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Issue 3. The Impact Edition
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    • A question of taste?
    • Wake up and smell the coffee
    • Are you listening to your website
    • From the horse's mouth

Are you listening to your website?
Words by Dom Aldred
Arrows
What to look out for
While the specific measures and their implications will vary from site to site, there are some key indicators worth looking at:

Unique visitors
How many people are actually viewing your site? Are weekends more popular than weekdays? Do numbers increase when you launch an ad campaign or send out direct mail?

Most popular pages
Do the pages that most visitors look at match the pages that you really want them to be viewing? If not you may need to change the structure and content to get the right results.

Visitor loyalty
How many times do people come back to your site? How many times do you want them to come back to your site? How can you evolve your content and functionality to increase return visits?

Search engine referrals
This gives you a good indication of how many people are coming to your site from a search engine and which engines (normally Google!) are sending the most traffic

Keywords
Linked in to search engine referrals, this will let you see the phrases people are using to search for your business. Pure gold dust when it comes to developing your search engine marketing
 Dom Aldred is on the psychiatrist’s couch with digital media and ponders the importance of spending quality time with your website
We all know web analytics and online measurement is much more sophisticated than it used to be. We’ve come a long way. But can you, hand on heart, say you really make the most of all that valuable customer and campaign information at your disposal?

If you put your website on the couch and made some time to listen to it, what would it tell you? What secrets would it reveal? And would it make for comfortable listening, or would there be a few home truths that need to be aired?

Web analytics is the study of the behaviour of website visitors. More specifically in a commercial context sense it refers to the use of data collected from a website to determine which aspects work best towards business objectives – or in short, how hard your website is actually working for you.

Depending on what your website offers visitors it’s likely to be making a contribution to many different areas of your business – from sales and marketing to customer support, from community relations to recruitment. No-one questions the importance of spending time with people in these roles to ensure they’re equipped and trained, but how often is the website overlooked and left to its own devices in a way that you would never consider leaving your staff unattended?

The starting point is normally web traffic reports, collected from your web server, but to this can also be added email response rates, direct mail campaign statistics, sales and lead information, user performance data. Look no further than Google Analytics if you want a powerful, but free, means of gathering and reviewing information. How long it stays a free tool remains to be seen, but while it is, Google Analytics (or a similar tool) should be a key component of your marketing strategy.

It puts your website on the couch and it lets you talk together freely and easily, starting off on the surface, but quickly digging deeper and deeper.

Which pages are proving most popular? How long are visitors spending on your site? Are key pages easy to find or buried beneath the mother of all crumb trails? Are people coming back to the site regularly? Which search phrases are generating the highest level of visits?

Too many organisations still fail to see their website as a living, (almost) breathing entity that needs constant care and attention. There’s no excuse for the, it’s up now and that’s all that matters’ approach. Your site can tell you plenty, if you know how to listen and make the time.

Of course how this information is interpreted will depend on what you’re expecting from your site – there will be a world a difference between a corporate communications driven site and an ecommerce site.

So, before you plump up the cushions and make your site comfortable on the couch, take some time to understand it, be clear about what it’s there for, what you’ve asked it to do and what it really should be doing. It’s only fair at the end of the day and it means you’ll be much better placed to understand what it tells you and respond appropriately.

You don’t have to be an expert. The sheer wealth of information available can be overwhelming, but if you focus on some of the key headlines to start with, you can make progress together.

The more you build your knowledge and understanding and the more you evolve the structure, content and functionality of your website, the harder your website will work for you. Despite what some people might try to tell you. It’s not rocket science, just good principles of communication.


Making an
impact
Picture
perfect
A question
of taste?
Wake up and
smell the coffee
Are you listening
to your website
From the
horse's mouth
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