Google has rolled out two important updates to your Google My Business Account. When I say important, I mean potentially life changing. But before I get into that, a quick word for anyone unsure of what Google My Business is.

Google My Business is a free Google (what else?) tool that lets you manage your online presence across Google. For example, you know those sidebars with maps that you often see on the search result page when you google a business? That’s Google My Business at work.
Google doesn’t make that information up out of the blue. You can verify and edit your business information, which means you have some control over what appears in those results.

Right now, Google’s trialling an extended version of this tool. Called Google Home Services, it allows certain types of businesses to:

So what’s the big deal? If Google rolls this programme out globally, every aspect of your online marketing will be affected. Based on the trial, PPC ads will be replaced with Google Home Services ads, and local business will not feature in organic search results. It goes deeper. Once you click on one of the listings in the Google Home Services section, you are taken to a new page where you can select three different suppliers to send a request quote to. If you’re not on that list, you don’t get to submit a quote. 

If you’re thinking Google is moving toward a “pay to play” model, you’re right! And while you may not like that, you’ll probably need to play the game if your business provides home-based services such as plumbing, building, electrical services and so on.

If you haven’t already, chat with us about the implications for your business. We can help you claim your Google My Business space if you haven’t already, and have you prepared for the rollout of Google Home Business, if and when it happens. Or check this link for how you can post content to your Google My Business account.

In related news, You can now send SMS/text messages to customers from your Google My Business Account. Check out details here.     

Apply the strategies of the America’s Cup Winning ETNZ to your online marketing through the use of a well known but underutilised feature in Google Analytics here.  

Are there days of the week and times of the day when people are more likely to look for what you provide?  Just think how you could focus your advertising to make the most of the “highs” and avoid costly expenditure during the “lows”.    This video blog reveals :-

Find the video here 8 mins

For a business owner new to online marketing, the space can seem totally bemusing. Google, Facebook, websites, email marketing — so many options — so many tactics and so little time and money to invest. And when faced with so many options to take, the tyranny of choice kicks in, and frequently nothing is done.

But what if from all the options available there was just one thing that needed their attention. Fortunately, there’s a management theory that supports this logic.

The Theory of Constraints was introduced by Eliyahu M. Goldratt back in 1984 with his book The Goal, the cover of which sneaked into a recent presentation I gave to a group of business owners late last Friday afternoon. Now Friday is usually a time for some mental wind down activities, but this group had spent the day planning their efforts for the year with a coaching network we work with. Nevertheless, energy was on the low side and I was the last talk of the day, so I introduced this theory as a simple way to avoid inaction through confusion.

There was no Internet back in 1984 when Mr Goldratt wrote his book. His focus was more on helping organisations optimise systems that were outcome driven and struggling in production and administration. However, online marketing is just a collective group of systems that everyone requires the most from. Think of Google AdWords for a moment. Six steps that need optimising. The prospect searches – step one. Your advertisement is shown – step two. They like your ad and click on it – step three. They like the web page you take them to – step four. They decide you are for them, or they keep looking through your web pages until they are convinced of the fact – step five. They make contact – step six.

Now the theory states that the overall performance of this complete system will be held back by just one of the six steps. Not three – just one that is holding the rest back. It’s the analogy of the weakest link defining the strength of the whole chain. So how does this play out in the real world of people paying for $10 clicks? Here are three real-world examples that I came across last week.

Client A is just starting out with us and arrives paying $10 per click in a highly competitive market. The good news is that there is enough revenue behind each sale to make the cost of these high-priced beauties work IF she can convert them at an industry standard level. (It’s an auction, so someone in the industry must be making it work.) For them the weakest link is Step Three – the prospect liking the ad and clicking on it. They are getting some clicks, but nothing amazing. It’s below our standard and their Google AdWords quality score is suffering because of it.

The reason? Their copy is boring and blends in with all the other “blah” ads that their competitors are showing.  Their service is differentiated — thankfully — but this hasn’t made it through to their advertising. So that’s the focus for the month ahead — right ads that shake up the market. No landing page split tests, no new keywords to bid on or videos to produce — just write better ads.

Client B came to us through one of our Google AdWords Group Training courses. They were struggling with the first step – the prospect searches. The backstory was that they had launched a new product in their industry that delivers an innovative software approach to solving quite a general problem people have in running effective meetings. It’s a cracking solution. Pricing is good. The website looks fantastic. The only issue is that nobody knows  that a solution exists, so they are not using Google to search for it. Unless they can solve this, then their search advertising endeavours will be very short lived.

And finally we get to Client C who is struggling with the last step – the client converts. Prospects are searching,  clicking and engaging with the website content. Videos are being played and PDF documents are being downloaded. However the number who are calling or completing quote/contact forms is way down on where it should be. So it’s here we focus our time. Split testing landing pages — incentivising contact requests — ensuring the site plays well with mobile.

Now I understand that Google AdWords is just one of the many systems you can apply your online marketing efforts to. Social media advertising, organic search optimisation, email marketing, marketing automation are just a few of others available. Thankfully, Mr Goldratt’s theory can be applied at a higher level too — because deep down all these are just sub-systems that operate underneath a general online marketing system.

Make contact if you need help defining which system should deserve your attention, and where in that the weakest link may live.

Started your planning for 2017? Ideally, this would involve extracting yourself from the office – having some way to collect those gems of ideas, plenty of strong coffee to get the neurons working and a general feeling of hope and expectation. But is that enough?

Today I want you to add one more item to your planning toolbox – your Google Analytics Account. With this in mind here are my four steps to crafting a cunning website marketing plan for 2017.

#Step 1 – All Good Things Must Come To an End

Let’s start with the end in mind. What do you want to achieve in 2017 and what role will your website play in all this? If it’s a year of new customer growth, how many more accounts do you want your website to find for you? Or perhaps it’s more about generating more revenue from existing accounts – again, how will your web presence help you achieve this?

For instance, your growth goal could be to win 50 new customers. And for this you will need 150 website quote requests completed over the next 12 months. Or say 300 phone calls for people wanting service requests.

With this in mind, crack open your Google Analytics account and head into the Conversions area to see which, if any, of these are being tracked by your team. By default, Google Analytics ships without any Goals configured, so if nobody in your team added them expect to see zero data.

Last year I huffed and puffed my way around a number of trail run events – nearly always at the back of the pack. The slight comfort I had through all that pain was that my watch told me how far I had gone and, what’s more important, how much was left. Knowing you have just 4km to go when you are out of water and swearing under your breath at every incline makes a lot of difference.

So as Chaucer said in 1374, “All Good Things Must Come to an End”. In the modern world I think that End is a Conversion Goal set up in Google Analytics. Once it’s done you will be able to track how many calls your website generated next month compared to the one prior and if any quote requests were generated from your expensive advertising on Google.

#Step 2 – Love the Traffic That Works

Once you have the end points defined, you can then follow the spaghetti to see which stream of traffic delivers the most love (that is, the most calls or quote requests). You can see this in the report – Acquisition – All Traffic – Source / Medium. It’s one of my all time favourites.

Pick a reasonable date range and let all be revealed. Insights we have seen people gather from this report include:

# Step 3 – Apply the Pareto principle to Web pages

Thankfully, we don’t need to pay attention to all the pages on our website – just those that really matter. To find the select few, head over to the report at Audience / Users Flow. This gives you a visual representation of the digital pathways people tread while on your website.

The first page they see is defined as the “Landing Page”. People who arrive here are important souls. However, if they don’t go any further into your website, things become a bit challenging. Fortunately, in my 32,000 hours of digital marketing experience (yes a few grey hairs) I have yet to see a landing page in which no traffic goes further – so next up, the report shows the top five pages that are fed from this page.

Jot down your top landing pages and top secondary pages – the list should be less than 10 – and you have now created the 20% of your website content that needs work in the months ahead.

# Step 4 – Automate the Party Celebrations

Finally, I want you to configure your Google Analytics account to tell you when it’s time to party. We all experience those weeks when it’s best to look back and, well ….. forget. Now let’s hop into the Custom Alerts part of your account to configure things so you know when it’s time to CELEBRATE.

What times are we talking about? When the conversion rate of your quote form doubles in a week, say. Or your website revenue grows by 25% from the previous month. Why wait until those boring reports hit your desk? Let Google Analytics immediately alert when it knows the good news. Just set up the criteria for a party and work hard on the prior three steps to make it all happen.

So there you go. Just a few short and simple steps to get you into the planning mindset. And if you would like a few grey hairs of digital marketing experience to join you in your planning space then why not make contact? Or if all this reference to Google Analytics makes your head hurt then think about our Google Analytics Group Training Program.

This site tells me that I had 250 working days in 2016. One holiday mid year brings that down to 240. So what did I learn during those 1920 hours of occasional focus? Well, here are five snippets that, with 20/20 hindsight, provided me with a sizeable dollop of knowledge. They may do the same for you.

Dollop #1 – Do It Different

We are lucky to work with a wide range of very smart clients. Looking back, I can see that the fast growing ones have a number of things in common. One of those things is their focus on creating and ruthlessly promoting a clear point of difference that makes them stand out in their respective markets. Google then does a great job of providing the necessary leverage to kick their growth numbers skyward. Whilst their “same as everyone” competitors are left to struggle to make those rising click costs pay.

So what makes you different from your competitors? Is there any way you can make that difference big, bold and obvious? Is it your guarantee, your range, your approach, your people – or all of these and more? Earlier in the year I wrote this blog post that talked to this point. Once you have a clear “message of difference”, your Google Search Ads stand out, your landing pages almost write themselves, and if the difference resonates with your audience then your conversion rates bump upwards.

Do different – it pays.

Dollop #2 – Passion Plays a Part

Back in November I attended Nurture Change in Fiji. While there I met and heard Murray Thom present – he’s the person behind “The Great New Zealand Song Book” and lots more. Murray would have to be one of the most animated and passionate business speakers I have had the pleasure to listen to.

But his was not the usual blah story of success linked joyfully to even greater success. Nope, there were numerous roadblocks, challenges and plain hairy obstructions that lined up in front of him as he built his publishing empire.

Through all this strife it was clear to me that it was his passion in the project that kept him keeping on. There’s plenty of talk about passion in business, but how many times do we really dig down and check in on the real reasons behind the “why” in what we do?

Dollop #3 – Give it a go: the power of the start.

I began 2016 with a plan to launch Google Group Training. Nothing new there – I had started 2015 with the same plans. But things just got in the way. Finally in May it all happened. We put a few days aside and designed and wrote the content for our first Google Analytics course. It sold out in a week.

Later in the year we kicked off Google AdWords training. We tried to condense it into one session and failed miserably. People complained that their heads hurt, there was so much content to consume. So we stretched it out to two sessions with a two-week break in between.

Next month we launch training in Email Marketing and, after that, Search Engine Optimisation – both introductory courses running for three hours each. Registrations are whistling in.

But the success is not the message here – getting started is. So what’s been on your 2016 task since late 2015? Why not give it some air in 2017.

Dollop # 4 – Help Loves Experience

In July my left knee decided that trail running was not such a good idea any more and it was time to stop. NOW. Exercise can be addictive, so it took me a while to listen until the pain became loud and clear.

Off I trotted to a physio who I chose because they were nearby. It was first physio experience, so how else should I chose?

I spent weeks working with this person with very little to show for my money and, more importantly, my time. Thankfully around this period Ark Advance started working with Darren North from Urban Athlete. Now “athlete” is not a classification I would readily put myself into but I can make the “urban” part work – so off I limped.

Darren had seen this problem many times before – we were on the right track from the first session. He had me running up and down the hallway, bending this way and that, and exploring models of troubled knees. In no time at all he taught me what was wrong then showed me how his unique list of new exercises would help – IF I took the time to follow them.

Thankfully I did – things settled down enough for me to have mildly pleasant experiences on a big hill near Waihi and a jumble of rocks around a mountain.

So has 2016 been like a rinse and repeat for the advice you are receiving in your business? Perhaps 2017 could be the time to break out and experience something new?

Dollop #5 – You Can Never Stop Learning

Last month the company turned 14. I have the grey hairs to show that this and a bit prior all adds up to roughly 32,000 hours of experience – and the odd stressful moment – in online marketing. But no matter how much experience you have, there’s always plenty of room to get better.

In October we spent the most we ever have on external training for ourselves. The figure made me wince, but we wanted to upskill on the latest advertising methods, so we gave the credit card a hard nudge and started to learn from the best in Australasia.

As mentioned before, in November I did the Nurture Change experience for the second year running. Yes, it was in Fiji and the resort was stunning BUT I didn’t go for the sand – it was the speakers who make this worth the time. Honest :).

But training and education don’t always need to cost the earth. Here’s the list of books I read in 2016 that made me take notes and apply new stuff. They may for you too.

Confessions of the Pricing Man: How Price Affects Everything – Herman Simon

My book of the year. Pricing is so important and rarely do we get it right. This book helps you navigate around the traps along the way. I gave it as a Secret Santa for my BNI group and was laughed out of the room. I admit it may look like a textbook – but it is an easy read once you get into it.

Making habits, breaking habits: how to make changes that stick – Jeremy Dean.

Learn the easy path to starting what you want and getting rid of what you don’t.

Two awesome hours: science-based strategies to harness your best time and get your most important work done – Josh Davis, Ph.D.

Thankfully, it’s not about working longer. Find the way to design your day to best use the fixed amount of energy you have.

The power of more: how small steps can help you achieve big goals – Marnie McBean

An Olympic-medal-winning rowing athlete explains her approach to goal setting.

Feet in the clouds: a tale of fell-running and obsession – Richard Askwith

Trail running porn. We think we have hills to puff our way up – those fell runners take it to an even higher level.

There’s been a lot of talk about the power of robots and how they are going to take over the Internet. Wanting to see what all the fuss was about, I decided to dive in and see if I could find my own little robot to put to work.

 
So let me introduce you to Amy. She’s been my handy little robot for a couple of weeks now, Her job is to sit there on the Internet waiting for my next request to coordinate my next appointment. That’s all she does – book appointments in my calendar. So far she’s helped me schedule over 20 meetings in a reasonably accurate way.

Now I must admit early on I thought she wasn’t perfect. There were times when my request for “next week” seemed to be ignored and a proposed meeting for Thursday morning was offered as Thursday afternoon. So I raised the question with their Human support and guess what – the error was at my end and how I had set up my calendar. Amy was doing exactly as she should have been – saving me many minutes of email ping pong deciding which time/day combination suited both parties.

 
As an introduction to the world of artificial intelligence she’s a breeze to work with. All I need to do is cc her in on an email requesting a meeting or call, and she takes over from there.

 
Coffee meetings, in person meetings, Google Hangouts – she can take care of them all. You can help her by loading up a series of preferences for where you meet, how long the meeting should be for, and gaps between meetings so you’re not rushing from one to another.

 
She learns as she goes too. She now knows that my physio appointment is booked in town – ideally on a Friday – and I need 20 minutes to get there and back. The receptionist thinks Amy is an absolute blast. Now I can set up Amy to respond to emails directly from her with me cc’d in and the two of them can work out the best time for the next appointment without me being involved. How cool is that!

 
Apparently, she’s capable of some complex appointment setting tasks. For instance, for a meeting of multiple people she can email each person individually to coordinate all their diaries, and then, from the intelligence thus gained, pick the time that suits me. Appointment setting Jiu Jitsu!

 
And to keep me on track, every Monday morning I receive a note from her telling me all the meetings she’s booked the previous week and those she is still struggling to confirm. Yes, she’s persistent but not in a totally annoying way. From what I can see she will try a couple of times to make the meeting work and if nobody responds then she lets me know so I can get involved if I need to.

 
That’s it really. A very simple robot doing a seemingly simple task which can actually be deceptively complicated when you have busy people trying to co-ordinate their diaries.

 
Want to see her in action? Let’s catch up and talk about online marketing – just send me an email I’ll get Amy involved and we can schedule a call. (And yes, if you don’t want an Amy and would prefer an Andrew there is a male option.)

So everyone knows about Google search, right? Yep, the stats are amazing — how about 40,000 searches every second. Couple that with a straightforward method of advertising, and you and your competitors end up pushing up click costs everyday of the week.

Now let’s look at an audience that most are not aware they can advertise to. How about the one billion active users of Gmail? But before we get into the detail of what’s on offer and how it looks, let’s think through some very simple scenarios of where this type of advertising may make sense.

Let’s start with prospecting for new business. Here, the more you know about your ideal audience, the better. So you may have a guide on the email newsletters they could be subscribed to, or even the websites they may visit. The targeting options would then allow you to show your advertising to those who have emails in their Gmail account from these subscriptions, or that contain links to those websites.

Secondly, you can also layer this type of advertising over your standard remarketing campaigns to bring back those who have visited your website before. (Not sure what remarketing is — try this short primer article.) So someone visits your website on the hunt for a new rug for their lounge room. They browse through your options, but leave to carry on more shopping. Now you know the competitors they could shop with, so maybe you could target your ads to those who have visited before and who have emails in their Gmail account from your competitors?

These are two straightforward examples, I realise. Now let’s have a peek at how the ads display. There’s a nice surprise in store here for those who want to make the most of what’s on offer.

First up, let’s have a peek at how these ads initially appear in Gmail. The image below highlights two ads that popped up in one of my personal Gmail accounts. I use this to capture newsletter or social chatter that I don’t want cluttering up my business address.

 

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We will pick up on the second ad from Grammarly. I have visited this site before, so I presume they are remarketing to me. I click on the ad, and that’s the charging point for Google. Just like search advertising in how it is charged, BUT the difference is what happens next.

With this advertising you are not immediately sent to the website but are dropped onto a separate landing page that, as an advertiser, you can control the look over, within certain parameters. In this case it looked like the image to follow.

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There’s plenty of options as to how this could be set up. And video could have been used to explain more, but in this case they went with testimonials and a big bold red button which I clicked to hop across to their website. My click from landing page to website was not charged. Therefore it makes sense to make this page as convincing as you can to make the most of that first click cost.

Sound interesting? With general paid-search click costs heading north, this one tactic may be responsible for taming that skyrocketing cost per lead. You never know if you don’t try. Give us a call today if you are interested in running a test.

Hidden deep in a recent blog post from Google is an update to their AdWords platform that had me sit up and take notice. Most of our clients know the type of prospect they are after. Theirs may be from a certain age group and with definite gender bias. Previously there was no way to target this bias through search advertising.

This is about to change.

But before we get into the good stuff of the future release, let’s remind ourselves how you bias a search campaign now to suit a certain demographic audience.

Let’s say for instance you run a women’s gym and want your AdWords search advertising to target women between the ages of 18-24. To support this goal you load up into your account search terms with this bias (e.g. women’s gym, or gym for women) to actively filter out any male “search noise”. This helps, but unfortunately is not the complete story.

That’s because not all women look for a gym with those search terms. Life is never easy. So they will also be using terms like “gym” or “ auckland gym”. Now you would actively discourage any males from clicking your ads by ensuring your Expanded Text Ad copy actively deterred them. Again, your chances of a 100% success with this strategy is never assured.

Which makes it so cool that with this recent announcement from Google of Demographics for Search Ads, thanks to Google, your life-demographic targeting has become so much easier.

Now you can let Google help you find the right demographic profile in its search audience and then, and only then, display your search ad. Just let that sink in for a while. No longer are you restricted by the previous targetting metrics of search term, device type, time of day or even geographic location. Now you now can add in the demographics of the actual person keying in the search and say — please Google show my ads only to females between the ages of 18-24.

The slight downside to this approach is that, thankfully, Google doesn’t know everyone’s demographic make-up, so by picking this option you will reduce your overall audience size. However, it does know enough for those situations where there is more traffic than budget — and it’s critical to ensure your advertising attracts the right bias of demographic to give your website enough of a chance of creating a conversion.

And if you are not sure if your website has a conversion demographic bias? Then I suggest you hop across to your Google Analytics account and check out your reporting from this same area. Not sure where to find it? See more about that here. The report is not enabled by default, so once done and your Privacy Statement is updated, all should be revealed. Then if your Analytics account has Goals you can slice the conversions by the demographic metric to see which age or gender is more or less likely to convert. (If all of this last paragraph sounds like gobblydegook, then why not consider one of our half-day training sessions to begin to master this great tool.)

So how does Google know your gender and your age? This link tells part of the story, plus if you are logged into your Google account then there’s more data for them to pick up on. Yep, I know it’s like Big Brother coming to a search term near you — however, this time they may help you save wasting another poorly targeted click.

Imagine if your Xero accounting software came bundled up with the service supplied by your accountant? Sound quite cool? It could be a small way to save a bit each month. Then imagine if you decided to change accountant and they got the huff and stopped you from accessing all your prior financial data. Now perhaps that’s not so cool but a real pain in the xxx.

But of course we all know that would never happen. Accountants have ethics they have to abide by, which stops them doing something so dodgy. Unfortunately that’s not the same when it comes to suppliers of online marketing services.

However, this time it’s not the uninterrupted access to their financial data that’s at stake for customers. Nope — here we are talking about the marketing systems and data they have paid to have set up in their Google advertising campaigns, because without it the growth of their company could falter.

Let me explain.

Last week I talked about a similar scenario with the problems that befall business owners who have their Google Analytics account set up and owned by someone else. The short summary being that Web Developer A builds a website for Client B and installs the Google Analytics tracking code from within the web developer’s account structure. The two fall out and with the relationship goes access to all the client’s website tracking data. I put this in the category of “annoying” problems to deal with.

Now let’s dig into the second scenario — the one that can cause you the most pain if it affects you.

This time Client A purchases some web optimisation services from Website Optimiser B. Part of the solution is a Google AdWords paid search-advertising campaign. This campaign is built within the AdWords account of Web Optimiser B and paid for by Client A. (See where we are going here?)

Months roll by and Client A pays more fees to have the search advertising tuned to improve its performance. The Google algorithms notice this and increase the Quality Score of the advertising.

Quality Score is a metric Google uses to price the clicks people pay. This video from Hal Varian (Google Chief Economist) takes you through the role it has. Basically there is some “Google Love” placed at the account level to those accounts that deliver effective advertising. This translates into lower bid prices.

Client A never receives any reports but is told more tuning is done, and an increasing number of leads are generated each month. Things seem to be going well. Until, that is, their account manager resigns and there’s a change of staff.

Unfortunately, this brings with it a drop in service standards, as Client A has to educate the new account manager on how their business operates. After a few months of poor account management, Client A decides to move on and finds an alternative supplier, ending the relationship with a final request to hand over ownership of the AdWords campaign they have paid many thousands of dollars to set up and optimise. That request is met with stony silence.

Unfortunately, as I write today, there’s no technical way to pass ownership of a campaign between AdWords accounts. Unlike the recent update to Google Analytics that allows this. So Client A is left with two options. Either hang on to what they have and hope things turn around. Or start over again with their new supplier, but this time with a brand new Google AdWords account.

In the short term the second option could well negatively affect their business. No reporting meant they were not sure which keywords worked and which didn’t. That knowledge will need to be learnt by the new supplier, and gathering this knowledge will come at some cost. Plus, they will start with a new account with no “Google Love” and their overall click costs could bump up because of it. They will need to go backwards before they can go forwards.

However, once over this hurdle there are a number of reasons why this is such a better option. First up, all the money spent optimising will live with the campaign they own. Forever — independent of the supplier they use. Plus, if reporting decides to fall by the wayside with this new supplier, they can log in to their account and see for themselves exactly what’s going on. Plus, if they are concerned over what has and hasn’t been altered to justify last month’s fees they can download the report on all the changes on their account over the same period.

Of course, none of these benefits are there for those who have their advertising held in the accounts of their suppliers. I would estimate that there are hundreds of companies in New Zealand who are running paid search campaigns in exactly this way and have no idea of the business continuity risks they are taking by doing so.

I know this because three of the largest players in our market will work only this way. Personally, I question the ethics of companies that operate this way.

Here at Ark Advance I want customers to remain with us not because we have a stranglehold on their data, but because the team does a good job. We are always paid to work on our customers’ accounts. If they come with none, we set them up and assign our customers as the top level admin level. Make contact if this approach sits well with you.

This scenario is surprisingly common. Client A contracts Web Developer B to build a nice, swanky new website. As part of the service, the developer decides to add Google Analytics onto the site to enable their client to track results. For the tracking code they set up a new Google Analytics property within their existing Google Analytics account and allow access to the views of this property for Client A.

The image to follow gives you a recap on the structure for those struggling with the concept. The web developer owns the account and therefore controls the access of their clients at the property and view levels. (The web developer may end up with as many Google Analytics properties as they do clients.)

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All this is fine and dandy — until relationships change.

For instance, many years pass until it’s time to refresh the website and, for a myriad of reasons, a new web developer is chosen and for some other reason the relationship falls apart between parties. Unfortunately with this break comes a severing of access to all the client’s historical Google Analytics tracking data.

Not good for Client A and, prior to a recent update to Google Analytics, you were stuffed if you fell into this situation. However now there’s an option. BUT it does rely on cordial relations to work.

Let me explain.

Google now allows you to move ownership of a Google Analytics property between account holders. The image (courtesy of Google) to follow shows you where you can now transfer ownership of a property between accounts.

 

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However to make this work the person making the move needs to have high level access to both accounts. That’s the gotcha. Once you are over this hurdle and you have admin access to your own account, then you are safe and sound with master control over all your tracking data.

Here’s my plan to make a move like this work.

First up, check to see if you have admin level control of your Google Analytics account. One sign that you are part of a “many property” system is to see if the number after your tracking code is greater than one — for instance 1236548-12.

If this is the case, then now is a good time to get onside with the person who owns access to the Google Analytics account that your property sits underneath. Once done with schmoozing, then I suggest you set up a new Google Analytics account and provide access to them at the required level. Then part with some money or call on some goodwill to get them to migrate the property from them to you. (Once the move has occurred you can then alter their level of access, if you so desire.)

Baboom — once done you can sleep easy, knowing you have full control over your tracking data and this will not change whatever the status of the relationships you have with your suppliers.

Sound like a plan?

Let us know if you need any help during the migration — and if you want to learn more about what your Google Analytics data reveal then why not consider one of our Google Analytics Group Training sessions?

For us Kiwis the first of September heralds the start of spring. The evenings are becoming lighter, warmer and — for Auckland, especially — a lot dryer. Just four months sit between us and the end-of-year rush, so now is a great time to spring clean your website marketing in preparation.

So let’s pull out the “spring cleaning broom” and give the four core areas a good once-over. Spend a few hours following the points below and you can bring each area back to the shiny state it was in at the start of the year.

1. Email Marketing

Are there new subscribers hidden in the dead-subscriber reports? You can tell this by digging into your hard-bounce reports. These are usually email addresses that will never resolve properly because of some basic error in the domain name. For instance too many or too few dots — or basic spelling mistakes like gmale.com that can be easily corrected.

Probably not the most enticing of jobs, but once someone has loaded them up into a spreadsheet and corrected the ones that you can baboom, you are now instantly connected with “new” subscribers who inadvertently entered their addresses incorrectly.

That done, now ask whether your Welcome Message is the best it can be. (That’s the message that people receive upon joining your email list.) Now would be a good time to check over the content to ensure all is still relevant and the links resolve properly. While you are at it, you may want to inspect any regular automatically generated messages to ensure their content works. Perhaps your mobile audience has grown and an upgrade to a responsive driven content could be worthwhile?

  2. Website Analytics

Is your “net of measurement” covering all your website content? Over the last few months you may have added some groovy new content to your site but not included it in your measurement plans. Now is an ideal time to review all your Google Analytics goals and events to ensure they accurately reflect your site’s content. Likewise, if you have removed sections of your website you may want to disable any goals related to these, now very quiet, places.

Next question, can your reports reveal new opportunities for lead generation content? If you run a blog you may want to see which posts have been the most popular so far this year. Perhaps there’s an e-book you can create by weaving the top five pages into the one seamless document?

3. Google AdWords Advertising

Are you making the most of the space provided by Google? The recent upgrade to Expanded Text Ads could mean your old-school ads are decidedly skinny compared to the competitor ones surrounding them. Time to get in there and make the most of the nearly 50% increase in space available to you.

Next step, can you hoover out any wasted clicks? Running an AdWords account on a set-and-forget basis is probably never a good idea — however, we are told that thousands of accounts are run this very way. So if it’s a month since you last looked at your account, dig into the AdWords search queries report in your Google Analytics account to ensure there’s nothing scary in there — like paying for clicks that are not relevant to your business. Pull out the obvious bad ones and amend your negative keyword list asap to stop the wastage.

4. Your Own Online Marketing Knowledge

Is new thinking required to help you achieve new goals? (That’s a rhetorical question.) Not knowing what you don’t know is always a challenging space to be in. Why not take the “spring cleaning broom” to your online marketing knowledge and invest some time and money in expanding it? Our Group Training courses are designed with the business owner in mind — short dollops of information delivered in an affordable way. You can find out more on what we offer in both Google Analytics and Google AdWords here.

Hidden in the Google Analytics smartphone app is a tool that most website owners could learn a lot from.

The fact that there is an app is nothing new in itself. It’s been on the scene for a while now and allows you to become even closer to your Website Analytics data. Available in both Android and IOS, it’s a breeze to download, configure and to start browsing away.

Once installed you get access to a familiar range of reporting areas, including Real Time, Audience, Acquisition and Behavior. The Conversion area of the Desktop is replaced by Ecommerce in the app. Which leaves us with the particularly interesting one to be recently released by google — Assistant.

However, before we dig into this interesting addition, let’s look over what the Android screens look like on my phone. Here’s the core navigation screen.

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Using the the sample Google Analytics Account I have talked about before, I can show off some of the reporting screens. Here’s how Real Time tracking looks.

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Then for Behavior we currently see a screen like this.

 

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While Ecommerce looks like this

 

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Which leaves us with Assistant. Dig in here and you will find a range of suggestions from Google based on the tracking results they see. It’s similar to the Intelligence Events Reporting area of the desktop client — but with the data presented in a much more user friendly way. Here’s what a screen looks like in revealing a drop in users and a handy tip about Remarketing.

 

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I suggest if there’s space on your smartphone then install the app and take a few minutes to configure it correctly just so you can access this feature. It can provide some insights that may have been hidden from view after trawling through the desktop client.

For instance, just look at the image to follow where Google advises that Returning Visitors perform above average, plus how a certain demographic is behaving better than others. Both of these could have been missed when looking at the larger screen alternative.

 

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Have fun with this new addition to your phone. And if you want to know more about how to interpret these reports, then why not  consider coming along to one our Google Analytics training course as a good first step.

Join us on the afternoon of October 19 to keep up to date on the latest research from Google.

As usual these events are hosted in our offices – this time in both Auckland and Christchurch. Two themes to cover this time: 1) how mobile has changed consumer behavior, and 2) the steps you can take to build an online presence.

Treat this as a high level information update. No pushy sales process here 🙂 Speaker details from Google as below – Chris Price will run the Auckland session, Abby Shepherd will manage Christchurch :-

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Mitchel O’Donohue

Agency Development Manager, Google Australia & New Zealand
Mitchel will present Google’s Micro Moments research, explaining how mobile has changed consumer behavior. He’ll talk about the opportunities this has created for shaping consumers’ decisions and preferences, and touch on why now is a great time to promote your business online.

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Elizabeth Fox

Head of Agency Relationships, Google Australia & New Zealand
Elizabeth will cover the practical steps your business can take to build an online presence. She’ll give recommendations on how to align business goals to a digital strategy, talk about solutions available and also explain the benefits of working with a Google Partner agency.

We have only 8 spaces available at our Auckland offices in Grey Lynn and 5 spaces available in Christchurch. Go here to claim your space. (Unfortunately, the Google registration system has everyone register for Auckland – just flick us a note if you prefer Christchurch and we will get you sorted.)

Google will provide complimentary snacks and we will keep the hot drinks flowing.

 

Learning about a new report from Google AdWords does not make most of us sit up and listen. Struggling already under a mass of data, finding out about one more set of metrics is not something most people celebrate. Which is a shame, because most reports in AdWords are there to help you avoid making bozo mistakes with your ad spend.

For instance, once properly configured, AdWords Conversion Reporting allocates orders or enquiries directly to the keywords you buy clicks for. If you fail to look at this reporting, you may as well be using intuition to tune your account.

In some cases, applying the information in Conversion Reporting is all that’s needed to get your AdWords account to succeed. Ad clickers arrive, look around and buy or register during the one visit – nice, clean, simple and relatively straightforward.

However, when it comes to costly products, visitor behaviour may be very different. They may jump in and out of your website a number of times before deciding to buy. Whether you allocate the sale to the start, or the end, or divide it between the various elements of traffic, is a question of attribution.

People may also interact with your advertising during such a sequence of events in a variety of ways. A comfortable sofa and smartphone screens of expanding sizes have a lot to answer for here.

For example, people may browse on their phone in the evening, between ad breaks, find your ad and click. Fortunately, they like what they see, but damn, the credit card is in the car – so no sale, but a reminder is set for tomorrow at the office.

Next day our potential buyer forgets the name of your website, so searches and finds your paid ad again – this time on the office computer – and clicks again. Thankfully the price is unchanged, the item is in stock and the purchase is made.

Sound unique? Google reports that six out of 10 internet users in the United States do exactly this – start their shopping on one device and finish on another.

The image below from Google shows the percentage of cross-device search impressions for different industries.

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If you tuned your AdWords account in a standard way for the scenario outlined above, you would celebrate the conversion and promptly allocate it to the office hours click from the desktop computer and shift your budget from mobile ads to desktop.

Thankfully though, the new cross-device attribution reports from AdWords can help you avoid this mistake.

Borrowing the pic from the Google post below, you can see how it operates.

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The above image shows how many sales were started on a phone and finished via another device by way of something called the device assist ratio. This means that if your mobile assist ratio was five, then for every conversion you achieved on mobile, another five were started on mobile but completed on other devices.

Accessing reports like these will make it easier to see the true value of your investment in mobile advertising.

A lot of people question the value of paying for visitors who view your website via a screen size that always converts at a lower percentage than its larger desktop alternative. But maybe mobile could be starting a lot more than it converts.

Mastering Google Analytics on your own can be a challenge. Yes, there are tonnes of articles to wade through, hours of You Tube videos to keep you entertained, and lots to figure out as you browse your own reports. However, very rarely do you get the chance to look over the shoulder of somebody else’s account to see how they have managed their set up.

Well, wait no longer, people.

Google have just released a demo account that lets you view data from one of their own websites, the Google Merchandise store. Now you can browse their reports to see how Google themselves configure their own account.

Follow this link to get access and start browsing. Apparently, the Google Analytics installation will be fully complete this month, but for now you can still enjoy:

– The neat selection of dashboards they have installed

– Viewing the extra reports available with their enhanced ecommerce setup

– Note the goals they have set up

Have fun!

PS: Want to fast track your learning? Why not try our Google Analytics Group Training Courses.