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Beyond "Hits"Your Website visitor reports
are a goldmine of
information. If you don't review these on a
regular basis, you can't fully
evaluate the return on your Web investment.
And, you could miss critical clues
as to how user-friendly your site is, how effectively
your message reaches your
visitors, and what unmet needs they may have. Step 1: Knowing Your MarketsFirst, identify all the different types of visitor to your site, together with the reasons that they might be coming to you. This may sound obvious, but in my experience there are nearly always visitor segments that are overlooked. Here are my starting suggestions for an association site:
If you don't have a press center on your site, you should consider it if you're interested in publicity. Reporters are increasingly looking for information online, and appreciate ready access to press releases, sample interview questions, and downloadable photographs of your key spokespeople. The content seekers category describes visitors looking for content that you provide, but who are not prospective members. They might be searching your member database for a referral, or they might be interested in your information products - and so they're great prospects for non-dues revenue. Step 2: Knowing Your GoalsIt's also key to know the required outcomes, not only for your overall site, but also for each individual section and page. I have a mantra in my speaking programs: "Every page of your site should have a strategy". Too many pages on the Web give great information, and then tail off, with no clear call to action. They expect visitors to go back to the navigational elements, and decide what to do next - but instead, many of them will leave. Step 3: Asking The Right QuestionsNow that you have the audiences and outcomes for your site, you can start to make sense of all those numbers and graphs. Based on what should be happening, you can formulate questions with which to approach the traffic reports to measure your site's effectiveness. Here are some ideas: Are your long pages effective? Often, I see long pages with key content "below the fold" - below the first screen of information. Many visitors won't scroll down the page if they're not immediately engaged by it; therefore they'll miss the lower elements. Is this happening on your site? Look for clicks on the links that are further down the page - are you getting an appropriate amount of traffic to the inside sections that these lead to? How much time is the average visitor spending on your long page - are they clicking off to the first thing that catches their eye - if so, is this really where you want them to go? Can you measure member benefits? If you provide an online database for prospective customers to find a supplier, track how many searches are done, and how many click-thru's your members receive. This can give you some powerful statements for your member benefits material. What are the hot content areas? Knowing your "Most Requested Pages" gives you some key clues about what's hot - and from that, which content might be worth developing further, either as a member benefit, or for non-dues income. It can be helpful to design your site to delineate this. For example, instead of having a long page of different pamphlets, show each product on a separate page. Now you can track which ones are most sought after, and perhaps consider offering these as online, instantly downloadable e-books. What are your conversion rates? If there's a hot content area - a highly requested page that doesn't translate into its required outcome, something's wrong. Possibilities include:
Step 5: Tweaking And Testing The good news about the Web is that it's a great testing ground for new products and ideas. When you find an area on your site that isn't performing optimally, you can make small incremental changes, and immediately see the results reflected in your traffic reports. So you can keep tweaking until you hit the winning formula for each page. Step 6: Don't Forget Your Internal Search EngineYour internal search engine allows you to track the keyword searches that visitors perform once they're on your site. This also has some valuable clues:
I think of Web traffic reports as "market research that cannot lie". They represent what your visitors do, unprompted, and really can contain some gold nuggets. Happy Mining!
© Philippa Gamse. All rights reserved.
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And, if you still have a burning question about e- business strategy or Internet marketing that you don't see answered on this site, just ask me!
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CyberSpeakerSM, The Internet in English A Division of Total 'Net Value, Inc. Philippa Gamse, President P.O. Box 1427 Capitola, CA 95010-1427 Phone: (831) 325-3307 pgamse@CyberSpeak er.com ©2008 Philippa Gamse |