Have you ever dealt with a customer who has very specific needs but who has breezed into your store in such a hurry that they don’t have the time to hear your sales spiel or hang around while you find the best option for them? These customers can be hard to please because they just don’t have the time or attention span you need to help them to your best ability.
Websites have these same challenging visitors. Quite a few of them, actually. In fact, the number of “challenging” website visitors are growing.
Who are they?
Let me introduce you to your mobile audience. Yep, those who look at your website through a screen the size of their hand and in situations where their attention is fleeting and easily distracted – you’re often their entertainment tool while they wait for a bus, their coffee, a friend to arrive.
Your first task – and the easiest – is to find out how many of your visitors fit into this group using Google Analytics. Just head over to your “Audience” section and you will see “Mobile” as an option. Within there you will see two sections: “Overview” and “Devices”.
Overview gives you just that – a top level look at how this type of traffic compares to those arriving from a Tablet or a Desktop computer. This is where you can check the volume of mobile visitors and see if there are any trends. Have a look at the past six months to see if your number of mobile-using visitors is heading up or relatively flat. In April, Google updated its search algorithm to favour those websites designed to be mobile friendly in order to drive a better user experience for those viewing from a mobile device. Scan back to April to see if your mobile traffic has taken a dive since that change.
Next up, let’s check how all three sizes of screen (tablet, desktop and mobile phone) are coping with your website’s content. You can see this through looking at the “Bounce Rate” – remember, that’s the percentage of people who come to the website, look at one page and then leave. The lower this stat the better; ideally you want to hover between 20 to 40 per cent. The “Overview” section gives you the bounce rate percentages for all three screen groups. In an ideal world you want the three numbers to be the same – and low. But if your website is non-mobile friendly, it’s likely your results will show higher bounce rates as your visitors quickly give up trying to navigate a desktop website from a dinky screen.
The “Devices” part of this report lists exactly that: the phone models your visitors are using. This is where you see the power of Apple’s marketing: iPhone is usually the majority of your phone traffic and iPad the majority for your tablet visitors.
Spending more time looking at your mobile visitors can help you solve problems such as:
Chris Price owns Ark Advance, a web optimisation business that specialises in online marketing. Ark Advance also offer a free monthly email newsletter focused on helping business owners grow their services online – sign up for free at www.arkadvance.com.
Do you sell a product or service that people generally take some time considering before they buy? Perhaps a month or two is required; maybe longer? This can pose a distinct marketing challenge.
Let’s say, for example, that a prospect visits your website on day 1, pops back on day 7 and then, assuming they remember, arrive again on day 15 ready to take the next step. In most cases you are relying on just their memory to ensure your website gets those later visits.
That’s a most unreliable thing to be relying on!
But what if there was a way to remind them during this time that you have an answer to their problem?
Fortunately, that’s where remarketing fits in.
Once correctly configured, your remarketing campaign will become your prospect’s regular little reminders to keep coming back to your website and (ideally) forget your competitors. Reminders usually take the form of banner ads that pop up around the internet on your prospect’s web browser. Or it could be search ads that are custom written to appeal to those who have visited your site before.
Here’s a real story of how a prospect could view the experience.
Last weekend I went mountain biking with some chums. On the first hill one of them came to the back of the pack to chat with me as I struggled up the first incline.
“Hey Chris,” said Joe, “you remember that business coach’s website you sent me a link to. Well I’ve yet to give him a call but the funny thing is that exactly after you gave me a link to his website he must have gone on a large online marketing campaign because I started to see his happy smiling face all over the Internet.
“That guy’s business must be growing like topsy.”
I smiled, knowing that remarketing was doing what it should.
“Well, you should make contact with him,” I replied. “Just so you get in before he fills up.”
I then saved my breath, put my head down, and tried to catch Joe as he powered up the incline.
Most people have Joe-like prospects that they would like to make the same impression on. Here are the basics of how to do it.
First you need to slightly amend your Google Analytics tracking code AND your website privacy policy. The privacy thing is a requirement by Google. They provide some details on what to include and where to make this change super easy.
Next you use Google Analytics to define your remarketing audience. A really broad and, therefore, not very useful, audience would be everyone with a pulse who visits the website. A better segment would be those who arrive and DON’T convert into a lead. Or better still, those who looked at a specific product or service but chose not to convert.
Next you “pass” these audiences through to your Google AdWords paid advertising account. Here you pick from one of two ways to market to them. The most common is the presentation of “banner” style adverts. Currently this requires 100 people in your audience before your advertising is displayed. The second option is to display different search ads for each audience. In this case you need 1000 or more audience members.
Then you choose how long your ads are shown for and how often they are seen. You need to strike a happy medium between too infrequent to be ever seen and being so ubiquitous that you become annoying.
Finally, you can launch your campaign and let Google Analytics help you tune it to produce the best results. Yep, Google automatically places this remarketing traffic within its own campaign so you can track those who click your remarketing ads and convert.
That’s the basics covered. Why not give us a call today to see how remarketing could work for your business.
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, July 5th ,2015)
Last month I spoke to a group on “How to Grow Your Business Through Google without Buying them a New Plane”. It sounds like I’m being a bit dramatic with that title, but I’ve crunched the numbers: inefficient Google advertising by numerous small NZ businesses adds up to – guess what – the cost of a new Airbus A320a.
At first I was pleased with myself how well the numbers worked and what a great speech premise it made. Then I realised the waste this represented for a group who could least afford it. You can avoid the “Buy Google a Plane Fund” by using Google Analytics – Google’s free website analytics product that helps you tune your website to become a high-performing virtual salesperson.
The product is free, but using it does require an investment in your most valuable of commodities: time. But it’s worth it. Master your Google Analytics account and you will get ROI. Here are just three exciting, juicy insights that make this hard work worthwhile:
Learn what advertising works for you
How much would you spend to “buy” a new customer? The quick response is, “as little as possible”. But, really, what would the ideal amount be? For some businesses it could be under $20; for others with high value products and great sales processes the amount could be greater than $2000.
Whatever the figure for your business, it’s smart business to continue with any advertising that delivers customers for your target amount or less. It’s a no-brainer. If correctly configured, your website analytics can tell you which of your online advertising fits into this category. And if your lead conversion rate is the same across all campaign types, then it’s a simple case of increasing your spend in channels that cost you the least per lead.
Plot prospect behaviour
It’s invaluable to learn what it is that turns your browsing visitors into strong leads or customers (and what it is that turns them away). Google Analytics can help you track the behaviour of your visitors – once you spot a trend or pattern in behaviour, you can work it to your advantage. For example, one business may spend a lot of money bringing traffic to their website, without an understanding of why some of these visitors buy and some don’t. As such, the only thing they can do to increase sales is increase their visitors to the site – by spending more money. Compare this to another company who know their customers generally visit their website twice before they reach out for information. Know how your potential customers act and you can work on strategies around their behaviour to drive up their lead conversion rate.
Keep your leads hot
Not all sales are instant. For example, not many people will buy a car simply by viewing it once online. With bigger ticket or complex items, you’ll need to nurture your online leads, gently nudging them along the sales process.
Step one could be to entice them to sign up for your email newsletter list or to download something of value, such as a buyer’s guide or industry checklist. Then you’d construct a series of clever emails, each message building on the actions of the one prior, growing their knowledge of the product and your company while subtly guiding them to request a quote or more information. For instance, if they clicked on a certain link on message two, the content of message three slightly alters to reference this fact. Here your analytics tools are effectively “listening in” on those being nurtured, letting you know who is highly engaged and potentially open to direct contact.
Could any of these help your business? Why not spend some time this coming week looking at your web and email analytics tools and reviewing these three sections? Warning: there’s some learning ahead – but also some great business outcomes as a reward for your efforts.
This is my last article in this series. Thank you for all the great feedback I have received.
I believe you can tune your website to become the lead-generating machine you wish it to be, with the help of Google Analytics. This free product can tell you how many people visited your site, where they went and if they completed any “goals” you wanted them to achieve. Facts, facts and more facts.
It’s all good stuff until something crops up to make these facts “questionable”. Well, that something has arrived: Google Analytics spam. I suppose it was just a matter of time.
Back in November 1999, as part of an email marketing company launch, I flew an email marketing guru from the US to speak to 300 people. His first question, “Does anyone receive email spam?” Not one person raised their hand. We all know how that quickly changed – thankfully technology won and very few spam emails make it into our inboxes these days.
Google Analytics, however, is now starting on that journey. With a reasonably high level of confidence I can say that your GA reports will unfortunately have spam in them.
Want to check yourself? Just look in the “Acquisition > All Traffic > Referrals” area and see websites sending you traffic like “best-seo-offer.com” or “100dollars-seo-com” or the crowd favourite “free-social-buttons.com”. It looks like these websites have sent you traffic but whatever you do, do not visit them… unless you are keen to test your antivirus software.
These sites have used a technical loophole in the Google Analytics tracking protocol to arrive in your reports. Thankfully we are not talking thousands of visits each week but if your website attracts a few hundred visits each month, having a hundred or so spam visits in the mix could be a problem.
Spam will skew your results. It will make your site look better in one area whilst looking worse in another. For instance, your total traffic will go up. Which may make you smile. Until you notice this peak came from referring traffic from rubbish sites. Not helpful.
Your website’s bounce rate will climb too. That’s the number that tells you the amount of visitors who arrive at your site, look at one page, and promptly leave. Nearly all of this rubbish traffic has a bounce rate of near to 100 per cent, which will quickly push a low-volume website into a scary bounce rate average of 60-70 percent. Your time and engagement stats will also plummet as spam shows up as spending less than a second on the site on that one page only. Argh! None of this is good.
You have a few options to clean things up – here are my top two:
First up, if you are only interested in reporting on New Zealand traffic then go ahead and create a segment to only show traffic from this region. Click on “Add Segment” > “New Segment” > “Conditions” > pick “Country” type in New Zealand and then save your new segment as “NZ Only Traffic”. You now can apply this segment across your reports and see all that nice, pure, New Zealand traffic.
Secondly, if regions outside of NZ are of interest to you, including those spam-creating places such as Russia, Indonesia or the like, then you need to create a “Filter” in your Admin area to remove the specific websites that are causing you a problem. This fix is a bit more technical and you may need support from the person who set up your Google Analytics account to help here.
Yes, I know it’s a pain but I’m backing that in a few months Google will have a nice, clean, technical fix to it all. But in the meantime, these are the ways forward.
Some of you have already been introduced to Liam, who joined us as a Campaign Manager back in June.
He is already certified in Google AdWords and is part way through his certification in Google Analytics.
Liam is actively involved in sport and community groups. He volunteers at the Auckland City Mission, helps to organise camps for children who need a break, and is investing in future generations through youth leadership across varying age groups.
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, May 24,2015)
Last week we covered how you can use Google Analytics to track positive stuff happening on your website, including sales leads, online purchases and newsletter subscriptions. We did this by configuring the “Goals” section of your Google Analytics account.
Now that you have goals in place and are tracking the right things, you can use the numbers to measure and monitor how well your website performs, based on the traffic it receives.
For instance, you may now see that just five percent of your visitors take up your option of requesting a quote. Or that a measly two percent actually whip out their credit card to buy from your online store. Not great.
How can you improve these numbers and the success of your website? Uncover all you can about those who DIDN’T make a purchase or become a lead (ie those who didn’t get in touch for more information). Use your Google Analytics account to learn who they were and what pages they clicked – doing this will hopefully help you figure out what it was that stopped them from becoming a customer.
In the “real world”, this bit of the process is a bit like having someone standing outside your bricks and mortar shop and asking those that leave empty-handed a few questions.
Google Analytics can tell you some good stuff about your website visitors, including:
Learning these things about visitors who fail to become customers will give you helpful insights you can use to tweak your website. Depending on your results, your actions to improve may include: fast-tracking your mobile website project knowing that people arriving from a mobile phone are twice as likely to convert compared to those using a desktop computer; reevaluating your spend of a specific marketing channel because so few visitors from this group end up as buying customers; or making your newsletter subscription option on your website even more prominent because you can see what a good job it does “warming” subscribers up who then go onto request a quote.
The more you know about the “who” behind those who don’t convert, the easier it can be to understand why your results may be struggling. Use your Google Analytics reports to do some detective work on your non-converters and see what valuable – and profit changing – information you can uncover.
Next week I’ll cover how Google Analytics can show you the paths these non-converters took around your website before they left without buying – very helpful indeed.
Chris Price owns Ark Advance, a web optimisation business that specialises in online marketing. www.arkadvance.com
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, June 07,2015)
I believe that websites can be optimised to act like vibrant salespeople rather than boring one-dimensional brochures. But, like the best salespeople, they need to be measured, monitored and have their performance and progress tuned in order to work at their full potential. Google Analytics is the ideal tool for this job – even better, it’s free. You just need to learn how to drive it.
Last week I explained how to use Google Analytics to uncover as much information as you can about those who visit your site but fail to convert into anything exciting, like revenue or leads. Information like where they were physically located, their gender and age, and what part of the Internet they were at before they clicked on your site. I likened this to someone standing outside your shop with a clipboard, questioning shoppers for similar information.
This week I’m on the quest for more answers to help you uncover the real reasons why so few of your website visitors do what you want them to. This time we want to find out why they left your website, empty-handed or without leaving their details for more information.
In a bricks and mortar store, you could get some insight into customer behaviour by surreptitiously following someone around your store, recording where they walk, what they look at and for how long. Doing this may alert you to why some customers leave without buying anything.
You can do this for your website, too, by checking out what order visitors browse your web pages.
There’s a great report inside your Google Analytics account called “Behaviour Flow”, which you’ll find in the “Behaviour” section. This is a cool graphical view of what pages people see and the order in which they see them.
The 80/20 principle applies neatly here: 20 percent of your pages will capture 80 percent of your visitors’ attention. The Behaviour Flow report will tell you which pages are in the small but powerful 20 percent group – you’ll find the home page generally falls into this category. Since these pages are so popular and make so much impact, you want to make sure they are working as hard as they should be. You only get a few pages to make a first impression, as such – this report will show you which of your pages are failing on the good impression front.
Now, you would expect (or hope) to see people moving seamlessly through your website, from page to page, before they eventually convert into a customer or lead. But if that’s not happening, you need to figure out which is the problem page. Looking at your report, which of those powerful 20 percent pages do visitors most commonly exit from? What’s the last page they view before they disappear off your site? If you can see a pattern here, you need to tweak or rework that page in order to stop losing potential customers.
It’s a bit like discovering the sales assistant in your popular jewellery area of your store is putting customers off – once you’ve found they’re a problem, you need to performance manage them.
For example, do visitors check out your home page then your “Services” page but disappear after looking at your “About us” page? You need to do some work here. Look at reworking your copy, design or images on the page – is it something you’ve said, or not said? Does it read badly or not have enough information and credentials to convince people that you’re the best? Get the help of a copy-writer if you need it.
You also need to ensure you make the next logical step for the visitor more obvious – where are they meant to go from here? If you want them to head to your “Book an appointment” or “Sign up to our newsletter” page, make it clear. Website visitors respond very well to clear direction.
Chris owns Ark Advance, which specializes in online marketing and website optimisation, helping businesses sell more online. See www.arkadvance.com
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, June 14,2015)
Google Analytics can tell you some really helpful stuff, including where your web visitors were before they clicked onto your site. Liken this in the physical world to someone standing in front of your store and asking people why they chose to visit your shop. Some may tell you they were already customers who read your recent newsletter, others may have noticed your ad in the newspaper and a few may have decided to visit after noticing your post on Facebook.
Why is this good to know? It can help you discern which of your marketing and advertising brings you website traffic and which of those avenues is the best at providing a reliable stream of high-converting leads. (Not all marketing is equal – you might do something that drives hoards of people to your website, but not one person buys something or becomes a sales lead. This may show your marketing choice is attracting the wrong audience for your product or service.)
There are five main streams of traffic that Google Analytics focuses on:
1. Direct traffic
These people know your website address and have typed it into their web browser. Regular customers will do this, but so will those who see your web address in a printed ad, hear your ad on radio or see your domain name on TV.
2. Referral/Social traffic
These visitors were browsing another website and followed a link to yours – it may be from a news story about you, a comment in someone’s blog or directory websites. Your social traffic comes under this category too, such as Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn. Facebook traffic is further broken down into desktop and mobile sites, so you can tell if they’re viewing your site from a phone, tablet or computer.
3. Search Engine Traffic
These are the visitors that came from a Google search – those who click on organic results, not your paid Google ads. GA will show you how much traffic came from this area and how it performed but it won’t tell you the actual keywords they used to find you ie what they typed into the search engine. (If you buy advertising with Google you can access this keyword data.)
4. Email newsletter traffic
This is where a few people trip up. Let’s say you spend the afternoon crafting and sending a cool customer email newsletter filled with links back to content on your website. If those links are set up to be exactly like they are on your website, this traffic comes under your Direct Traffic category. Not so good. Not only does it warp your idea of how many people know your URL or website address, it also thwarts you from being able to tell how effective your newsletter was on delivering highly engaged visitors to your site. To avoid this, you need to configure your email tool to add in some extra bits to each link to allow GA to place these visitors in their own newsletter “campaign”. This will give you an accurate picture.
5. Paid advertising traffic
Your GA account will treat your Google AdWords advertising in a very special way (of course, considering they’re both Google entities). GA places all the data that relates to it in its own AdWords category. Here you can drill down into the exact keywords that were clicked (so you can see which are working) and the outcomes they delivered (ie did they deliver profitable leads).
Look at your different traffic types and you can make business decisions like:
– Noticing with glee that your direct traffic gets a sizable bump when your ad plays on radio – and that this traffic also delivers a bump in conversions.
– Reaching out to a website owner who is sending you great traffic via referral traffic, to see how you can advertise on their site to entice more visitors.
– Realising that only 20% of your Google Adwords keywords are converting so deciding to pause the other 80% and switching your budget to those that are working.
This week, dig into your different traffic types and see how they perform on your website. You’ll find all this in the “Acquisition” part of your account.
Chris Price owns Ark Advance, a web optimisation business that specialises in online marketing. www.arkadvance.com
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, June 21,2015)
From the response I have been receiving to these articles, it seems that a growing number of business owners would love a website that did its job well and delivered a steady stream of high quality leads. Unfortunately, what’s more common is that business owners spend time building a new website and then tear out their hair wondering why it’s not made a jot of difference to their business. Alas, with websites, it’s not a simple case of build it and they will come but Google Analytics (GA) does a good job in helping you understand what areas you can improve or tweak your site in order to improve its performance.
Time is a good metric to keep an eye on. It needs to be optimised in two ways: firstly, by increasing the amount of time your visitors spend on your website and, secondly, by reducing the days between their – hopefully – multiple visits. It’s a bit like making sure those in your bricks-and-mortar shop keep walking around and browsing instead of dashing for the door. In the real world, you’d perhaps achieve this by adding nice couches for their partners to sit while they wait or installing an in-store cafe to keep them there and highly caffeinated.
To tune the time spent on your website, there are a number of strategies you can employ:
Content renovation.
Number one on your list should be improving your content. Last week we talked about how to use GA to find the 20 percent of your website pages that are shown to 80 percent of your visitors. Start with that 20 percent when upgrading your content – you want to make sure the pages that most of your visitors see are at their most captivating. Be aware that your content may need more of a renovation than a cosmetic makeover: think beyond tweaking words and look at your images, design and overall content.
If one of your pages is word-heavy and hard to digest (read: daunting and boring), consider using a well-designed infographic or an embedded video to share that content instead.
Email marketing.
Enticed your visitors to sign up for your newsletter? High five! Your ability to get their attention has just sky-rocketed. Now they no longer have to return to your site to see what’s changed and you have a direct line of contact. Deliver a value-packed newsletter and each edition will move them closer forward to becoming a customer.
Use remarketing to bring them back.
This is a nifty type of advertising that helps reduce the time gap between visits. Remarketing is a Google product that allows you to show banner-style advertising on sites other than your own. The brilliant thing is that your advertising is only shown to those who visited your website. You can set these ads to reach visitors who didn’t convert (ie buy), encouraging them to come back and have another look at your site, as well as those who have purchased from you before, reminding them to come back and purchase again.
So there you have it – three good ways to improve your GA time metric.
Speaking of time, there’s another time issue we should mention: pages that take an age to load.
Don’t expect your visitors to wait too long for that next page to appear. The faster your pages load, the more likely your visitors are to stick around. Look at the “Behavior” part of your Google Analytics account to see the current selection of “Site Speed” reports available. Not only does GA tell you which pages have the most room for improvement, it also tells you what to suggest to your web developer to get the problem solved. How thoughtful is that?!
Chris Price owns Ark Advance, a web optimisation business that specialises in online marketing. Ark Advance also offer a free monthly email newsletter focused on helping business owners grow their services online – sign up for free at www.arkadvance.com.
This month I’m swapping the word “Report” for “Feature” to highlight the Intelligence Event option available in your Google Analytics account. This allows you to configure your account to send you an email when certain predefined events occur on your website.
What kind of events? For example, if your Social Media traffic delivers traffic above a certain threshold. Or your site receives traffic from a certain geographic region. You can define what’s important for you during configuration and then sit back and let Google email you when it has to.
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, May 10,2015: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/68319798/counter-your-bounce-rate)
How about a bit of audience participation to explain how the “bounce rate” works in Google Analytics? Imagine you’ve printed off the pages of your website (your home page, About Us, Contact Us etc) and laid them out on the floor in front of you. Now sit back, look skyward and imagine your website visitors falling onto these pages.
For most websites, you’ll find people stacking up on your home page – their first port of call. Those with a highly optimised website will see people falling on a more even spread of pages. (If no one falls from the sky at all, your website is a write-off – start again.)
The pages these visitors are landing on are what Google Analytics terms – guess what – your “landing pages”.
If your home page does its job well, you should see your visitors stand up and jump from this page to another. And another. And another, as they move around your site. If they stand up and walk away from the scene, never to be seen again, your home page has problems. Those people who fall onto your home page and then walk away forever is what Google Analytics calls the “home page bounce rate”. GA shows this in a percentage form.
It’s vital to track the home page bounce rate because the home page so important to the performance of your website as a whole.
The main role of your home page is to welcome and help your visitors find what they are looking for. It’s kind of like a salesperson in a shop, meeting and greeting new customers and letting them know where things are.
A bad home page is like having a nose-picking, talking-to-their-friend-on-the-phone, swearing like a sailor salesperson – a terrible first impression that will make any new customer swiftly exit the store, never to return.
With the home page bounce rate stat, the lower, the better. Our best clients have home page bounce rates below ten percent, while others struggle with 50 per cent or higher.
Your website’s “bounce rate” is the percentage of people who leave after only viewing one page ie the page they landed on. A target value here is between 20-40 per cent.
Some visitors will fall onto one page, stand up and walk around a few other pages before they walk away. The page that they stand on before they walk away is called the “exit page”. If you look at your Google Analytics and see your Contact Us page has a very high Exit Rate, don’t worry about it: your visitor has probably found your phone details, email address or shop address before they’ve left your website.
Have a look at your Google Analytics for the month. What’s your home page bounce rate like? How does it fare when compared to your site’s average bounce rate? Too high? Focus on improving it – perhaps move some content around, add to what’s there to entice people to move deeper into your site or even look at a redesign so that it is attractive as well as easy to understand and navigate.
(As published in the Sunday Star Times, May 17, 2015: http://www.stuff.co.nz/business/68483238/track-your-websites-performance)
Hopefully you now view your website as a salesperson rather than a brochure and you realise you can use Google Analytics to improve how your website is working for you. This week I want to show you how to configure your Google Analytics to track the bits that really matter. How would you measure the performance of a salesperson if you didn’t keep track of the sales they made? With a great deal of difficulty. Same goes for your website. Keep its performance on track by putting some goals in place.
Unfortunately, your Google Analytics account isn’t automatically set up to measure the sales made by your website – this is something you have to sit down and do. But it’s most definitely worth your while. How can you measure performance if you don’t track it?
Let’s cover what you may want to track.
For those with an e-commerce website, the outcomes you’ll want to track are quite straightforward. You’ll want to track how many online sales you’ve made, how many people signed up online to your newsletter (or for other bait, such as a “Cheat Sheet” or “Helpful Guide to”) and possibly how many viewed your website videos.
If your business sells services (such as accounting or cleaning), it’s a bit different. Your website is probably there to generate leads – it tells potential customers who you are and what you do, before prompting them to get in touch with one of your salespeople, who will then (hopefully) convert it into a sale. While we can’t track sales on service-focused websites, we can track interest. This includes visitors who viewed videos, downloaded PDF documents, completed quote request forms or filled in Contact Us pages. Visitors doing some or all of these actions are obviously more engaged than those that don’t – they’re showing interest.
So you want to track all the website actions that show engagement (as we’ve outlined above). To do this, head over to the “Goals” section of your Google Analytics account and work through setting them up.
Once this is completed, Google Analytics will help you create the Key Performance Indicator (KPI) that will let you know if you need to make any website changes to improve each goal. For instance, your reporting may tell you that 2% of your website visitors complete your Contact Us page. Or that just 3% of visitors to your homepage play the video that’s there. Or only 0.5% of visitors buy something from your e-commerce website. All of these results are on the low end – but at least you’ve started tracking them and are now aware they need work. I’ll share how to do that next week.
The main thing is now you know where you stand. Well done for getting this far and having some Google Analytics goals set up – based on my experience of reviewing hundreds of Google Analytics accounts, just doing this puts yourself in the top 35% of website owners.
Thank you to all those who turned up for our inaugural event last month. During this session I covered “Growing your business through Google without buying them a new plane”. The content for our July 23rd session is now finalised (see below) and you can register for the event here. Customers and prospects of Ark Advance should have received a voucher code by now.
5:10pm – Understanding The Fundamentals of Online Marketing
6:20pm – How to complete a web development project and still talk to your web developer
This month I kicked off our first “Thursday” by presenting on “Growing your business through Google without buying them a new plane”. Customers who couldn’t make it will receive a pre-recorded version of this presentation. Here’s a brief synopsis.
First, I reviewed how many small businesses in New Zealand have staff (approx 97,000), and then surmised that they could also afford to advertise at approx $300 per month with Google. And allowing for 50% of this spend being wasted through poor advertising choices led to a calculation – 97,000 x $150 per month – which comes to $174 million. With a new Airbus A320a costing a piddling $123 million, I had to allow for a few “modifications” to soak up the remaining $51m. Airforce One, anybody?
Now if you design your advertising to help Google achieve the ideal user experience, you are heading along the right track and probably not helping Google fund that new Airbus. The question is, what is this supposed ideal experience? Think back to when you’ve been googling something and Google, bless its heart, did exactly the right job for you. You found just what you were after, spent a happy few minutes or more splashing about the website Google pointed you to, and didn’t go back to Google until you were ready to search for something else.
And when it fails? That’s when you search, click onto a site, realise it’s not what you’re looking for, quickly click back for another look at the search results, and then click away. Think of it as bouncing between the search results and the sites you find – hunting for that elusive prey.
Advertising that is costly and ineffective will have all the attributes of this scenario – attracting few clicks for the number of times it is shown. What’s more, those who do click bounce off the site in droves – most likely to head back to Google to continue their quest. There’s an Airbus armrest paid for, right there.
Applying poor measurement practices is another armrest – with maybe a seat belt thrown in too. Although you can’t manage what you can’t measure, it’s still common to see people buying Google Advertising with no way to determine what value they gained from it.
It’s easy to see why. Setting up a Google Adwords account is easy peasy – all you need is 20 minutes and a credit card. Just follow the prompts Google provides and your ads will be online, with money being sucked from your account, in mere moments.
Now compare that with the effort required to set up and configure your Google Analytics account. Yes you can get the code in minutes – then someone needs to add it to EVERY page of your website. What’s more, the account needs configuring to track the actions (think sales or contact form requests) that you want your advertising to drive. All going well, and with someone who knows exactly what they need, this work can done in under an hour. But ask the business owner to take on the task and it could be weeks before a web developer has done their job, leaving the marketing assistant to figure out exactly what part of Google Analytics needs customising for the goals to work properly.
So think yourself lucky if your goal tracking is working as it should, allowing you to see exactly how much each lead from your paid advertising channels is costing you. You may also notice that each month the per lead cost moves gradually northwards.
Why is that? Well, Google is the place to be for you AND your competitors. And that drives the bid price up – and with it your cost per lead. Which leaves me with the last part of this presentation summary – nurturing your leads with the care and attention they deserve.
Let’s think about the polar opposite way this could work: Aging sticky notes on computer screens containing the details of prospects who called in for help last week and still haven’t been called back yet.
Then, when they are called back, it’s from salespeople who treat them depending on how they feel that particular day. No method to track who has said what to whom. Appointments get set and people fail to turn up. Quotes are given but never followed up. And so on, and so on.
I know this happens because – as I’m sure you have – I’ve been on the receiving end of nearly all these behaviours. And while businesses can survive in the short term with systems like this, I predict they will soon find themselves priced out of online advertising because their effective cost per sale from online leads will be too high. The smart people who see selling as a “system” will bid up their advertising to grab as much traffic as they can.
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So who is on your website NOW? No need to guess – just head over to this report and all will be revealed. This is a great way to while away a few moments and look transfixed as people arrive and wander amongst your pages.
Some of the cool ways to use a report like this would be:
To validate that your tracking is working properly. Today I opened this report and picked up that a client’s mobile website wasn’t being tracked at all. I just opened up my smartphone, turned on my mobile data connection, browsed to their homepage and waited for me to turn up. I didnt.
Sit back and skite about how well your radio advertising worked as you “see” hundreds of new direct visitors arrive in abundance just minutes after your ad ran.
Double check that your Goal Tracking or Event Tracking is correctly configured. Just turn off any filters that could ignore your traffic (if, for example, you were on your work network) and then go ahead and register or complete a sale and see that the necessary Google Analytics goals are working.
Or sit back and while away the Friday afternoon as people take in all your great content.
Enjoy.
“No thanks I’m just looking.”
How many times have you said this when wandering around the shops of your favourite shopping mall? You were probably not alone. Walk around any mall and notice those holding shopping bags compared to those not, and the majority will be looking. Well, it’s the same online.
In fact the web is the first place many go when starting the research stage of any complex purchase. Knowing this, the savvy service marketer knows she needs to create a clever system to a) attract those who are just looking; and then b) nurture them gently but purposefully towards the sale. The key parts that make up this system are the subject of this article.
There are five main stages to follow when creating a “looking-to-buy” nurturing system. Let’s go through each of these in the sequence that I see them deployed.
#1 Converting Anonymous Lookers into Known Lookers
Lookers are reasonably useless in their anonymous state. Somehow you need to stop those “just looking” and convince them to raise their hand and identify themselves. Until they do this all bets are off. There’s very little you can do to nurture them.
Now I realise you can unleash some re-marketing smarts and try to promote yourself to them as they browse other sites. That’s a step further forward than doing nothing. Nevertheless, you really need their email address to start to move ahead.
Content that makes the anonymous known is the magic ingredient behind content marketing. Producing the right content and delivering it in a way that makes someone willing to give up their anonymity (ie, give you their email address) is is not easy. You will trip up along the way as you fine tune your content to make it persuasive enough make the conversion work.
Because you can’t go any further forward until this part is working, stick at it. And once these “just looking” email address leads start to arrive, it’s time to ….
#2 House them in a system that tracks what has been said to whom
You will need a CRM of sorts to hold all these new prospects, remembering that they are not ready to buy just yet. So they don’t need a salesperson calling them to take the order. Instead, they need to receive small pieces of content that slowly, but gradually, move them through the decision making process.
Life is so much easier if the system that houses leads also keeps track of what communication was sent to whom and when. Ideally, it will manage both digital and non-digital channels. So if someone receives a few emails, a direct mail piece and perhaps a check-in call from a call centre, then each and every communication is captured against the prospect’s record.
Once you have a system ready to house and monitor prospects, you can focus on what to say to them and when. Or to stage 3 where you get started on….
#3 Crafting messages that move them further along the buying process
I’m not thinking here of “are you ready to buy now?” reworked multiple ways but all with same intent.
Nope, the plan is to deliver answers to the questions people have as they work through the buying process. Questions like “who else has used your service to solve the same problems I am facing?” or “how do I compare you with others?” or even “why should I consider the premium service when the standard may do the job?”
Customer testimonials, buyer guides and product infographics could deliver answers to questions like these.
Every service business will need to answer its own set of prospect questions. Start by identifying what the common questions are and crafting initial content to answer them.
Then, once you start matching your content to your prospect audience you can begin to….
#4 Take notice of those who take notice
Once again, ideally this will be a feature of your CRM system. Here your leads are stored and your campaigns crafted. And all going well, the system will track emails that are opened, the links clicked inside them, and perhaps even the website pages browsed. All this interaction will then be neatly stored against each prospect record.
Then it will be a simple case of sorting your leads by those who interacted the most with your digital content. The more they open, click and browse, the more likely they are to be ready for the next step where you….
#5 Give people a chance to raise their hand
Those engaging most with your content could require a carefully scripted phone call from a “gently gently” salesperson. Or, if this is too much, perhaps a visit to a group event hosted at your company. Something that moves them off the digital channel into the physical space where the sale can be completed. Nurturing content that has done its job well will make this “bridging content” part of a natural next step.
There you go – my five steps to convert “those looking” to “those buying”. Yes, I admit they are very high level overviews BUT they should give you a starting template to work towards. GIve us a call today if you want help installing them into your online marketing box of tricks.