analytics 101

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Analytics 101

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Page 1: Analytics 101

Analytics 101

Page 2: Analytics 101

Agenda• What are Analytics?• Important Concepts • Campaign Tagging• Reporting• Using the Data• Q & A

Page 3: Analytics 101

Objectives/Goals• What do you want to achieve?• What data will help you achieve your goal?• Once you have the data, what actions will you take based on

the data?

• Analytics has nearly all the data and reporting variables you might require, except individual personal data!

Page 4: Analytics 101

What are Analytics?The concept & science behind the data

Page 5: Analytics 101

Why Analytics?• See how users find your site• Search, referring sites, campaigns…• See how users use your site• Pages, events, navigation flow…• Prove value/ROI of marketing programs• Track conversions and revenue• And see what drives conversions and revenue

Page 6: Analytics 101

Why Use Google Analytics to Measure?• Industry standard – 67% of top Websites• Versatile and robust• Easy to configure and use• Best of all: It’s FREE

Page 7: Analytics 101

What We Measure• How do visitors find our website• Which pages are they visiting• Events (how are they engaged on the site)• Conversions/Goals

• Make informed site design and content decisions• Improve our site to convert more visitors into customers• Optimize marketing campaigns

What We Do With the Data

Page 8: Analytics 101

Important ConceptsThings to Know

Page 9: Analytics 101

Audience Report

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Definitions

User (Visitor)Individual user visiting your site; or more accurately cookie/machineSession (Visit)A user comes to the site. They have multiple visits. Visits typically end when they leave the site or after 30 minutesPageviewUser loads a page. Every load/reload of a page counts as one pageview

Page 11: Analytics 101

Definitions ContinuedUnique PageviewPageviews tied to users. Reload a page 5 times?5 pageviews = 1 unique pageviewNew/Returning UserIf you never had a cookie from the analytics system, you are a new user. Cookies deleted? = new userEventSomething you want to single out to track analytics for. For example, file downloads, clicks to offsite links, video engagement

Page 12: Analytics 101

How it Works TogetherNew user accesses the home page:• 1 User• 1 Session• 1 Pageview• 1 Unique PageviewThe same user accesses 3 more pages and home again• 1 User• 1 Session• 5 Pageviews• 4 Unique PageviewsThe same user leaves, comes back tomorrow, accesses home and 2 new pages• 1 User• 2 Sessions• 3 Pageviews• 3 Unique Pageviews

Page 13: Analytics 101

Traffic SourcesA: Organic Search: clicks from search enginesB: Paid Search: clicks from search engines (paid)C: Social: clicks from social posts, not adsReferral: clicks from another sites links, like partners Direct/None: typed in www.Nintex.com or bookmarks. Custom: Anything you set in tagging A

B

BB C

C

Page 14: Analytics 101

Audience Report

Page 15: Analytics 101

Campaign TaggingFeed Us Your Data

Page 16: Analytics 101

Campaign Reports Inside Google Analytics

Page 17: Analytics 101

Track Everything!• Google Analytics naturally tracks referrals and

Organic Search

• Anything you want to track MUST be manually tagged• Banner/Display Ads• Email Links• Printed creative (usually via a link shortener)• Anything you want to attribute to a particular initiative

• Note: tagged links must go to a page with Google Analytics code on it or the data WILL NOT be captured

Page 18: Analytics 101

How To Tag• To tag your campaign URLs, use the following

parameters and campaign variables:http://www.nintex.com/landingpage/?utm_source=someadnetwork&utm_medium=banner&utm_campaign=q2_partner&utm_content=banner1

• utm_source: Identify the source of the link (google, citysearch, newsletter4)

• utm_medium: Advertising medium (marketing medium: social, cpc, banner, email)

• utm_campaign: Campaign name (product, campaign, program, slogan) • utm_content: Optional, used to differentiate ads, link placements

• Use the tool located at https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/1033867?hl=en to make tagging easier!

Page 19: Analytics 101

Campaign Reports Inside Google Analytics

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ReportingHow it all comes together

Page 21: Analytics 101

Google Analytics Interface Report Structure• Audience – Visitor information: geo-location, technical

details, sessions, visitor type• Acquisition – How did they get to the site? Campaigns,

organic search, social…• Behavior – What did they do on the site? Pages, events,

site search…• Conversions – Did they complete a goal? Goals, funnels,

attribution…• Real-Time – Live data!• Dashboards – Visualize your data

Page 22: Analytics 101

Date RangesAll reports are driven by the active date range selected in the upper right-hand corner

Select “Compare to Past” to view data compared to the previous period of equal length, previous year, or custom ranges

Page 23: Analytics 101

Audience Reporting – Overview: General Traffic Data

Page 24: Analytics 101

Geo – Location and Language

Page 25: Analytics 101

Users Flow

Flow by source/medium

Page 26: Analytics 101

Acquisition ReportsHow did you get here?

Page 27: Analytics 101

Acquisition - Overview

Page 28: Analytics 101

Acquisition – Organic/SEO

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Social Reporting

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Campaigns

Page 31: Analytics 101

BehaviorWhat did you do here?

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Behavior - Pages

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Behavior - Navigation

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Behavior – Events (example: video activity)

Page 35: Analytics 101

ConversionsDid you do what we wanted you to do?

Page 36: Analytics 101

Goals - Overview

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Goals - Funnel

Page 38: Analytics 101

Multi Channel Funnels – Conversion Paths

Page 39: Analytics 101

Use Your Reports!

Page 40: Analytics 101

Objectives/Goals• What do you want to achieve?• What data will help you achieve your goal?• Once you have the data, what actions will you take based on

the data?

• Analytics has nearly all the data and reporting variables you might require, except individual personal data!

Page 41: Analytics 101

Report and Analyze What is Most Actionable55,000 visits last month – ok, but so what?

Versus 48,000 visits the month before – interesting, but why?

Gain in visits came from event and a new paid campaign – now we’re getting somewhere!

New paid campaign drove traffic from campaign ads A and B –this is actionable!

Page 42: Analytics 101

Keep in Mind….1. Look at trends over snapshots – data at one point in

time isn’t as interesting as data over time2. Find out the why – what influences an interaction or a

goal conversion? -Traffic sources, campaigns, sites, regions….3. Start with the basics and add dimensions to drill down4. Compare: quarter over quarter, year over year – look

for seasonality

Page 43: Analytics 101

Review and TroubleshootRemember:• If it’s not tagged, you can’t attribute where it is coming

from• If the link goes to a page without analytics code (or a

direct file download), you will never get the data• If you don’t set up a goal, proving ROI is not impossible,

but is more difficult

Page 44: Analytics 101

Questions?