Web Measurement: What You Don’t Know Would Make A Great Book

Written by Steve Jackson


“What’s in it for me?” you ask. “Why should I measure how people use my website? How does it help and what does it all mean?” The purpose of this article is to try to give you some insight into effective web measurement and to talk aboutrepparttar most important page of any website,repparttar 124817 landing or home page.

Why measure at all?

Fred Flintstone lived inrepparttar 124818 Stone Age but we live inrepparttar 124819 Information Age. We deal with a constant flow of information from TV, websites, email, RSS feeds, mobile phones, PDAs, radio, newspapers, flyers, billboards, and magazine covers. Evenrepparttar 124820 sides of buses hit us with information about companies, products and services. So why on earth, inrepparttar 124821 midst of this information overload, would you want to measure how people use your website, another source of data to barrage you with even more information? The answer is quite simple and is summed up best byrepparttar 124822 18th century writer Sydney Smith. “What you don’t know would make a great book.”

Consider this.

Your business is selling $50,000 worth of product a week (5000 units a month) through your website. You are delighted with these results, as many would be, and you only measure them because you figure you’re doing something right. However your competition, always watching and waiting for their chance, come along suddenly and steal a lot of your market share before you know what’s happening. How? They were consistently testing how they could improve their conversion rate online and after they had maximized their conversion rate, they went out and aggressively targeted your potential customers. The bounders! However sincerepparttar 124823 conversion rate on their website is much higher than yours, they eat your market like a hungry lion.

Let’s put it another way.

You are successfully selling 5000 products per month through your website but your conversion rate is only 0.18%. According to research carried out by shop.org,repparttar 124824 average sales conversion rate is 1.8%. That means that you could be selling 10 times as many products (50, 000)! Imagine what that could mean to your bottom line. If you don’t know what your conversion rate is, then you don’t know how to improve it or even that it needs improvement.

Measuring conversion is not complicated.

Measuring sales or prospect conversion is very easy. Over a given time period, you simply need to know how many people buy or register an interest in your product or services as a percentage of how many visitors turn up. However, there is more to effective measurement than simply measuring this kind of conversion.

What a good measurement tool should give you.

The ability to improve your conversion rate depends, atrepparttar 124825 very least, on 2 basic things. In essence, this is what you ‘have’ to measure to begin a conversion improvement program.

·Firstly, you need to be able to accurately measurerepparttar 124826 number of visitors arriving at your website. ·Secondly, you need to be able to see how they userepparttar 124827 website by looking atrepparttar 124828 paths they have taken and how long they have spent browsing your pages.

Don’t just sit there going hmmm….

You look atrepparttar 124829 paths that regularly ‘don’t’ lead to a conversion and try to improve them. Don’t simply sit there looking at your path tracking tool wondering to yourself why people don’t convert, but look at your website and physically userepparttar 124830 path that your visitor has exited. This is where careful analysis is required and where comparisons should be made with paths that ‘do’ convert people. In many cases, variables that are present inrepparttar 124831 higher conversion paths are not present inrepparttar 124832 lower conversion paths.

It’s that simple. If you regularly comparerepparttar 124833 best paths andrepparttar 124834 worst paths whilst measuring your changes consistently, there should be a steady improvement in conversion. You undoubtedly will make mistakes, but that is why you should carefully measure any changes you make, and why you should measure one change at a time. If you change more than one variable, then you won’t know which change maderepparttar 124835 difference and you won’t learn anything valuable.

Of course this takes a lot of time and effort onrepparttar 124836 web marketer’s part, but I never claimed it was going to be easy. In comparison to say direct mail marketing or TV advertising, it is still much less expensive when you do make a mistake.

The landing page

The landing page deserves special attention. When people do a search on Google, for instance, they have something in mind when they get to your landing (home/index) page, and if you’re not it, they have gotten to you by mistake. There is nothing you can do about this at all. It’s a simple fact of life that people using keywords like “improving conversion” could be talking about a web site marketing campaign or catalytic converters for their car.

The landing page however does require special attention from you as a web marketer because you want to reducerepparttar 124837 number of 1 page exits from this page as best you can. This means your focus should be purely onrepparttar 124838 visitors who arrive. How well you service their needs when they find you is critical to your level of conversion. Again, measuringrepparttar 124839 visitors who arrive andrepparttar 124840 ones who leave immediately (the bounce rate as it’s sometimes called) is a good measure of how good your home page is at getting its message across. The ones who read for a few seconds and leave aren’t your target market so don’t worry about them. Onrepparttar 124841 other hand,repparttar 124842 ones who read for a little longer and leave might be slow readers, or might be your target market so concentrate on getting that number down. Your conversion rate for your landing page should rarely be measured as registrations or sales. It’s more likely reading time (for those websites that makerepparttar 124843 proposition onrepparttar 124844 landing page) or click-through to another section ofrepparttar 124845 site.

The Top 6 Website Sins

Written by Niall Roche


They sayrepparttar eyes arerepparttar 124816 window torepparttar 124817 soul. Your website then isrepparttar 124818 window to your business. What would a passerby think of your "window"? Would they want to stop and maybe come inside for a few moments? Or would they just pass by without giving it a second glance?

The goal of any website is to makerepparttar 124819 visitor stay. The desired visitor response might be that they make a purchase, sign up for a newsletter, enter a competition or simply complete a survey. The end result isrepparttar 124820 same - you needrepparttar 124821 web surfer to hang around your website for as long as possible.

There are, however, aspects of your site which can stop visitors from staying. Some of these are:

Sin #1 Slow loading The ultimate website sin. Your homepage must, must, must load in 30 seconds or less. This is not optional. If a visitor has to wait more than 30 seconds they will stop what they're doing and move on torepparttar 124822 next website. Optimize your website to load quickly by using as few graphics as possible and then only use JPEGS and GIFS. Your website should be no more than 20% graphics and at least 80% text. Why? Text loads faster and also keeps your visitor reading about your site as it loads up.

Sin #2 Poor layout A visitor should be able to find what they need on your website in 3 clicks ofrepparttar 124823 mouse or less. Any more than that and you're losing valuable visitors. Your navigation menu should be easy to use and every single link must work properly. Make use of a sitemap. Do not use fancy cursors. Do not use complicated menu systems. Text should be legible but not too big. Keep it simple. Imagine how a new internet user would react to your website. Would they love it or hate it? Could a new visitor to your website easily findrepparttar 124824 information they're looking for?

Sin #3 Awful color schemes There's nothing worse than searching for a website for hours only to find what you need and then realize that you cannot readrepparttar 124825 text onrepparttar 124826 pages becauserepparttar 124827 owner though yellow text on a light blue background was cool. If you need guidance on how to choose colors for your website look at any magazine for examples. Black or dark blue text on a white background isrepparttar 124828 simplest and most effective color scheme.

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