Digital Marketing 1
Digital Marketing 1
Digital Marketing 1
SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization. It is the process of getting traffic from
the free, organic, editorial, or natural search results on the search engines. Simply put,
it’s the name given to the activity that attempts to improve search engine rankings. In
many respects, it's simply quality control for websites.
SEO may target different kinds of search, including image search, local search, video
search, and news search engines. Employing a sound SEO strategy will help you
position your website properly to be found at the most critical points in the buying
process or when people need your site.
Search Engine Crawlers
The leading search engines, such as Google, Bing and Yahoo!, use crawlers to find
the pages for their algorithmic search results. Pages that are linked from other search
engine indexed pages do not need to be submitted because they are found
automatically.
Search engine crawlers may look at a number of different factors when crawling a site.
Not every page is indexed by the search engines. Distance of pages from the root
directory of a site may also be a factor in whether or not pages get crawled.
Points to Note
You should be careful to keep the following points in mind in order to ensure your
brand is well positioned on search engines −
Search engines want to do their jobs as best as possible by referring users to
websites and content that is most relevant to what the user is looking for. This is
determined by the site content, how fast your site loads, how often your site is
linked to from other credible online resources, and user experience, including
design, navigation and bounce rate.
The items that the search engines don’t want are: keyword stuffing, buying links,
and poor user experience (too many ads and high bounce rates).
Domain naming is important to your overall branding. As a best practice, use
sub-directory root domains (example.com/events) versus sub-domains
(events.example.com). Other best practices with domain names are to use
consistent domains and keywords in the URL.
Optimize for different types of results. In addition to optimizing for desktop
experience, focus on mobile and tablet optimization along with other media.
Content on the site should have title tags and meta descriptions. Although
meta tags aren’t as important as they used to be in the past; if you do use them,
ensure they are formatted correctly.
Brand awareness
Lead generation
Engagement
Sales
Lead nurturing
Customer retention and loyalty
Customer evangelism
Up-selling and cross-selling
Although these are the typical goals found in content marketing research, think out of
the box and look at the goals of your “audiences”.
Start Content Marketing
Here is brief set of guidelines that you can follow to start content marketing −
First, find a reason to start using content marketing. Knowing what the reason
and the purpose is important. In a few years from now, people will say content
marketing doesn’t work. It’s like in social media: people start saying it doesn’t
work because they often forget for what and whom they wanted it to work in the
first place.
Know the different people and types of customers and prospects you want. Be
aware of how they “act”, what they want, and how they will use your content.
Don’t reinvent the wheel. Before dreaming up new content, see what you
already have. Often, the best content for your customers and business is
already in the mind of your customers and the people in your business. You just
need to present it in a way everyone understands.
Once you know what content you have, figure out what you need.
Now, it’s time to get that content organized and check out the best formats and
channels. Know the different formats of content your prospective customers use
and there are some good tips and tricks to make sure that your content is
“engaging”. Align the content to the types of channels you think that it will be
best received.
It’s time to make sure that the content is found or used! If not there is little sense
in spending all the energy, is there? Promote, connect and engage.
Finally, test, measure, and optimize continuously. Try different types of content. Check
analytics. Monitor your expenditure. And always adapt.
In its broadest sense, every email sent to a potential or current customer could be
considered email marketing. It usually involves using email to send ads, request
business, or solicit sales or donations.
Any email communication is considered as email marketing if it helps build customer
loyalty, trust in a product or company, or brand recognition. For instance, when a
company sends a commercial message to a group of people using electronic email
mostly in the form of advertisements, requests for business or sales, or donation
solicitation.
Email marketing is an efficient way to stay connected with your clients while also
promoting your business. Doing so, you can easily and quickly reach target markets
without the need for large quantities of print space, television or radio time, or high
production costs.
Additionally, while using email marketing software, you can maintain an email list that
has been segmented based on several factors including the length of time addresses
have been on the list, customers’ likes and dislikes, spending habits and other
important criteria. Emails are then created and sent out to specific target members on
the list, providing them with a personalized email detailing information that they are
interested in or have requested.
Email marketing can be carried out by −
Email newsletters
Digests
Dedicated Emails
Lead Nurturing
Sponsorship Emails
Transactional Emails
Email Newsletters
Email newsletters offer the following three advantages −
They can spread your brand awareness. By building habitual communication
with your email subscribers, you enable them to recognize your brand and
associate it with a positive sentiment.
They can leverage the existing content. Many companies do quick summaries
of their most popular blog posts and link to the articles from their newsletter.
They give you the freedom to include different types of content that might be
important to your organization.
Digests
Digests are generally easier to consume than newsletters as they generally consist of
links and lists. One popular option is the blog digest, which collects notifications about
the articles you publish throughout a certain time frame and releases an email with the
links.
Dedicated Emails
Dedicated emails also known as stand-alone emails, contain information about just one
offer. For instance, you can use a dedicated email to notify your target audience about
a new whitepaper you've released or invite them to attend an event that you're hosting.
Unlike newsletters, dedicated emails don’t need to include many graphical elements to
separate the different blocks of text and prioritize information.
Lead Nurturing
The concept of lead nurturing introduces a tightly connected series of emails containing
useful content with a coherent purpose. Lead nurturing is timely, automated, and is
typically a low financial investment.
Sponsorship Emails
If you want to reach a totally new audience and generate net new leads, you might
want to try sponsorship emails. In sponsorship emails, you pay for inclusion of your
copy in another vendor’s newsletter or dedicated send.
Transactional Emails
Transactional emails are the messages that get triggered by a specific action your
contacts have taken, enabling them to complete that action. For instance, if you are
signing up for a webinar, you will fill out a form and then receive a transactional (thank-
you) email that provides you with the login information in order to join.
Transactional emails are also the messages you receive from ecommerce sites like
Amazon that confirm your order and give you shipment information and other details.
The biggest advantage of transactional emails is that they enjoy a high click-through
rate (CTR).
Popular email marketing services include MailChimp, Constant Contact, and My
Emma.
Pay Per Click, commonly known as PPC, refers to a model of internet marketing in
which advertisers pay a fee each time one of their ads is clicked. Pay-per-click is
calculated by dividing the advertising cost by the number of clicks generated by an
advertisement. The basic formula is −
Pay-per-click ($) = Advertising cost ($) ÷ Ads clicked (#)
Essentially, PPC is a way of buying visits to your site, rather than attempting to earn
visits organically.
Search Engine Advertising
Search engine advertising is one of the most popular forms of PPC. It allows
advertisers to bid for an ad placement in a search engine's sponsored links when
someone searches using a keyword that is related to their business offering.
For example, if you bid on the keyword “marketing classes,” several ads might show up
in the very top spot on the Google results page. Every time a specific ad is clicked,
sending a visitor to their website, they have to pay the search engine a small fee.
When PPC is working correctly, the fee is trivial, because the visit is worth more than
what is paid for it.
Advantage of PPC Marketing
The unique advantage of PPC marketing is that the ad networks used to manage PPC
campaigns don’t just reward the highest bidders for that ad space, rather they reward
the highest-quality ads (meaning the ads that are most popular with the users).
Ads are rewarded for good performance.
The better the ad, the greater the click-through rates and lower the costs.
Many marketers choose to use Google AdWords to manage their PPC
campaigns. The AdWords platform enables businesses to create ads that
appear on Google’s search engine and other Google properties.
Factors behind Successful PPC Advertising
How often your PPC ads appear depends on which keywords and match types you
select. While a number of factors determine how successful your PPC advertising
campaign will be, you can achieve a lot by focusing on −
Keyword Relevance − Crafting relevant PPC keyword lists, tight keyword
groups, and proper ad text.
Landing Page Quality − Creating optimized landing pages with persuasive,
relevant content and a clear call-to-action, tailored to specific search queries.
Quality Score − Quality Score is Google's rating of the quality and relevance of
your keywords, landing pages, and PPC campaigns. Advertisers with better
quality scores get more ad clicks at lower costs.
Your entire PPC campaign is built around keywords, and the most successful AdWords
advertisers continuously grow and refine their PPC keyword list.
In conclusion, PPC advertising offers a unique opportunity to −
Grow Your Customer Base − Connect with searchers actively looking for
products and services like yours, and respond to the need by providing them
with an offer relevant to their search query.
Generate Leads at Low Costs − As pay-per-click marketing allows you to reach
leads and prospects when they’re researching and looking to buy, it’s a highly
effective way to bring interested visitors to your site. In addition, you can enjoy
an algorithmically generated discount from the search engines in exchange for
making their users happy.
CRO stands for Conversion Rate Optimization. Whatever may be the ultimate goal of
your website, a conversion is the successful completion of that action. CRO is the
process of optimizing the site to increase the likelihood that visitors will complete a
specific action.
Conversion Rate is a key metric in e-commerce, as it reveals the percentage of the
site’s total traffic completing a specific goal. The higher the conversion rate, the better.
Once you have defined what conversions you want to track, you can calculate the
conversion rate.
Let’s assume you regard a sale as your conversion. As long as you are tracking the
number of leads you get and the number of resulting sales (conversions), you can
calculate your conversion rate −
$$Conversion Rate = \frac{Total Number of Sales }{Number of Leads} \times 100$$
When you know what the value of a lead is, you can determine how many leads you
need each month to sustain your business and how much you should pay for
advertising. This is true whether you are using pay-per-click (PPC) or any offline
advertising like mailers or print ads.
What is CRO?
Conversion Rate Optimization is −
A structured and systematic approach to improving the performance of the
website.
Informed by insights − specifically, analytics and user feedback.
Defined by the website’s unique objectives and needs (KPIs).
Taking the traffic that you already have and making the most of it.
What CRO is Not
Conversion Rate Optimization is not −
Based on the guesses, hunches, or what everyone else is doing.
Driven by the highest paid person’s opinion.
About getting as many users as possible, regardless of the quality or
engagement.
Why do Companies Use CRO?
CRO plays an important role in improving the efficiency of critical processes. Here, we
will discuss the most common areas where companies evaluate CRO.
A/B testing − What is A/B testing? In basic terms, you set up two different
landing pages, each has a different element from the other. Your site presents
the “A” version of these pages to half your traffic and the “B” version to the
remaining half. Then you can see whether or not a small change to a call-to-
action (CTA) can make a difference in conversion rates.
Customer Journey Analysis − How did your customers progress from brand
awareness to purchase? Also often referred to as a Conversion Funnel.
Cart abandonment analysis − Investigate the cause of not checking out, once
the items have been added to a shopping cart.
Segmentation − Segmentation shows approaches to grouping prospects and
customers to deliver more relevant communications and offers for better
response rates to these communications.
In addition, CRO is used for copy optimization, online surveys, and customer feedback.
Web Analytics is the measurement, collection, analysis, and reporting of Internet data
for the purposes of understanding and optimizing Web usage.
The focus of web analytics is to understand the users of a site, their behavior, and
activities. The study of online user behavior and activities generate valuable marketing
intelligence and provides −
Performance measures of the website against targets.
Insight on user behaviors and needs, and how the site meets those needs.
Optimization ability to make modifications to improve the website based on the
results.
Web Analytics Tools
An average web analytics tool offers hundreds of metrics. All of them are interesting
but only a few would be useful for measuring the website’s performance. Focus on
what is important to get meaningful insights on your website, and start your web
analytics initiative by defining realistic and measurable objectives for your site.
In order to identify the users, web analytics tools need to report on user
sessions (also referred to as visits). There are different techniques to identify
users such as IP addresses, user agent and IP address combination, cookies,
and authenticated user.
Nowadays, the most common user identification technique is via cookies which
are small packets of data that are usually deposited on the user’s computer hard
disk when the person visits a website.
How to Review Web Metrics
When reviewing metrics, there are a few things to keep in mind to ensure you are
encompassing the set of data that best evaluates your efficiency −
Think People and Process
No doubt, technology is important, but you need to go beyond it. Take time and care to
thoroughly understand your stakeholders’ measurement needs.
Segmentation
There’s more to data than just total number of page views. Many organizations
unfortunately still report on total page views and miss out on all the non-page view
interactions such as video, downloads and rich media.
Analytics platforms such as Google Analytics, MixPanel, Flurry and others, are very
powerful and allow us the ability to go beyond simplistic hit collection, and really dive
into rich data and patterns.
You can easily report and derive insights with visitor segmentation, have quick visibility
into buyer or non-buyer behavior, group content by asset type, measure gated or
ungated content consumption, and with relatively ease run a cohort analysis. These
are just a few views that could be utilized while segmenting your data.
Think Visitors, Not Visits
Explore data such as where visitors came from, what course they took between pages
while on your website, and where they spent the most (or least) time during their visit.
Later, after two or three visits they got converted to customers. With this information,
you’re able to gain increased awareness of visitors and how they interact with your
content throughout the buying cycle.
Optimize What Matters Most
Optimize conversions on all things digital. Take it one notch higher and optimize on the
Lifetime Value of a customer. Put into place a system that gives you the ability to
measure behavior and interaction across multi-devices and multiple channels for
(most) users that come from mobile, web, etc.
Maximize Returns
You’ll maximize the return on gathering, reporting and analyzing data, when you do so
consistently. Commit to the process and develop a list of priorities and a measurement
“roadmap.” Audit what you have periodically. Websites and mobile apps are constantly
evolving, so ensure your analytics implementation is in-line with such changes.
Facebook has 1.28 billion active users and is currently the largest social network – that
adds up to a lot of potential brand exposure.
Your Facebook Page makes your business −
Discoverable − When people search for you on Facebook, they’ll be able to find
you.
Connected − Have one-on-one conversations with your customers, who can like
your page, read your posts and share them with friends, and check in when they
visit.
Timely − Your page can help you reach large groups of people frequently, with
messages tailored to their needs and interests.
Insightful − Analytics on your page will give you a deeper understanding of your
customers and your marketing activities.
Start Facebook Marketing
Ready to get started? Let’s walk through the steps!
Step 1: Set Goals
Any strategy begins with goals. What do you want out of your Facebook Page? Sales
is the obvious choice, but there can also be secondary goals that lead to sales.
Consider some of these Facebook marketing goals as you craft your plan −
Increase overall exposure and awareness.
Create a loyal and engaged community.
Establish authority and showcase your knowledge.
Step 2: Research
Your Facebook research will include these areas −
Identify your audience and where they spend their time.
Research your competition and watch what is working for them.
Understand the latest techniques. Make sure you know the latest techniques on
Facebook that are effective. Keep up with the trends so you know what is
working for others.
Step 3: Design the Facebook Experience
Now that you have your goals set up, work backwards from those goals to determine
how you will achieve them.
Set up an editorial calendar. Plan your content that you want to share. You can
schedule your daily activity, weekly activity and monthly activity by using a
simple Excel spreadsheet.
Set up an activity calendar. Map out your long-term activity and marketing plan,
along with an estimate of your outcomes. Also decide when and how often to
engage with your key influencers.
Step 4: Measure Your Progress
Take time to look back at your progress on Facebook so you know if your marketing is
working. Become familiar with how Facebook Insights work so you know which posts
are working for you.
With hundreds of millions of users and over 500 million tweets being sent each day,
there is a great opportunity for businesses to reach a global audience of new and
existing customers through Twitter.
Twitter is a social communication tool where people broadcast short messages. These
messages, called tweets, are limited to 140 characters in length. As a Twitter user, you
select which other people you wish to follow; when you follow someone, their tweets
show up in a list known as your Twitter stream.
Anyone who chooses to follow you will see your tweets in their stream. It is not
necessary to follow everyone who follows you, and not everyone you choose to follow
will follow you back.
Conversations on Twitter are just like the face-to-face encounters you have with
customers each day. Compelling content will help you attract new followers and keep
them engaged over time, building awareness of your brand and asserting yourself or
your brand as an authority in the industry or niche area.
Points to Note
If you want real success and want to build your brand on Twitter, then you should
always keep the following points in mind −
Use your brand name as your Twitter name. It may seem obvious, but it needs to
be said!
If branding a company is your number one priority, use your logo as your Twitter
picture.
You should tweet 10 to 20 times a day to keep your brand name in the Twitter
stream.
Schedule the tweets that have links to valuable content and complement that
with 10 or so personalized tweets where you are interacting with other Twitter
users.
Reply to Everything! Really, everything.
Learn to give. To build a strong brand on Twitter you will need to give back as
much as you get. Share content from your “tweeps,” retweet, and favorite
relevant content.
Follow at least two new people a day. Follow back anyone who followed you. It’s
the best way to keep followers! Click on “Followers” and then follow anyone in
your stream that you are not connected with.
One of the biggest mistake people make on Twitter is not using relevant
hashtags. You may want to create your own personal hashtag to archive your
tweets but use hashtags that are trending when posting, so that your content
gets seen.
Tweet questions or a call-to-action when you post. People are more likely to
respond when they’re asked something. There’s an option to create polls too.
LinkedIn can be a powerful tool for individuals and companies looking to make new
connections, generate leads, and build their brand. In addition to being a great way to
recruit new talent, LinkedIn marketing is a likely top marketing tool to employ for B2B
businesses. It consistently proves to be the platform of choice for marketing product
launches and lead generation.
A comprehensive LinkedIn marketing strategy requires ongoing management,
monitoring, analysis, and adjustments.
Here, we have listed down a set of important tips to help you get the most out of your
LinkedIn Marketing strategy −
Create a dynamic company page for your brand
To create a business presence on LinkedIn and gain access to additional features that
enhance your visibility, you must build a LinkedIn company page. Consider this page
an extension of your website and fill out the complete profile, including products and
services. Invite your employees and customers to follow the page.
Be an authority in your industry
You need to plan out what type of content you can provide that will have decision-
makers thinking twice about the approaches they're taking. Think about the
discussions you can create that make you stand out as a thought leader. Also
determine whether the content is relevant and for whom, and whether the content
inspires prospects to want to take action.
Engage in the community
It's not about how many connections you make or followers you have on LinkedIn and
other social media platforms. It's about how many people you reach and engage with.
The best way to engage in social media is to create a community.
In LinkedIn, you can create actual groups that you manage. Consider taking an active
role and creating a group in the industry that you are active in. Or, simply join an
existing group and share the relevant content. Either way, you’ll be creating new
contacts and participating in worthwhile conversations with industry leaders in your
field.
View the stats
The new LinkedIn Publisher stats offer amazing insight into not only how many people
are viewing each post, but the lifespan of each post, reader demographics, and the
people who engage with your posts.
To see your stats, go to the Who’s Viewed Your Posts tab, which is located under
Profile in the main navigation under Who’s Viewed Your Profile. Click on any post to
see a graph that shows the number of views in the last 7 days, 15 days, 30 days, 6
months or 1 year.
This gives you incredible perspective to see the shelf life of each post. Review these
numbers, as well as the elements of the posts themselves, to see patterns that will tell
you what topics, format, and length your readers are most interested in.
YouTube is no longer a new platform; it’s over ten years old! However, it is seeing
tremendous growth. If it isn’t already a part of your online marketing strategy, it needs
to be. But what types of YouTube videos should you be making? The key is to find the
place where, what your brand stands for and what your audience cares about intersect.
Creating the relevant content is step one, but optimizing it on YouTube is what gets
that content seen by those that matter to your brand.
Common Video Themes
Not sure what type of content will resonate with your audience? Here are some
commonly employed video themes that are used by businesses and brands −
Tutorials − Show your viewers how to perform a task or demonstrate how to use
your product.
Customer testimonials − Interview a satisfied customer, or share a
usergenerated testimonial on your YouTube channel.
Behind-the-scenes videos − Take your viewers on a tour of your office or
workspace, or introduce them to your staff or co-workers.
Tips and tricks − Share useful insights that will help your prospects.
Live presentations − Speaking at a conference or tradeshow? Record and
share it with your YouTube viewers.
Product launches − Share the release of new products with your YouTube
viewers.
Statistics − To establish yourself as an expert in your field, share industry-
related statistics, data, and research via a simple slideshow-like video.
FAQs − Compile a list of frequently asked questions and respond to them via
video.
Optimize Your Videos
Next, you’ll need to optimize your videos for on-site and Google search. Utilizing
relevant keywords in your title, tags, and description can help the users find your
videos for related searches.
Google recommends using your keywords first, and branding second. Use seasons
and episodes if relevant. Tags are your keywords. Put the most important ones first.
Include a call to action in your description and be sure to enable closed captioning
(loaded with those keywords).
When viewers are scrolling through search results, thumbnails can have the biggest
impact on clicks. Make sure you use captivating, colorful, high-contrast images that
work well both in small and large formats. The optimal size for your thumbnail image is
1280 x 720 pixels.
Google AdWords is a marketplace where companies pay to have their website ranked
right with the top organic search results, based on keywords.
The basic gist is, you select to promote your brand based on keywords. A keyword is
a word or phrase the user searches for, who then sees your ad. Your ads will only
show up for the keywords you pick.
Google counts the clicks on your ads and charges you for each click. They also count
impressions, which is simply the number that tells you how often your ad has already
been shown when the users searched for that keyword.
If you divide clicks by impressions, you get the click-through-rate or CTR. This is the
percentage of users who land on your advertised page, because they clicked on your
ad.
Consider Google AdWords to be an auction house. You set a budget and a bid. The
bid sets how much you are willing to pay per click. If your maximum bid is $2, Google
will only show your ad to people, if other aren’t bidding more on average.
Google doesn’t just want to show people the ads by the highest bidder – they could still
be horrible ads. They care about their users so much that they’d rather show them a
more relevant and better ad by someone who pays less.
Therefore − Quality ads + good bid = win!
Create a Google AdWords Account
To create a Google AdWords account, visit − www.adwords.google.com/. From there
you’ll create your account, and set up your first campaign. Here are the steps −
Step 1
Select your campaign type and name.
Step 2
Choose the geographic location where you’d like ads to show.
Step 3
Choose your “bid strategy,” and set your daily budget. Change the default “Bid
strategy” to “I’ll manually set my bids for clicks”. This gives you more control and will
help you learn AdWords at a greater level of understanding.
Step 4
Create your first ad group, and write your first ad. More people click on ads when the
headline includes the keyword they’re searching on. So use your keywords in your
headline when you can.
You’re limited to 25 characters here, so for some search terms, you’ll need to use
abbreviations or shorter synonyms. Here’s the short version of your ad template −
Do you have a blog? Do you have a static website? If yes, then you need Google
Analytics. This tool can do so many things. Even if you just use it for the most basic of
information, you can learn a lot about your website visitors and traffic.
A quick glimpse at Google Analytics can tell you −
How many people visit the website?
Where do the visitors live?
Is there a need for a mobile-friendly website?
Which other websites send traffic to the website?
Which marketing tactics drive the most traffic to the website?
Which pages on the website are the most popular?
How many visitors got converted into leads or customers?
How to improve the website's speed?
Which blog content the visitors like the most?
Which place do the converting visitors belong to and what did they visit on the
website?
Let us now understand in detail how you can make use Google Analytics.
Create a Google Analytics Account
First, you need to have a Google Analytics account. If you have a primary Google
account that you use for other services like Gmail, Google Drive, Google Calendar,
Google+, or YouTube, then you should set up your Google Analytics using that Google
account. Otherwise, create a new one.
Once you have a Google account, you can go to Google Analytics by clicking the
Sign into Google Analytics button.
After you click the Sign Up button, you will need to fill out information for your
website. You can have up to 100 Google Analytics accounts under one Google
account.
Once you’ve filled in the properties for your website, click the “Get Tracking ID”
button. Agree to the terms and conditions and you will get a Google Analytics
code. This must be installed on every page on your website. The installation will
depend on what type of website you have.
After you install your tracking code on the website, you will want to configure the
Goals Setting. Goals will tell Google Analytics when something important has
happened on your website.
In Google Analytics, click the New Goal button. From there, you will choose the
custom option or template options. You can create up to 20 goals on your
website. Be sure that the ones you create are highly important to your business.
This is the simplest of all conversion tracking in Google Analytics.
If you want to add a new Google Analytics account, you can do so by going to
your Admin menu, clicking the drop-down under the Account column, and
clicking the Create New Account link. Once you've installed Google Analytics on
your website(s), set up your goals, and wait about 24 hours for it to start getting
data.
How to Use Google Analytics?
Each time you log in to Google Analytics, you will be taken to your Audience Overview
report, from where you can access one of more than 50 reports available through
Google Analytics.
In the report at the top-right corner as shown in the above screenshot, you can
click on the dates to change the date range of the data you are viewing.
You can also check the Compare box to compare your data from one date range
(such as this month) to a previous date range (such as the last month) to view
your data.
Beneath the main metrics, you will see reports that you can switch through to
see the top ten languages, countries, cities, browsers, operating systems,
service providers, and screen resolutions of the visitors.
Make Optimum Use of Google Analytics
Using the endless tools available through Google Analytics, you can view various
details. We have given here a few examples −
Audience - Demographic – Age
You can use Google Analytics to find demographic details of the visitors to your site.
Audience - Geo – Location
You can find out where the traffic is coming from. It can either be global or local
information.
Acquisition Overview
You can determine which channels your traffic is coming from.
Behavior - Site Content
You can determine which pages on your website are being viewed the most.
Translating Insights into Action
Unfortunately, many firms find their digital marketing analytics programs fail to translate
analytics into action. However, most of the times, translating insights into action
involves manipulating your data for distinct insights. Some of them include −
Looking for relationships among your data. For instance, you might uncover
a relationship between top performing posts and specific keywords used or
publication timing.
Looking at trends rather than data points. Trends often help you identify
meaning in your data such as cyclical trends or when a particular data point
stands out from others versus simply representing normal fluctuation.
Turn data into predictive models. Don’t stop with viewing data as isolated
points and basing forecasts on simple linear extrapolations. Predictive models
use historical data to determine the relationship among a set of factors and
desired outcomes (like KPIs).
Predict future KPI performance. Analysts use algorithms to predict future KPI
performance. You can even play “what-if” games to determine the impact on the
performance of various actions. This helps determine which changes represent
the greatest impact on performance.
Don’t forget that data analysis is part Art and part Science. Translating insights into
action involves a certain amount of playfulness with the data to discover deeper
insights.