Posts Tagged ‘Google Analytics’

Google Analytics app gallery unveiled

Wednesday, May 5th, 2010

Applications designed to extend the use of Google Analytics have been brought together in a new gallery.

Google has described Analytics not as a single product but as a “growing ecosystem of developers, tools, users, and partners”. And in order to highlight the tools being designed to help analytics users make the most of their data, the US search firm has brought details of the various applications together in one place.

There are currently just under 40 apps in the gallery, such as CallTrackID, which allows telephone enquiries to be tracked from various traffic routes including direct, organic, PPC ad, affiliate and offline, straight into Google Analytics.

Excellent Analytics is another application in the gallery which lets users work with their data in an Excel spreadsheet.

News home

Google Analytics – down but not out

Friday, February 26th, 2010

Google is planning to upgrade its services in the next few weeks, affecting many services that are vital for SEO marketers.

One of the services which will be hit is Google Analytics, which webmasters and SEO marketers use to analyse traffic sources and levels of traffic to a site.

Google Analytics is used by SEO experts for a variety of purposes, including testing new products, and managing targets and spending for PPC campaigns. The message informing all analytics users of the outage has been displayed on accounts currently using the service.

The message displayed by Google says “Starting Mar 2, 2010, the Analytics system will be unavailable from approximately 7:00 AM to 11:00 PM (Pacific time) for maintenance.
“While you may not be able to view your most current data during this time, your data will continue to be collected and processed so you can view it once we finish.
“Thank you for your patience.”

No new features or filters are going to be added to Google Analytics during this period, and all account will be frozen so campaigns cannot be changed or stopped in the time period.

Google is making the upgrade to improve its service and boost the service’s reliability.

E-shoppers flock to Marks & Spencer

Wednesday, September 30th, 2009

ONE major retailer whose latest sales figures provided evidence that online sales are performing well was Marks & Spencer.

In a good quarter for the stores group, it reported that, while overall sales grew by 2.7 per cent in the three months to the end of September 2009, online sales had surged ahead by 30 per cent.

This clearly shows that the switch to online retailing is being successfully embraced by this iconic high street brand.

Analysts were surprised by the figures, having expected a like-for-like fall of about 1.5 per cent over the quarter.

M&S chairman Sir Stuart Rose attributed the results to better buying strategies and stock management. He also said he was confident the company had reached the bottom in its performance.

He did warn, however, that the re-introduction of the higher 17.5 per cent VAT rate was casting a cloud over the next period, and said that, despite lobbying from retailers he was “not confident at all it will be extended.”

Discount web vouchers prove big hit

Monday, September 14th, 2009

With the recession continuing to be uppermost in many people’s minds, there should be little surprise that one area of internet search which is booming is for discount vouchers, according to research reported in the Financial Times.

Internet searches in the UK for “discount vouchers” grew by 47.5 per cent in the year since last August, according to Hitwise, the internet research company. Google’s records show a 67 per cent jump in searches for the term “discount vouchers” between December 2007 and December 2008

Online discount vouchers are widely available, and offer savings on all manner of purchases. And the main users, according to Hitwise, are professional and white-collar workers, with about 70 per cent of them claiming to have used a money-off coupon in the last six months.

Recession-scarred consumers are embracing a thrifty habit that is likely to outlast any economic recovery: the use of online discount vouchers to save money on retail, food and other purchases.

Robin Goad, UK director of research at Hitwise, said searching for vouchers had become an established part of online shopping. “Consumer behaviour has changed so that people are looking online to research a product, looking at where to find the best price and finally doing a search to see if there is a voucher for it.”

Tracking Social Media Referrals in Google Analytics – Econsultancy Tip

Wednesday, May 6th, 2009

One cannot thank eConsultancy enough for publicising their experience of tweaking advanced segments in Google Analytics, to enhance the data granulation and to help us see Social Media sites on the chart. Previously, when we wanted to see and analyse visits from Social Media sites, we would do so via Referring Sites under Traffic Sources in Google Analytics. Now, in a few simple and quick steps, one can create a segment that will display just the data they need.

Over at eConsultancy you can read more about the experiment. In short, you can either create filters under a new website profile (but do not delete the main one!), or you can go via advanced segments. We chose the latter, since the data can then be accessed within the main website profile. So, as a matter of giving an example, here is how the things stand for ourselves and for one of our clients (the left and right images, respectively (or top and bottom, depending on how you are viewing this)):

What instantly comes to mind is that this cannot be a one-size-fits-all type of exercise, and it helps if you already have an idea about the Social Media sources that send you traffic. For example, eConsultancy does not include either Flickr or YouTube. We do not have a YouTube account, but we do use Flickr, and in the data capture from 1 January to 6 May 2009 Flickr has been the fifth traffic source for our site and blog.

Better still, building on eConsultancy’s experience, we created two separate segments for Twitter and Facebook, as these channels were consistently driving traffic since we have started using them, hence it was interesting to see the competition. We created two segments, one called “Twitter streams” with the following regular expression values: “twitter|tinyurl|bit.ly|tr.im|cli.gs”; and another called “Facebook”, with “facebook|new.facebook” as the regular expression value. See below the way this comes out in the chart (it also includes visits from Flickr):

Overall, since the beginning of the year, the traffic from these three sources – Twitter, Facebook, and Flickr – has accounted for 6.3 per cent of all visits to the blog. What our experiment shows is that similar segments can be created individually for other Social Media channels. In our case, this simply serves to graphically exemplify that, as far as Social Media and Networks are concerned, Twitter and Facebook are our most loyal traffic drivers so far. But when there are several competing channels, it makes every sense to create dedicated segments for them. What this will serve to do, is to better analyse the traffic and optimise the use of Social Media sites accordingly.

In addition, the value expression in an advanced segment field is limited to 256 characters. What could potentially be done, is all the Social Media traffic sources can be broken down to the ones that consistently deliver a lot of traffic and the ones that can be lumped together. For example, you would end up having segments for Facebook, Twitter, Flickr, YouTube, Digg, and LinkedIn; and the “Other Social Media” segment would include traffic from all other sites that do send visits to your site or blog but in a less consistent, impressive or otherwise important way.

Finally, if you are still unfamiliar with how to track Social Media responses to your content with the help of a Greasemonkey script, here is the post by Erik Vold on UserScripts, to get you started: Social Media Metrics Plugin for Google Analytics.

And many thanks to @technicalfault and @mattorchard for discovering the story and bringing it to our eyes on Twitter.