Get Clicky – Web Analytics Software

Saturday, November 29th, 2008

There’s been a lot of talk of Google lately and how their Web Analytics is (IMHO) going to take over the world one day. However, I know many people who don’t find it very intuitive or user friendly.

Here’s an alternative that’s deemed great for bloggers and small sites: Clicky

Clicky is a web analyzer that works great with any web site, even Ajax and Flash sites. It was originally targeted towards smaller web sites and blogs because it tracks a high level of detail on every visitor, and these types of sites find this information very interesting.

With many of the same reports as Google, what Clicky offers is a good user experience – especially for those not all that savvy with web analytics. The reports are easy to navigate and use language and terms that are recognizable to all, no matter the level of web analytics knowledge you have.

A gutsy move is that they seem to use a lot of Google tools – such as Google Maps to overlay and show their visitor data, making it apparent that they know where their limits are.

One Clicky feature lets you “track custom data on a per session basis for your visitors. The most common example of this is to automatically name each visitor to your site so that they are identified in your stats by more than just an IP address.”

You can then begin to understand what certain visitors are doing on your site. This is something that could be useful to bloggers and small sites, but definitely not plausible for large companies who have a lot of visitors coming to their site.

To be honest, I find it a little Big Brother-esque and I’m not entirely sure what our privacy commissioner up here in Canada would think of this. It seems a little intrusive to me when it’s done on an ip address level. I guess it’s no different than cookie tracking, though.

They say you can also use it to track ad campaigns, which could be very powerful, but again would only be manageable if you had a small campaign and lots of manpower time.

The downside before you rush out there, Wordpress bloggers, is that Clicky currently isn’t recognized as a trusted provider to Wordpress, so the customized tracking is not available as an option if your site is hosted there.

While Clicky has a free service, most of these options are not available with that package, and in fact require you to sign up for the pro level, which is the third level up. It’s only $11.99 per month though, so when you compare it to something like Omniture, that’s a drop in the bucket.

Personally, I’m a Google gal; that’s just my preference when it comes to free tracking tools, although there are other really good ones out there too like Quantcast, and PMetrics to name a couple.

If you find Google Analytics is not for you and you’re willing to pay a small monthly fee, Clicky just might be for you.

See a short tutorial posted by a Clicky user on youtube below, or just GetClicky.com for yourself.

How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Four

Friday, November 21st, 2008

Table of contents for How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns

  1. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part One
  2. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Two
  3. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Three
  4. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Four

This is the last post in my series – How to Measure Reach and Quantify Social Media Campaigns. It’s essentially a listing of tools that you can use to help you monitor and manage all the different streams.

These tools are all free, and it is noted that there are some services out there that you can pay for who will do this for you. This list is intended to help out those folks who either don’t have a budget to pay for monitoring, or for those who still need to convince the budget holders in their organization that social media does/can work and that you need to be more involved.

I’ve tried to also stick with sites that for the most part you don’t need to be heavily involved with/active to and can easily grab the info you need without spending a lot of time there.

Tweetburner: Shortens urls and tells you the number of times a url you shortened was clicked on.

Twitt(url)y: Twitturly is a service for tracking what urls people are talking about as they talk about them on Twitter.

Twitter Search: Lets you search for any conversations taking place based on urls, keywords, or Twitter handles.

BUDurl: This service takes Tweetburner one step further, it allows you to shorten urls and track them across any media.

Google Analytics: Use it to tell what social media sites people are coming from and use the Grease Monkey Plug in to understand what people are doing on your site to promote it outside.

AideRSS: Enter the url of your feed (if you have a blog) and it will return information about the posts, including which how many times they are shared on a variety of social networking sites.

AddThis: If you have an account with AddThis, they will tell you how many times someone used the AddThis feature.

Xinureturns: lets you find out how your (campaign for example) micro/website is doing. Just type in the url and you’ll get tons of stats ranging from search engine optimization (SEO) to social bookmarking and more. Good to look at how your competitors sites are doing too!

Feedburner: Allows you to see how many people are subscribing on average to your feed if you have a blog or podcast. It also allows some simple tracking to understand what people are clicking on and where visitors are coming from and going to.

Technorati: Allows you to see who’s talking about you in their blogs, or find out who is linking to your blog.

Google Blog Search: As above, but I find more comprehensive.

Blog Catalog: As above, but has additional features for sharing and rating.

Blogscope: is an analysis and visualization tool for the blog world, developed by the University of Toronto, allows you to search on keywords to find out what’s happening in the blog world (great for product searches) and when activity spiked.

Google Alert: Create alerts for your name, company, product, campaign and keep track of what’s being aid where.

TweetBeep: The Google Alerts for twitter : Keep track of conversations that mention you, your products, your company, anything! You can even keep track of who’s tweeting your website or blog, even if they use a shortened URL (like tinyurl.com).

Spokeo: This is a bit more personal and kind of big brother like. Spokeo monitors 41 different social media sites (and growing) and reports what your friends are doing on each), I’m not sure how to use this effectively for companies yet.

I’m sure I’ve missed a few, so I’d love to hear what other tools you use to help you keep track of what’s going on in the social media space when it comes to your company, product or campaign.

UPDATE: @jowyang tweeted this article this morning with additional monitoring tools that might be of interest! Enjoy, there are a couple of really good ones I indeed did miss.

Photo Credit: Juliaf; Stock.xcng

How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Three

Monday, November 17th, 2008

Table of contents for How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns

  1. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part One
  2. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Two
  3. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Three
  4. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Four

Over the course of the last two posts I’ve established what should be measured and how to go about getting the data. But now you’re likely overwhelmed at the ton of numbers you’re left with.

Let’s look at your total Reach number, which is the total number of conversations, shares and site visits. For the sake of this post, we’ll use the following numbers:

Conversations: 200; Sharing: 300; Site visits 1,500;
Total Reach: 2,000

Remember, this doesn’t include any banner-ad visitors or any other measures, just the three identified groups.

Now, what did you spend on your social-media campaign? Well, let’s see. What’s the social-media campaign? What kinds of things are included?

 
Let’s say we’re looking at $100,000 as our total cost of these items. Take your total cost and divide that by the total number of people you Reached. It cost you $50 per person you Reached.
 

 

Keep in mind this number may be a little bit higher as your total Reach number may not be a unique number since we can’t confirm if someone conversed, shared and visited the site. If you want to look at it from an overly cautious way, you can then take the 2,000 Reached and divide that by three (which gives you about 667 or something else if you believe in superstitions). Your cost per person Reached would now be $150. These are two very different numbers, but it’s a range that you can begin to use for budgeting.

You’ll need to work something out that’s right for you based on what you think people are doing or what the numbers tell you. If you have more people sharing than visitors to your website, I’m going to guess that you can safely assume people are doing at least two of the three items.

The point of the matter is that the Reach Formula should be defined campaign to campaign, and that it should evolve depending on the social nature of what is actually taking place.

Eventually, you as a company should be able to benchmark and create your own personal average, and perhaps as an industry if this were tracked. There are some hard numbers that you can put beside it, but for right now, each campaign is different.

If you can go a step further and determine the number of people who took an action that you wanted as a result of getting to the page, you would have your total conversion number. Perhaps you also had a way for people to purchase offline if they quoted a specific code that was only given out in a video… Say you have a conversion rate of 20% of those who landing on the landing page – that gives us 300 conversions and a cost of $334 for each person who converted.

Now, how does that compare to what your company pays for each new customer acquisition (i.e. what is your customer worth in the long run, and therefore what are you willing to spend to get that customer in the first place?)

And how does this compare to what you would normally pay per person to see your message? When you factor in all the associated costs and not just media?

Compare it to the numbers you just created – where does it fit in? Now you should have some pretty compelling numbers one way or the other to either suggest why you need to spend more money or time on the medium, or why you need to improve what you’re doing. Or perhaps it’s proof that your customers just aren’t quite ready for your brand to be in the space.

If the latter is the case, it’s not necessary to abandon ship right away; it just might be time to better understand how they want you to interact with them in this space.

The final post in this series will be links to many tools used in the measurement/monitoring of the space now, and will likely be heavy on the Twitter links. If you have any links you think are worth mentioning, please let me know and I’ll be happy to include them.

Photo Credit: JuliaF; Sxc.hu

Direct Costs for media (such as Facebook; not banner-ad related, but would include any costs for blogger pitches)
- Agency costs
- Creative costs (Facebook, Twitter profile, website, video, etc.)
- Cost of internal hours for coordination
- Cost of hours for Facebook, Twittering and media monitoring
- Cost of hours for report analysis
- Cost of hours for responding and interaction
- Percentage of product-sample cost (Yes, some of the offline samples should be included as you want people to go online and talk about their sample. You’ll have to gauge accordingly based on online product-sample costs for blogger pitches, but I’ve used 60% here.)

How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Two

Friday, November 14th, 2008

Table of contents for How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns

  1. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part One
  2. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Two
  3. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Three
  4. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Four

Part One of this post identified the three main elements that are required to create a Reach formula. I’ll now discuss how to get at each of these numbers.

Conversations/Metrics
This needs to be done through the use of tools and alerts, a lot of searching and a lot of man-hours, at least until someone can automate it. Pick a timeframe to start from, like around a campaign launch, for example.

a. Twitter Search allows you to create a feed for a particular name/comment/word, etc. Don’t just think about your Twitter handle here; think about your brand and how customers and clients refer to you, including the name of your campaign or product.

b. Google Alerts Rinse. Repeat as above. Except I find you need to be more specific with this one.

*NoteOnce the first two are set up, it should be a little easier to get that information. For the next two, you will need to pick a timeframe to start from, otherwise you can search a few years back in some cases. Make sure you also copy down the links of the blogs on a separate worksheet.

c. Blog Searches. There’s a variety of tools such as Google Blog Search, Blog Search Engine and the Blog Catalog are good examples to start with. You can also use Technorati, but personally I don’t find it picks up a lot of things, though it should make the list.

d. Facebook and Myspace: Search for your company or key products. Look for groups listed that have to do with your company or product (and omit internal ones).

Open your spreadsheet and start adding up numbers for each of the four areas within this metric. Include everything in that timeframe and/or related to that campaign or product – even if it’s negative, it’s still conversation. You can make notes somewhere of the negative stuff and go back to it later to determine how best to address it.

Now that conversation is out of the way, let’s look at:
Sharing

Add This is the most simplistic of measurement tools to track where your users are sharing your articles, but it requires the people sharing to use those buttons on your site.

A much more complete option that doesn’t rely on people using the share buttons on your site is my new favourite plug in for Google Analytics – GreaseMonkey. Yes the downside is you must have GA and Firefox. I can’t sum it up any better than this:

“Not only will it pull the social media metrics right into Google Analytics Content Detail reports automatically, but the icons are interactive.”

Depending on which analytic system you use, there may be a plug in for that, or one not too far on the horizon – because you can’t beat this in my humble opinion…

Again, grab the information for the entire time frame and total up the number of shares and enter that into your spreadsheet.

Now it’s time to play with your Analytics some more.
Visits to your site from a social media site

Make a list of all the social media sites – or sites you consider to be social media.
Then make another list of words found back in the conversation phase that are outside of your traditional SEM budget (this part will get harder as you should be adding in any keywords that your customers use to your SEM campaigns). Now lastly, take your blog list and go through the spreadsheet with all the blog links.

Once you have all that in front of you, it’s time to do some digging and report pulling in your analytics system.

a. Find out how many visitors came to your site from each of the social media sites you listed

b. Find out how many people came to your site as a result of the non-SEM keywords (or you can also look at organic traffic for keywords that you’re bidding on)

c. How many people visited your site as a result of one of the blogs that talked about you?

Each of those three main areas, conversation, sharing and visits, should now have subtotals. Add them all together and there is your “magic” Reach number. It’s not perfect and it’s not exact, but it’s a pretty good and hopefully impressive picture to paint for your bosses.

The third post in this series will discuss how to begin to quantify these results and determine if your social-media campaign worked – including comparing it to Reach versus your other marketing tactics. I might even be so bold as to offer a formula for ROI calculations, so stay tuned.

Photo Credit: JuliaF; Sxc.hu

How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part One

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Table of contents for How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns

  1. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part One
  2. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Two
  3. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Three
  4. How to Measure Reach and Quantify Your Social Media Campaigns – Part Four

This is part one in a series of posts on how to effectively measure Reach and begin to quantify your social-media campaigns. It sounds complicated, looks long and a lot of work. It is. But it’s also not as hard as you think because the key here is around social-media campaigns; a time frame, not forever, so theoretically you shouldn’t have mounds of data to go through – and if you do, the short answer is your campaign was an overwhelming success.

A special h/t to @JeanAnnVK who asked me this question and forced me to put to paper what I’d been thinking about for a while.

In short, Reach is a term often used by marketing folk to understand how many people saw their campaign. Media planners use a measure of Reach/Frequency to let clients know what they will get for their marketing dollar.

I think it’s time that Reach came to play at the social-media table.

Reach as a Formula

The way I see it, there are three main parts to Reach in social media
1. Conversations/Mentions
2. Sharing
3. Visits to your site from a social-media site

A brick and mortar visit is great, but as most in the offline world will tell you, that’s really hard to gauge without coupons and promotions, and you can’t count on it being reliable.

So how do you get this magic number?

Part Two of this series will discuss and detail the three pieces of the puzzle in determining what your Reach is.

Photo Credit: JuliaF; Sxc.hu

New Website Launch: Butterscotch.com

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

Hot off the Twitter presses and described as HGTV meets TechTV, Butterscotch.com is not for techies – it’s for the average person who has an interest in technology but doesn’t quite get the uber-geek terminology we all use.

“Butterscotch.com is aimed at moms, dads and children who love technology but sometimes think it’s too techie. We’re here to help people who buy the latest gadgets and then scratch their heads over how to use them to their full potential.” – Andy Walker, Executive Producer, butterscotch.com

.With social networking sites like Twitter, going mainstream, it’s clear that even your grandma is (going to be) wanting to understand a little more about this stuff.

With a team of individuals on board including Amber MacArthur, I don’t see how this can be anything but a brilliant success.

Check out the first episode of “On Deck 1″, What is Butterscotch.com below:

Increasing Subscribers is More than Offering Incentives – 5 Tips for Improving the Sign-Up Process

Wednesday, November 5th, 2008

Marketing Sherpa’s 2009 Email Benchmark Guide said to increase opt ins, you should offer real benefits to your potential subcriber. Previous Benchmark Guides have also said that If you can improve your opt-in conversions on your website by 25-40% – which are not uncommon result during design tests – your list will grow significantly and those new names will provide your highest email campaign results.

Incentives can range from special pricing, to promising not to share personal information, or offering a free download. Incentives may increase an individual’s interest or intent to sign up, but that won’t translate into real numbers if the process is complicated or time-consuming.

Here’s five best practices to consider before you begin offering the world to your potential subscribers.

1. Always tell users where they are in the sign up process
** Provide Breadcrumb trails and/or steps/length of time required to complete the form.

** Keep initial registration to one page if possible.

2. Validate email addresses before displaying thank-you pages
** It ensures the user is interested in signing up and not just in getting the incentive offered at the end (which is more a bonus for you).

3. Identify errors to users in a clear and easy to find fashion
** Suggest reasons for the error and show how to correct it.

** Ensure this is placed in an an area where the user is going to be able to locate it easily (i.e. don’t put it at the bottom of the page, or make me work to find it).

** Offer suggestions – or even little information buttons next to the required field to show the user how you want them to fill it out – it’ll make everyone happy.

4. Speak the user’s language
**Use familiar phrases and concepts when asking for information and ensure consistency in terminology use to avoid user confusion.

** Don’t use internal lingo for processes and forms or even short form. If I’ve never been to your site before – how would I know what you’re referring to?

5. Determine what is mandatory and what is optional
**Personal questions – e.g. income, should be considered optional to increase sign up rates.

** At a minimum, ask for first and last names, email address and some sort of geographical question (i.e) country.

** Optional questions include: demographics, interests and asking for secondary email address.

** Ask for more detail once they are a subscriber.

** Approx. 1/3 of users will change their email address every year so giving them an option to edit/add their information on your site is extremely important.

There’s many sayings that could sum up this post – such as you can lead a horse to water… The point I’m trying to make is that it doesn’t matter how many incentives you have, that’s the easy part. First you need to make sure it’s easy for people to actually sign up otherwise it doesn’t matter what your incentive is.

If this were a top-ten list – what else would you add as a best practice to follow?