners who need to understand how GA works and how the features link to your business. Cutroni covers it well at the beginning of Chapter 2:
“Google Analytics is a business intelligence tool and, because every business has different data needs, your implementation may be very different from someone else’s. Do not believe that you can simply slap some tags on the site and collect valid data. It is very rare that an implementation involves only page tagging. There are many configuration steps required to generate accurate, actionable data.”
Admittedly Chapter 2 is ultra-brief, but subsequent chapters offer distinct applications of Google Analytics features that will enlighten long-time users and new practitioners alike, such as reviewing the evolution of the tagging script and providing an overview of mobile tracking code in Chapter 3. Cutroni highlights integrated uses of the features, such as an explanation of marketing campaign tagging. There are also a few discussions you won’t find online, such as incorporating Google Analytics into CRMs and explaining of how tracking code functions on the server versus the browser. Topics such as the mobile tracking code expand on the functional impact to a site and give useful guidance such as the following comment:
“The mobile tracking code collects data at the server level rather than at the browser, or device, level. Because the mobile tracking code collects data at the server level, you must implement it in the language that you used to build your Web application. Google provides four mobile tracking libraries to make the process easier: PHP, Java, ASP and Perl.”
The segments on advanced techniques should be especially helpful for e-commerce companies and businesses with multiple domains. Here, Cutroni explains how analytics should work with existing systems, not just be a sole influence of decision:
“You should not use Google Analytics e-commerce tracking in place of an accounting or order management tool package. While the tracking is fairly accurate, there are too many external forces that can affect the data quality. It is best to analyze larger sets of e-commerce data and look for trends that provide insight into customer actions….”
What You Will and Won’t Get From Google Analytics
If a user is looking for more integration knowledge, the book does offer a number of excellent plug-in suggestions such as a code debugging tool, a regular expression diagnostic, and a keyword trend checker. There is a chapter dedicated to enterprise-level application that may not fit most small business needs, but it’s worth the page turns if your business is growing and more advanced measurement is on the horizon.
Cutroni’s experience and honest tone comes through at every turn, so readers can rest assured that they are receiving digestable information. One note: Google Analytics does not cover the subject of APIs, so developers looking for coding development information should stick with the Google Code site for how-to instruction. There is also some script discussion, but only a bit more compared to Avinash Kaushik’s Web Analytics 2.0.
Overall, Google Analytics is the right book that can guide businesses that are beginning to create more elaborate websites or encountering e-commerce measurement concerns. Get this book to overcome analytic gremlins, and your business will certainly benefit.
Justin Cutroni writes a great blog on analytics called Analytics Talk. You can also follow him on Twitter.
Better Online Marketing Optimization Through Google Analytics: A Book Review
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View full post on Small Business News, Tips, Advice – Small Business Trends
Nov 29th
I recently had the good fortune to attend a session on landing page optimization at PubCon.com, the annual conference about search, social media, Internet marketing and website operation. I learned a lot, so I thought I’d share the 14 top takeaways from the session with Small Business Trends’ readers.
The experts who shared their knowledge at this session were Joanna Lord, Director of Customer Acquisition for SEO Moz; Kate Morris, SEO Consultant; and Tim Ash, CEO of SiteTuners.com. Here’s what each of them had to say.
There Are Tons of Tools to Help You—Use Them!
Joanna Lord’s presentation was focused on tools and programs you can use to discover which pages on your website and what types of content are converting well or poorly. I came away with lots of interesting tools I’m going to try.
1) Use Google Analytics to data mine. Google gives you so much information to uncover what parts of your site are working to convert customers and which are not. Everyone should start with this tool.
2) Use heat mapping. (In case you’re not familiar with this term, a “heat map” uses colors to show the areas of a Web page where users most frequently scan.) By seeing where users spend the most time, you can improve your click-through rates and conversions to products/services. Here are some heat mapping tools Joanna suggested trying: Clickheat (this is a free tool); Click Density; and Crazy Egg. Crazy Egg is Joanna’s favorite heat mapping tool. While some heat mapping tools update you on the most popular areas of your site every 24 hours, Crazy Egg provides hourly live reporting.
3. Do user surveys. When people leave your site, do you know why? No one likes a popup box on a website, but if you can get useful information by running a popup or exit survey for a week, a temporary decrease in conversions is worth it for the long-term health of your site. Here are some user testing tools Joanna likes: Assistly.com (free trial), UserTesting.com ($39), Keynote (free trial), Providesupport.com (free trial) and Zendesk (free trial). The tool SEO Moz uses is KISS Insights ($29/month). Joanna likes KISS Insights because it has great survey options, including surveys via popup boxes or upon user exit.
4. Test out new options. After you have surveyed your users, make changes and test their effectiveness. Tools Joanna recommends to test different landing pages: Unbounce.com, Google Website Optimizer and Optimizely.com.
Think Like a User
Kate Morris offered some great advice as well.
5. Know your product and always keep in mind user intent. What are users trying to do when they are on your site, and can they do it easily? Assess your site from the viewpoint of the user trying to accomplish a goal. Can they check out quickly? Can they navigate back to a prior page? How good is your search function?
6. Identify high-traffic pages that are not converting and make changes. If a page is getting lots of traffic, great! But if that traffic isn’t converting, not so great. Kate suggests using Google Analytics to pinpoint these pages. She used the example of one customer that had a high-traffic page with lots of white space on the right nav. She had them add a form, which helped increase conversions.
7. Look at “top landing pages” in Google Analytics and search for outliers. Are there pages on your site that are receiving zero visitors? Is your internal linking structure poor? Do you need more links to those deep pages?
Image—and Images—Matter
Tim Ash’s presentation was extremely visual. He showed a number of before and after pictures for sites and displayed heat maps for the old and new pages so we could see the comparison. I will mention a few of the sites that he has worked on, so you can check them out for yourself (unfortunately, you won’t be able to see the “before,” but hopefully the “afters” will inspire you!).
8. Create trust. Many sites don’t convert because they lack credibility and fail to establish trust with users. Consider displaying seals (Truste, McAfee, BBB, VeriSign and the like) as well as displaying the logos (he couldn’t stress enough the importance of images, not just the names) of large companies that you do business with.
9. Keep it simple. Don’t offer too many choices on the home page. Keep strong images of what you are selling on the site, but don’t clutter things up with unnecessary Flash (especially not fast scrolling Flash shows). Tim showed us the “before” look of MosquitoCurtains.com (which was very scattered) compared to the new look. Cleaner and simpler is much easier for users.
10. Read Influence: The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini.
11. Adjust guarantees. Don’t offer 30-day guarantees; offer lifetime guarantees and watch your purchases increase. Lifetime guarantees make the user feel much safer.
12. Ask for the sale. Sometimes it’s simply a matter of asking for the close. Tim showed us the “before” for 1-800-Flowers. Their order form was so buried and blended in that users never clicked on it. After changing things up, the order form was much more prominent and got a ton more clicks.
13. Check out B.J. Fogg from Stanford Labs. B.J. helps organizations use technology and new media to influence people. Tim suggests reading through his papers and articles on customer interaction and usability.
14. Remember, you’ve only got an instant to make a good impression. Tim emphasized that customers make up their minds in a fraction of a second whether or not they want to interact with your site. Good, clean design is of paramount importance.
What tips and tactics have worked for your website in improving conversions and click-throughs? Share them in the Comments.
14 Tips From the Pubcon Experts About Landing Page Optimization
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| Internet Marketing Company Search Engine Optimization SEO Google algorithm caffeine in 2010 and based on an analysis of new infrastructure technology offers. |
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