Top 10 Google Analytics Reports for Online Marketing

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GA Experts have just released a new whitepaper covering the most important Google Analytics Reports for Online & Search Engine Marketers. Whether you manage a Google AdWords campaign, a wider paid advertising campaign or are just tagging your newsletters, these reports will tell you how your online marketing is performing. These are the key questions answered in the whitepaper:

  • Where can I see a summary of all my marketing data in one view?
  • Where can I see total sales revenue from AdWords and other online marketing sources?
  • How can I see an overview of how my PPC advertising is performing?
  • How can Google Analytics help me choose my keywords?
  • How can I compare my PPC advertising with my organic listings?
  • How can I see where my AdWords ads appear on Google search results pages?
  • Where can I see ROI and conversion data for my online marketing?
  • How can I relate my E-Commerce transactions to my online marketing?
  • How do I discover which campaigns are driving traffic to a particular page?
  • Where can I see how much traffic comes from content partners?

To download the whitepaper, please visit our Whitepapers section.

Position Your Ads According to their Conversion Rates

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Hot on the heels of the recently released AdWords Analysis Report is a new AdWords Keywords Position Report. It is now possible to examine which positions your AdWords adverts are appearing in, and which have the best conversion rates. Then you can use the Position Preference function in AdWords to ensure your ads are placed where they create the best results. This is a tremendous resource for all AdWords users.

You can see this report under Marketing Optimisation -> Search Engine Marketing, and it contains data on the conversion data and $/Visit values for your ads segmented by ad position.

This is designed to work with the new Position Preference function in AdWords. Position Preference means AdWords will try to show your ad whenever it is ranked in your preferred position and to avoid showing it when it is not. More info on Position Preference is available from the AdWords Help Centre.

Where do your AdWords ads appear on Google search results pages? How does each position convert for your particular keywords? Drill down from any keyword to see its display position: T1 through T3 indicate that your ad was promoted to the top of the search results page. Positions 1 and higher indicate a position in the right-hand location.

Top Ten Google Analytics Myths Busted

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In person, at conferences, on the phone and over the web, we hear a lot of people talking about Google Analytics. Unfortunately not all of it is well-informed, so here for the record are our Top 10 Google Analytics Myths, and why you shouldn’t belive everything you hear:

  1. Google Analytics is for home users only
  2. GA uses third party cookies
  3. Google doesn’t provide any support for GA
  4. Google Analytics slows your website down
  5. GA is only a Google AdWords tool – “it’s the next version of Conversion Tracker”
  6. You can only get Google Analytics if you have an AdWords account
  7. Google will use conversion data to fiddle the auction system of AdWords
  8. Google Analytics is free because they will charge you later when you are locked in
  9. Google will use your data to sell more adverts
  10. GA is free because they are farming the data for industry trends, ROI, conversion metrics, PageRank, etc.

1) Google Analytics is for home users only
Wrong. GA is a scaleable web analytics solution that can adapt itself to any user. We’ve implemented GA for multinationals as well as SME’s, and the GA client list contains names like General Electric and The Financial Times. Just because Google Analytics is free, doesn’t mean it’s small time – it just means that with GA, everyone can get access to enterprise-class web analytics.

2) GA uses third party cookies
Just plain wrong. This is a favourite line propagated by the competition (running scared since GA was released). GA uses first party cookies and that means accurate reporting, don’t let anyone tell you otherwise. Our whitepaper on web analytics data collection – explains the importance of using first party cookies.

3) Google doesn’t provide any support for GA
Way off again. Not only is there online support here – http://www.google.com/support/analytics/bin/request.py. But there’s a global network of authorised consultants providing support in 16 languages (http://www.google.com/analytics/support_partner_provided.html). Google Authorised Analytics Consultants (GAACs) provide support, training and consultation on all aspects of GA. The theory behind the GAAC program is for Google to spend its money on making the best web analytics package it can, and making it available for free, whilst you spend your money on the most difficult part of the problem – interpreting the data.

An influential post from Avinash Kaushik highlights this problem. To summarise – ditch your expensive analytics vendor, get a GA account and spend the money on analysis. We couldn’t agree more.

4) GA slows your website down
Err, well okay, maybe slightly, but we’re talking about milliseconds. GA works by page tagging, and any time you add more content to a web page, it will increase loading times. However if you follow best practice (adding the tag before the </body> tag) then your page will load first. Also, bear in mind that any page tag based web analytics package (which is the majority)
will work the same way.

5) GA is only a Google AdWords tool – “it’s the next version of Conversion Tracker”
In a way, it is the next version of Conversion Tracker, but that’s like saying that a Rolls-Royce is the next version of a Model T Ford. GA is the Google version of Urchin-on-Demand, a product of the Urchin company bought by Google in 2005. As such, it was a popular and highly regarded web analytics solution capable of tracking any online marketing even before it was integrated with Google AdWords.

6) You can only get Google Analytics if you have an AdWords account
Not at all. Anyone can apply for a Google Analytics account, whether or not you are using AdWords. Admittedly, if you don’t have an AdWords account you are limited to 5 million pageviews per month, but then all you have to do is open an AdWords account (£5.00) and that restriction is lifted. This is a world class web analytics product. For free. That’s not too much
to ask is it?

7) Google will use conversion data to fiddle the auction system of AdWords
Just not true. The Terms of Service and the Privacy Policy prevent this and besides, why risk it when the system is working so well?

8) Google is free because they will charge you later when you are locked in
Although we can’t read the minds of the Google people, and they love to bowl googlies (Wiki:Googly) every once in a while, this just doesn’t make sense. There is a partner product to GA, called Urchin Software, which is a paid product designed for in-house use and the two products complement each other nicely. There’s just no need to charge for GA.

9) Google will use your data to sell more adverts
Nope. Google’s privacy policy is clearly written out here: http://www.google.com/intl/en/privacy.html. We’ve read it so you don’t have to, and it’s a lot more strict than many of the other online services you might have signed up for. Think about it – Google’s high public profile means that if they get this issue even slightly wrong, the whole world will know about it.

10) Google is free because they are farming the data for industry trends, ROI, conversion metrics, PageRank, etc.
As Authorised Google Analytics Consultants, we have been assured by a senior source at Google that this is just not going to happen:

“… knowing your conversion rates and ROI is great for your business – you the client need to know this. And its important to you that you maximise ROI to your best potential. However this is of no interest to Google, beyond the fact that Google are happy that you are using their tool to perform the task. Benchmarking clients is the job of third parties, Google does not offer this service.” Dr. Brian Clifton, Head of European Web Analytics at Google

In order for the AdWords system to work there has to be trust between the advertisers and Google themselves, and Google is never going to sacrifice that trust just for a few more dollars when the system is working so well for all concerned the way it is now.

So that’s our Top Ten – let us know if you’ve heard any other GA myths that need de-bunking.

New Time Zones & Dayparting

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Two significant recent developments:

  • Google has upgraded the way in which AdWords and Google Analytics manage time. Firstly, you can now set the global time zone in both AdWords and GA.
  • Closely related to this is the facility to choose the time of day when your AdWords ads run.

For example, if your website’s goal is to generate phone enquiries, but only during working hours, then you are now able to run your ads from 9am to 5pm in your local time zone, or you can raise your bids for certain time periods. If you set your time zone in AdWords, it is also applied to a linked Analytics account. The serving of ads at specific times of day is known as “dayparting“, and it can be a highly effective PPC management technique.

Of course, in order to establish whether or not you should use dayparting, you need a good web analytics package. Some of the key questions to answer:

1) When is your traffic visiting your site?
2) When is the traffic converting best?

Sometimes the two are not the same – many of our PPC management clients ask us to turn off their ads when they have few clickthroughs. But the number isn’t as important as the conversion rate – you may have fewer clickthroughs, but are they converting better? In Google Analytics, you can set the date range view to hourly and then check your conversion reports (Content Optimisation -> Goals & Funnel Process -> Goal Conversion) to establish when conversions are highest and whether dayparting might be useful for your site.

The example below shows that the best converting time of day for this goal is 4-6pm. If you raise your CPC budget for this time period you’ll attract more of your best converting customers.

Remember, dayparting isn’t suitable for everyone – use your web analytics.

Has Google Fixed Invitation Code Issue?

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Recent posts to the Web Analytics Forum in Yahoo, as well as the general buzz in the web analytics community would seem to indicate that Google are making good on their commitment to ramping up capacity for Google Analytics.

When the Google Analytics was first released as a free product, the demand was massive – way more than Google were expecting. So to maintain the quality of the user experience the invitation code system was implemented. It was never meant to be a permanent fixture, and now it looks like the wait for a code is really coming down. Examples:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/webanalytics/message/6787

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/webanalytics/message/6952?l=1

You can apply for your Invitation Code directly at Google:
http://www.google.com/analytics/sign_up.html

Clifton Caption Competition

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To celebrate the launch of our new GA Experts Google Analytics Blog – we’re giving away a Google Analytics T-Shirt to the best answer to our caption competition. What is Head of European Web Analytics for Google, Dr. Brian Clifton saying to the Thomson Local catwoman at the recent SES London Conference?
Winners: The best answers will receive an official Google Analytics T-Shirt and will be listed here – keep it clean folks….

New GA Installation Guide Released

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Google has just released an Installation Guide for new GA users. This Help Centre article covers the basics of creating and setting up your Google Analytics account in 9 easy steps:

Step 1 – Creating a GA Account
Step 2 – Configuring A Profile
Step 3 – Creating Filters
Step 4 – Editing The Tracking Code For Custom Website Setups
Step 5 – Adding the Tracking Code
Step 6 – Grant Access to Other Users
Step 7 – Create Goals and Funnels
Step 8 – Tag your Advertising Campaigns
Step 9 – Enable Ecommerce Transaction Tracking

All the articles are also linked to the relevant Help Centre articles. View the article here, but don’t forget that to get the very best from your GA installation, you might need the services of a Google Authorised Analytics Consultant.

New AdWords Analysis Report

Google Analytics, Urchin 5 3 Comments »

Google have added a new report to the Search Engine Marketing section in Google Analytics. The new AdWords Analysis Report means you can break down your AdWords PPC data by Campaign, Ad Group and Keyword. This is a great resource for assessing the ROI of your campaign at a glance. Find it here: