A New Dawn For Web Analytics
2006 heralded a step change in the web analytics market. Now businesses with an online presence wishing to succeed in this rapidly changing world are welcoming the next evolution in marketing analytics, says Conrad Bennett...
2006 heralded a step change in the web analytics market. Now
businesses with an online presence wishing to succeed in this
rapidly changing world are welcoming the next evolution in
marketing analytics, says Conrad Bennett...
By Conrad Bennett, Technical Services Director, WebTrends
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2006 heralded a step change in the web analytics market.
Businesses with an online presence wishing to succeed in this
rapidly changing world are welcoming the next evolution in
marketing analytics.
By combining the science of online optimisation with the
creative art of marketing, they have realised that you can not
only prove but also dramatically improve your marketing
results.
As more and more businesses bolster their web presence,
analysing web visitor behaviour is crucial. No longer is web
analytics purely about number crunching for backroom IT
dwellers, but a vital tool in analysing business trends and
stats for senior management.
CEOs have woken up to the fact that they have to be involved in
their marketing campaigns and become more marketing-savvy. As a
result they are embracing advanced marketing measurement and web
analytics as an indication of organisational performance.
Web analytics comes of age
This move beyond conventional web analytics has been coined
Marketing Performance Management and matured to meet the growing
requirement to identify what customers want in order to deliver
the right messages at the right time. Of course the web is key
in bringing this change about, allowing businesses to measure
all of those fragmented media channels, quantify the results of
your marketing campaigns to the whole organisation and target
messages to customers effectively.
Marketers are now calling for a total system of measurement,
with the web as the hub. They face a myriad of challenges in
today’s competitive marketplace and are increasingly being
called upon to demonstrate the success of their campaigns.
However Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) have remained
inconsistent, despite the fact that more and more organisations
are embracing them as a means to measure the strength of their
business.
Consistent KPIs mean streamlined operations, increased customer
lifetime value, and reduced business costs. However different
teams are receiving different information from different
systems, that measure campaigns differently, which is where the
route of the problem lies.
Time for web analytics 2.0?
In this respect data is left languishing in silos. And with so
many campaigns to try and keep track of, from search to email to
advertising, the amount of data can become overwhelming to a
frazzled marketing exec with a hundred actions on the to-do
list.
Couple this with the continued explosion in the breadth of media
opportunities and new and exciting ways to reach consumers
through the net, and the problem can only be exacerbated. If
everyone in an organisation is measuring marketing campaigns
with opposing and uncoordinated systems, valuable insights will
continue to fall by the wayside.
"Intention marketing"?
Another issue that has brought about this change in the market
is poor targeting of campaigns. Sending a one-size fits all
message simply doesn’t provide the results it once did. In order
to create marketing campaigns that resonate, it is imperative to
understand the intent of customers and tailor the message to it.
This is a key aspect of relationship marketing - and a powerful
benefit of communicating with the web as the hub.
Marketing departments must now begin to provide metrics and
demonstrate accountability – just like their peers in other
departments. A recent survey by WebTrends revealed that over 56
per cent of marketing executives stated that the web was either
the hub of their organisation’s marketing strategy, or that it
would become the hub in the next year.
As online marketing is rapidly maturing, businesses must ensure
their web analytics keep-up with their online campaigns. In
particular there is a real need for organisations to recognise
the importance of web analytics within every part of their
marketing spend.
Integrated marketing still the exception...
Not only has online marketing needed to take a more
sophisticated approach in measuring visitor behaviour and
accountability, but also it must be more closely integrated with
offline marketing activity. A recent survey compiled by the
Economist Intelligence Unit found that an integrated online and
offline marketing strategy remains the exception rather than the
rule. 52 per cent of executives admitted that online and offline
marketing efforts either run in parallel or are not integrated
at all.
A 360-degree approach to customer data analysis can provide a
business with a complete insight into the online behaviour of
customers and is vital in ensuring that both existing and
potential customers can be targeted more explicitly.
Benefits of web intelligence
Measuring and tracking online marketing performance is key to
ensure only the most effective, profitable and loyalty-building
marketing activities are executed. As CEOs embrace Marketing
Performance Management as an indication of organisational
success, marketing teams are being held accountable for creating
‘web-smart’ campaigns that optimise online marketing spend and
campaign elements to generate the maximum number of sales
leads.
The next generation of web analytics is here, with tailored
solutions that meet the needs and objectives of a variety of
members from the marketing team - not just the technical guys
sitting in the basement.
About the Author
WebTrends Inc. is the global leader in web analytics, working
with big brands to understand visitor behaviour on their
websites and track the success of marketing campaigns. Conrad
Bennett, Technical Services Director, heads up the technical
services team, having joined WebTrends in 2003.
www.webtrends.com
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