WebProNews

Tag: Web analytics

  • Imgur Analytics Let You Track The Viral Success Of Your Images

    Imgur just announced the launch of a new analytics platform that will enable brands and marketers to track the viral life of the images they upload. Given that Imgur sees upwards of 100 million unique monthly visitors, this is a pretty significant offering. It hosts over 650 million images and attracts up to 1.5 million uploads on a daily basis.

    “The analytics platform will show all the top referral sources and respective view numbers from each source,” an Imgur spokesperson tells WebProNews. “Simply by moving points on the graph, users will be able to narrow down the dates that they want to get analytics from.”

    Here’s a look at an example image and its corresponding analytics.

    Imgur Analytics

    The basic analytics data showing daily view metrics will be available to all users.

    “Paid users ($24/year) will get a closer look into how their images moved around the internet using the referral tracking data,” the spokesperson says. “We plan to add the hourly breakdown as well for engaged social users and brands that need that type of granularity.”

    “As one of the world’s top entertainment destinations, we have a huge opportunity to build out the data and analytics piece of our business and to create advertising channels that drive new revenue streams for the company,” says CEO Alan Schaaf.

    Read our interview with Schaaf here.

    The company says the data its analytics provides “dovetails nicely” with its new native advertising business. It offers sponsored images that are inserted directly into the Imgur Gallery as the top image of the day. They’re spotlighted in the top left corner of the Gallery and in-stream as users browse the site.

    “They look and function as all other organic content on the site so users can engage with branded content by voting, commenting and sharing,” an Imgur spokesperson tells WebProNews. “We work very closely with brands and advertisers to ensure that the sponsored image content fits in with our community so they are successful for our ad partners.”

    Imgur has recently run successful sponsored image campaigns for Paramount’s Anchorman 2 and Rock Star Games’ $1 billion launch of GTA V.

    You certainly don’t have be a marketer to appreciate data about how well your images are doing, but Imgur’s increasing popularity (in no small part thanks to reddit) will make this a pretty important tool in viral campaigns.

    Images via Imgur.

  • Google Talks Measurement Challenges In Analytics Presentation

    Google is sharing a recent presentation about universal analytics on the Google Analytics YouTube channel. The talk from Analytics Advocate Daniel Waisberg took place last month at Foundry Dublin.

    It will take about a half hour of your time as Waisberg talks about the challenges of “measuring the full customer journey,” which include holistic measurement, full credit measurement and active measurement.

    “Learn more about how Google Analytics is trying to help marketers understand better how their customers behave and how to provide them with a better experience,” says Google. “Among the solutions we are creating are: Universal Analytics, Measurement Protocol, Dimension Widening, and Cost Data Upload.”

    If you head over to the channel, you’ll find a plethora of videos Google has made for its Analytics Academy program, as well as an explanation of a recent developer update and a “sizzle reel” from the Google Anaytics Summit 2013.

    Last week, Google introduced new custom dimensions fro Google Analytics.

  • Google Analytics Gets New Custom Dimensions

    Google Analytics Gets New Custom Dimensions

    Google announced today that it has added “many” new dimensions to standard reports in Google Analytics. Included is Custom Dimensions, which Google says has been a highly requested feature.

    Here, you can see example custom dimensions “user tier,” “is logged in,” “friendly page name,” and “is internal”.

    Google Analytics

    “Custom Dimensions is a new Universal Analytics feature that allows you to bring custom business data into Google Analytics,” says Google Analytics API product manager Nick Mihailovski. “For example, a custom dimension can be used to collect friendly page names, whether the user is logged in, or a user tier (like Gold, Platinum, or Diamond).”

    “By using Custom Dimensions in secondary dimensions, you can now refine standard reports to obtain deeper insights,” he adds.

    Secondary dimensions

    The feedback on custom dimensions is quite positive so far, as would be expected.

    Image: Google

  • Socialbakers Launches Mobile Analytics App, Adds Instagram And LinkedIn Support

    Socialbakers Launches Mobile Analytics App, Adds Instagram And LinkedIn Support

    Socialbakers announced today at the Engage 2013 conference in New York that it is launching a mobile analytics app and support for Instagram and LinkedIn.

    The app, the company says, provides an “executive dashboard of key metrics for monitored Facebook profiles including top performing content, fans and followers, engagement rates and competitor analysis.”

    “The addition of Instagram and LinkedIn broadens its suite to help social marketers measure the effectiveness of their campaigns across a wide range of social channels,” a spokesperson tells WebProNews.

    Users will no doubt appreciate the mobile app. Remember when Google Analytics launched on mobile?

    Socialbakers’ app is debuting on iOS, and Android will follow shortly, the company says.

    “I am excited to announce strong expansion of our analytic suite today,” said CEO and co-founder Jan Rezab. “Extending the scope of social media data provided to our clients is our number one priority. We also want to enable our users to check high-level data on the go by bringing the executive reports app to mobile users.”

    “Instagram is a very visual space where people like to engage with brands,’ added co-founder Lukas Maixner. “With this we are enabling marketers with the analytic data they need to understand which content resonates best with their communities and how they can benchmark themselves against competitors. Now we provide insight of both followers and following, interactions, engagement rate and also top interacting profiles, similar to Facebook’s key influencers.”

    Instagram itself is rapidly expanding. It just launched on Windows Phone, its fourth major platform after iOS, Android and the web. Before the Windows Phone launch, it had grown to 150 million users.

    Image: Socialbakers
  • Google Analytics Adds New ‘Speed Suggestions’ Report

    Google announced the launch of a new Speed Suggestions report in Google Analytics. This can be found under Site Speed along with Overview, Page Timings and User Timings.

    The report shows the average page load time for top visited pages on your site, and utilizes the PageSpeed Insights tool to surface suggestions for improving specific pages for speed.

    “The PageSpeed Insights tool analyzes the contents of a web page and generates a speed score and concrete suggestions,” says Chen Xiao from Google’s Analytics team. “The speed score indicates the amount of potential improvement on the page. The closer the score is to 100, the more optimized the page is for speed.”

    “In the report, you can click through a suggestions link to see a page with all of the suggestions sorted by their impact on site speed,” Xiao adds. “Example suggestions include reducing the amount of content that needs to load before your users can interact with the page, minifying JavaScript, and reducing redirects. Note that if you rewrite your urls before displaying the url in Analytics, or your pages requires a login (see the help article for more details), then the PageSpeed Insights tool may not be able to analyze the page and generate a score and suggestions”

    Speed Suggestions

    Google says it has seen from its own benchmarks that the web is getting faster in general, with mobile even being 30% faster year over year.

  • Google Analytics Real Time Reports Get Even Better

    The real-time feature is probably the best thing Google has done for Google Analytics in a long time, at least for publishers like us. Now the feature is getting even better.

    Google announced some improvements to its real-time reports, including the ability to analyze Events in real-time, breakdown real-time by Desktop/Tablet/Mobile traffic, create shortcuts to your favorite real-time segments, and compare real-time filtered data against overall real-time data.

    “With the real-time events report, you can now not only see the top events as they occur but also filter on particular event categories (and actions),” the Google Analytics team notes in a blog post. “Additionally, you can see whether particular segments of visitors trigger different events and debug your events deployment in real time.”

    “If you are trying to see what events a particular segment of visitors generate, that is easy as well,” Google adds. “Any filters you set up in any part of real-time are preserved in the Events report. For example, in the above screengrab we have set up a filter here to see what events are triggered from visitors coming via organic search.”

    The breakdown by Desktop/Tablet/Mobile feature is going to be an interesting one to watch, and will give publishers a better sense of their current audience at any given second.

    More on the changes here.

    Earlier this week, Google also launched some new social reports for Google Analytics.

  • YouTube Has New Analytics Features

    YouTube Has New Analytics Features

    YouTube is talking about some new analytics features it has rolled out recently, including “time watched” and “annotation” reporting.

    The “Views” report has been enhanced to show more time watched data .”Estimated minutes watched” can be seen from the Views report. Users can also choose other data options from the “Compare metric” drop-down.

    YouTube Analytics Views

    The beta version of the Annotations report lets you view data on the performance of video annotations, with additional insights on viewer click and close rates.

    Annotations Report

    YouTube has also brought back Date Slider, which lets you adjust the date range and see how videos performed for various time periods.

    “You can average data across time with rolling totals for 7- and 30-day totals. Instead of seeing changes in weekend traffic and other cyclical data, rolling totals will smooth the trends to help you see overall growth without the distracting spikes and dips,” says YouTube product manager Ted Hamilton.

    Additionally, the metadata section for videos and channels now instantly provides data like lifetime views and video duration, the video hovercard shows a thumbnail of a video and basic info when hovering over a video link, and Compare Metrics gives users more ways to compare trends and patterns across different metrics.

  • Google Adds A New Kind Of Referrer For Ad Clicks

    Google announced today that it’s making a change to how some clicks coming from Google appear in traffic logs and web analytics software, though Google Analytics itself will not be affected by the change.

    There are now three possible referrers.

    Referrers for clicks on ads for a term like “shoes,” have, until now, looked like either:

    http://www.google.com/search?…&q=shoes&…

    or

    http://www.google.com/aclk?…&q=shoes&…

    Now, they may also look like:

    http://www.googleadservices.com/pagead/aclk?…&q=shoes&…&ohost=www.google.com&…

    The new referrer is on a different domain, and has a new path.

    “We’re making this change because we’re trying to improve the experience of clicking on an ad for our users,” says Ali Mohammad with Google’s Ads Latency Team. “For historical reasons, Google currently uses two redirects on two different domains for many of the ads on our site. We are streamlining our infrastructure to remove one of these redirects, which brings users to ad landing pages faster, leading to a better user experience for our users and a better return on ad clicks for our advertisers.”

    “The new referrer format ensures that advertisers will still get the relevant bits of information about a search that drove traffic to their site, but without the extra redirect,” Mohammad adds.

    Google says it will keep the number of affected searches low throughout the next month, but will move to all queries in August.

  • Yahoo Drops Analytics-Only Customers

    Yahoo announced some changes to Yahoo Web Analytics. Specifically, it is discontinuing services for analytics-only customers and the Yahoo Web Analytics Consultant Network.

    “In 2008, Yahoo! acquired IndexTools to offer web analytics and deep insights for small-and-medium business customers leveraging the Yahoo! Store platform to effectively sell goods and services online,” writes Yahoo’s Emer Kirrane on the Yahoo Web Analytics Blog. “While this one-click integration with Yahoo! Web Analytics proved to be very popular, with more than 80 percent of Yahoo! Stores using the platform to optimize their online presence, we’re committed to continuously measure and scrutinize what’s working and what can be improved.”

    “We will continue to support this community of Yahoo! Store customers and a limited number of other customers (e.g., Right Media Exchange seat holders) with the same Yahoo! Web Analytics services they know and trust,” says Kirrane.

    Daniel Waisberg points to some research from CardinalPath, indicating that Yahoo Web Analytics was only used by 3% of the top 500 retail sites (as of last October). That’s compared to 64% for Google, 33% for Adobe and 19% for IBM.

    CardinalPath data on analytics

    Existing Web Analytics projects will become read-only starting at the end of August. They will still provide access to historical data for two months.

    Yahoo suggests removing YWA tags from your site, as they’ll no longer populate data to your YWA account.

    There’s a data export feature, for those who wish to retain historical data. Users will have until the end of October before all Yahoo Web Analytics projects scheduled for discontinuation will be shut down.

  • Google’s BigQuery Means Analytics for all Businesses

    Google is introducing an analytics solution for businesses of all sizes without the need for investments in additional hardware or software. BigQuery is a web service that lets you analyze information from huge datasets and have on-demand access to the figures. The service is available for free right now.

    Google has been running a trial version of their analytical solution since November and many businesses and developers are using it with great success. Claritics, a mobile solutions provider, developed a mobile analytics application based on BigQuery.

    Claritics CEO Raj Pai comments on BigQuery:

    “Getting data into the system was cumbersome,”

    “Once the data was in, running queries – asking simple questions and getting responses – took a lot of time. Complex queries on large datasets could take more than 30 minutes.”

    “We can use the BigQuery Service infrastructure to create advanced queries and build these really quickly from a prototyping perspective,”

    “Google BigQuery Service is saving us time and resources. Since we don’t have to worry about setting up machines as we bring more clients onboard, we expect it will save us a lot of money as well.”

    Crystalloids is another company who streamlined their efforts and used BigQuery to help vacation destinations plan, predict, and target markets based on available data from past sales and inquiries.

    Richard Verhoeff, founder of Crystalloids Innovations comments on BigQuery:

    “We had to get all of the data over into Excel and then format the reports, which became very tedious,”

    “Then we would have stacks of papers on our desk, comparing this year’s occupancy rates with last year’s and trying to identify problems.”

    “Google BigQuery Service makes it possible to examine millions of records in seconds,”

    “Other business intelligence solutions could take eight minutes to come back with an answer. That’s much too long. Speed is an essential part of our application, and BigQuery Service gives us that.”

    Google+Enterprise+Blog%29″>Businesses and developers alike can sign up for the BigQuery service and get 100 GB of data per month for free. They also offer special pricing plans for storing and query up to 2 TB. Google wants you to try the service and share your success stories on Google+. It sounds like a great service. Having real-time business information can vital for reaching new customers and competing against other providers in the same market.

  • Nine Analytics Tips to a Hassle-Free Site Migration

    Many site owners and marketing managers experience data loss and lose visibility into their marketing activities and site performance which potentially could negatively impact the bottom line. This article examines practical steps to maintain and improve the quality of your data when upgrading or redesigning a site, or migrating to a site/new content management system. While the examples used here are Google Analytics specific, the approach is applicable to other analytics solutions.

    Prior Preparation Prevents Poor Performance

    With a little bit of planning, business owners, marketing managers and webmasters would immensely benefit. Here are few items to review prior as you plan to upgrade your site:

    Tip #1 – First and foremost review what are conversions (goals, users actions) you are measuring on the current site and how it’ll apply to the new site. You might be adding video, or downloads or new lead form, these new user actions should be tracked as goals in Google Analytics. Plan for it. Or maybe, you’ll be selling online on the new site, if so, plan for eCommerce analytics to measure where your online sales will be coming from, average order value and top selling products. If you will be using Google Checkout or Paypal, let your analyst/developer know to integrate.

    Tip #2 – You’ve heard that “segmentation” is really important to understand the behavior of different users (new vs. returning, customers vs. non-customers, etc.), and you want to apply this concept to the new site. Identify those segments clearly and pass on the information to your analyst/consultant/developer and they’ll help you track it on the new site.

    Tip #3 – Third-Party Systems: start looking beyond just your website. Are you passing information to SalesForce, SugarCRM, or other CRMs? Look for other tags from advertising and affiliate platforms and include them in your site upgrade plan, including Google AdWords tracker, comparison shopping sites tags, doubleclick or other tags.

    Tip #4 – Analytics and websites do get technical so if you are a marketers, this is a opportune time to be super nice to your technical team :). Have a meeting with your analyst (or consultant) and go over your list of marketing and business measurement goals we discussed above, and ask them to plan the Google Analytics Tracking Code implementation for sub-domains or cross-domain tracking, or if you are using events or firing virtual pageviews, they might need to make updates necessary to maintain the same data collection method. Also, have your technical team pay close attention to URLs/redirects, especially for landing pages, redirects can create all sort of data mess if not handled properly.

    Note: if the URL structure and page naming convention is changing, one or more of the following could be impacted, so plan for the necessary updates at the time of site upgrade: filters, goals, e-commerce variables, custom variables, advanced segments, custom alerts, custom reports with filters, dashboards with filters.

    Site Launch – Congratulations!

    You are very excited about the your new site launch, and you should be. Few more steps and you’ll be ready to celebrate!

    Again, marketers and webmaster must work very closely here.

    Tip #5 – First and foremost, and right after the site launched or if you had a site in a staging environment, you want to validate that the analytic code is on all your pages (turn to your favorite site scan software). Pay extra attention to key pages (landing pages/static pages and conversion pages such as thank you pages, form completion pages, e-commerce purchase complete pages, etc.). And while you are at it, run a quick hostname report. In Google Analytics this can be found under Demographics -> Technology -> Network to ensure you are collecting data only from your production web properties.

    Tip #6 – You might be experiencing slow load times when you launch your new site for a variety of reasons. Don’t despair, GA has some powerful reports that come to the rescue. Discuss the Site Speed Reports (under Content) and identify and fix page or server issues.

    Tip #7 – Go the GA reports and set up a date range comparison (equal number of days, and days of week before and after launch), then monitor your most important metrics. Here are some starting points: under Audience, run a report on traffic/key metrics/conversion by browser. Any major peaks and valleys pre/post site launch? If so, immediately inform your webmaster, there are potential issues with browser compatibility. Also, examine your traffic sources and goal conversion carefully. If the domain/sub-domain configuration wasn’t set up properly, you’ll see all sort of issues with self-referring traffic, visit inflations and other side effects. Don’t forget to review your Pages report for any error pages (404 pages) that site visitors might be experiencing.

    Tip #8 – Automate. Yes, let Google Analytics do all the heavy lifting for you. Set up Custom Alerts (Intelligent Events) on all vital metrics. Without needing a degree in Statistics, GA will report to you if and when any of these metrics fall outside the norm. This is very powerful and a great time-saver. You’ll be notified when there is an issue (or a good thing) and you’ll act on the finding accordingly.

    Tip #9 – Annotate – yes, you’ll few weeks down the road, you’ll forget what changes you made on your site. So take few minutes to annotate (by date) when major changes occurred, day of site launch, etc. Your colleagues (or consultants) who come after you, will be very thankful for the context you’d provided.

    Note: while the above tips focus on analytics and maintain data quality, site migration or upgrade planning should include SEO and SEM planning. Look for the for search engine traffic and landing pages and report drops in ranking, traffic, engagement or conversion issues to your search marketing team.

    Equipped with the above nine tips, you’ll be closer to a hassle-free outcome. By following these suggestions, your site will not only have that fresh new look you develop, but you’ll also have the necessary data you need to measure and improve the site and marketing performance and keep your visitors (and boss) very happy!

    Editor’s Note: For a comprehensive checklist on analytics tips for a hassle-free site upgrade and migration, check out Feras’ recent post on the E-Nor Digital Marketing Optimization blog.

  • Google Analytics Email, PDF Exporting Features Announced

    Google announced that Analytics reports in Google Analytics can be sent to users via email from within Google Analytics itself. They can be scheduled to be sent daily, weekly, monthly or quarterly.

    Reports can also now be exported to PDF documents so they can be saved/shared in that format.

    The options to do these things can be found in the utility bar at the top of the reports. “In order to provide maximum flexibility, this functionality is available on standard reports, custom reports, and dashboards,” says Chris Anderson from Google’s Analytics team. “Clicking on the ‘Email’ button on a dashboard pulls up the same email scheduling dialog as in standard reports and offers the same feature set.”

    Google Analytics Email

    “For those who have used the email scheduler in the old interface, this new emailer system operates independently and has enhancements in reliability and ease of use,” says Anderson. “We are putting the finishing touches on the look and feel of exported reports, and anticipate that these will be finalized soon.”

    This is just the latest in a string of recent improvements to Google Analytics, including: multi-channel funnels, the realtime analytics feature (which can be quite addictive to watch), flow visualization, and the premium version.

    A couple weeks ago, Google introduced new site speed reports. In addition, they announced new social reports, which should be rolling out soon.

  • Yahoo Web Analytics Version 10.3.19 Gives Product A Facelift

    Yahoo is giving Yahoo Web Analytics a refresh, and as a start, has launched version 10.3.19.

    “We want to make the YWA user experience better – we know that our customers love the product functionality but they would like to see some changes in the interface. We’re hoping that this part of the UI refresh helps to improve usability,” says Emer Kirrane.

    For one, they’ve cleaned up the settings page, changing some of the text to make relevant settings easier to find. They also removed Personal Setup, which was no longer in use anyway.

    Yahoo Analytics

    “QuickLinks” have been added to the Control Center, the first page you see when you log in. Kirrane lists the following changes on the Yahoo Web Analytics blog:

    • We’ve moved the Logout button to the menu bar to make it easier to find
    • We’ve removed the sidebar links as they were not relevant to the way users use YWA
    • We’ve created QuickLinks for each project to improve usability in YWA
      – new: direct access to the Custom Report Wizard
      – new: direct access to the Manage Projects page
      – new: direct access to the Manage Segments page
    • We’ve moved the Installation link from the menu bar and created a QuickLink from the relevant project to improve usability and reduce the instance of error (accidentally copying the tag for the wrong project).

    The company acknowledges that the service has experienced a lot of outages, and promises that it’s working on making this a non-issue.

  • Urchin Founder Reflects On The Impact Of Urchin And Google Analytics

    Google acquired Urchin all the way back in 2005. It seems like an eternity ago.

    “In 2005 we acquired Urchin, whose online web analytics product became the foundation for Google Analytics, helping businesses of all sizes measure their websites and online marketing,” Google said in its big product shut-down announcement. “We’re fully committed to building an industry-leading online analytics product, so we’re saying goodbye to the client-hosted version, known as Urchin Software. New Urchin Software licenses will no longer be available after March 2012.”

    Paul Muret, Director of Engineering for Google Analytics and co-founder of Urchin, talked about it a bit more on the Google Analytics blog:

    When I started Urchin Software with a few colleagues back in 1998, it was hard to imagine the scale and impact that Urchin and Google Analytics would eventually have. And yet, I remember rolling out the first version of Urchin to our customers and being blown away by the response. It was clear that Urchin was filling a fundamental need to understand customer engagement in a new medium. Suddenly, it made the intangible packets of traffic flying invisibly all over the world very tangible.

    Within a few short years, we built a successful business based on Urchin and “Urchin on Demand”, an online version of the product. In early 2005, we were acquired by Google because it saw the potential of data to create a better web. By liberating this tool we could empower companies of all sizes to become smarter and more effective online. We assigned considerable resources to our online solution and released it to the public for free. Google Analytics has since grown beyond anything that we could have expected.

    The success of Google Analytics has been incredibly rewarding and humbling, and we are very thankful for the support of our early Urchin customers and investors. The Urchin Software product has now been completely overshadowed by its tremendously popular offspring. And so, it is time that we now complete the cycle by officially retiring the Urchin Software product and focus exclusively on online analytics. On behalf of the original Urchin crew and Google, we thank you and hope that we can continue to serve you with amazing products.

    New sales of Urchin will stop at the end of March, but current installations will work “for years to come,” according to Muret.

  • Google Analytics Gets Non-Interaction Event Tracking

    Google announced the addition of non-interaction events to its set of event tracking metrics.

    “”But wait!’ you ask, ‘How can an event-which measures user interaction-be non-interactive? And why would I want that anyway?,” says Patricia Boswell of the Google Analytics Team. “The answer is simple: sometimes you want to track passive events on your pages, like images from an automatic slide show. In this case, you want such events to be excluded from bounce rate calculations because they don’t track visitor interaction. Now, you can mark these events as non-interaction events, so that they don’t affect the bounce rate for the page.”

    She uses an example of an image slide show that automatically serves up 5 images in rotating order on a site’s homepage. “You want to apply an event tracking call with each movement of the slider, so that you know which images are being seen most by visitors to your home page,” says Boswell. “However, there isn’t really any interaction required on the visitors’ behalf to engage with this slider. You know that in the past, event tracking for this slider would make the bounce rate for your home page drop dramatically. Better to exclude these events from bounce rate calculation, so that the bounce rate for your home page is calculated only from pageviews for the page and not events.”

    Non interaction events

    She explains how to use the code in this blog post.

    There’s been a lot going on with Google Analytics this month. For one, Google announced that it would make encrypted search the default for signed in users of Google.com, meanwhile blocking specific referral data. This hasn’t gone over incredibly well with the webmaster community. There’s even a petition aimed at getting Google to reconsider.

    Google also started letting Analytics users get Webmaster Tools data in their GA accounts, an extension of a previously launched pilot program.

    Finally, Google announced Flow Visualization in Google Analytics, which lets you analyze insights in a visual way, to help you better understand how visitors flow throughout the pages of your site.

  • Google Analytics Gets Webmaster Tools Data, New Search Reports

    Google is letting Google Analytics users get Webmaster Tools data in their GA accounts, so they can surface Google search data in GA.

    Several months ago, Google launched a pilot program, but now, the new set of reports is available to everyone. “The Webmaster Tools section contains three reports based on the Webmaster Tools data that we hope will give you a better sense of how your site performs in search results,” says Google Analytics Associate Product Manager Kate Cushing. “We’ve created a new section for these reports called Search Engine Optimization that will live under the Traffic Sources section.”

    That includes reports for queries (impressions, clicks, position, and CTR info for the top 1,000 daily queries, Landing Pages (impressions, clicks, position and CTR info for the top 1,000 daily landing pages) and Geographical Summary (impressions, clicks and CTR by country).

    Google says it has made various improvements to the reports based on feedback from the pilot program.

    Perhaps these reports will help webmasters who have been affected by Google’s Panda update figure out some things.

    Users must link their WMT and GA accounts obviously. To do so, go to the WMT homepage, click “manage site” next to the site you want and click “Google Analytics” property. Select the property you want to associate with the site and just save it.

  • Google Launches Important New Tools for Webmasters

    Google made a couple relatively quiet announcements this week that have pretty big ramifications for webmasters who want to get more traffic to their sites.

    If you’re a Webmaster Tools user, you can thank Google for a new “Site Health” feature. In a nutshell, it’s Google’s way of helping you prioritize what you’re doing in WMT by highlighting the “health problems” your site has. In fact, they’ve even redesigned the homepage around this concept.

    Do you like the new design? Share your opinion in the comments.

    The thinking is that you can see what needs attention the most, in order, according to Google. Given how much sites generally rely on Google for the majority of their traffic, whose advice would you rather take in this department?

    If you don’t want to see sites listed by priority, you have the ability to view them alphabetically like before.

    webmaster tools homepage  

    Site Health  

    The new home page is only available if you have 100 or fewer sites in your account, but they don’t all have to be verified. Google says it will be available for all accounts in the future. If you have over 100, you can still access Site Health info from the top of the dashboard for each site.

    So what’s included in this site health data? Malware detection, important pages that have been removed with Google’s URL removal tool, and important pages that are blocked from crawling in robots.txt.

    Google will provide additional info about any of these things as they’re found.

    In a post on Google’s Webmaster Central blog, Webmaster Trends Analyst Susan Moskwa writes, “A word about ‘important pages: ‘as you know, you can get a comprehensive list of all URLs that have been removed by going to Site configuration > Crawler access > Remove URL; and you can see all the URLs that we couldn’t crawl because of robots.txt by going to Diagnostics > Crawl errors > Restricted by robots.txt. But since webmasters often block or remove content on purpose, we only wanted to indicate a potential site health issue if we think you may have blocked or removed a page you didn’t mean to, which is why we’re focusing on ‘important pages.’ Right now we’re looking at the number of clicks pages get (which you can see in Your site on the web > Search queries) to determine importance, and we may incorporate other factors in the future as our site health checks evolve.”

    “Obviously these three issues—malware, removed URLs, and blocked URLs—aren’t the only things that can make a website ‘unhealthy;’ in the future we’re hoping to expand the checks we use to determine a site’s health, and of course there’s no substitute for your own good judgment and knowledge of what’s going on with your site,” she adds. “But we hope that these changes make it easier for you to quickly spot major problems with your sites without having to dig down into all the data and reports.”

    It’s important to note that it may take several days for Google’s health warnings to go away after you fix the problems. Hopefully they can do something to speed that up in the future as well. If you’re still seeing it after a week, Moskwa says, the problem may not be resolved.

    Feedback from webmasters about site health has been generally positive, but some still want more. For example, on Moskwa’s post, Antonio Ooi comments, “We’re more interested to know what is missing, critical level (high, moderate, low) and recommended action/solution. For example, which image alt, meta tags, video sitemap etc are missing/invalid and how to fix. Or what else that has yet to be implemented on our site to take advantage of the new Google search engine’s cool features and so on. This will not only make us work smarter, this will also make Google team work smarter.”

    Another commenter going by “knowj” says, “It would be a great feature if the Webmasters Tools API allowed developers to feed error reports/logs into for websites/applications.This could generate an RSS feed/alerts ordered by priority/severity. This would create a useful single location for keeping track of the health of websites.”

    What do you think? What else should Google show you as part of its site health feature? Let us know in the comments.

    Now on the Analytics side of things…

    In addition to launching a premium version of Google Analytics for bigger sites, Google announced the launch of Real-Time Analytics. What this means is that you can now see how your traffic is coming in as it happens, which could be huge for helping you shape your promotion strategies, and play to your strengths.

    Essentially, it can help you do what you’re already doing with the data you get from Google Analytics and do it faster.

    “One way that I like to use these reports is to measure the immediate impact of social media. Whenever we put out a new blog post, we also send out a tweet,” says John Jersin of Google’s Analytics team. “With Real-Time, I can see the immediate impact to my site traffic.”

    “For example, last week we posted about the latest episode of Web Analytics TV and also tweeted about the post,” he adds. “By campaign tagging the links we shared, we could see how much traffic each channel is driving to the blog as it happened. We could also see when we stopped receiving visits from the tweet, which helps know when to reengage.”

    He says he also uses real-time analytics to make sure campaign tracking is correctly implemented before launching a new campaign.

    The new real-time reports are only available in the new version of Google Analytics. You can find a link to the new version at the top of Google Analytics if you’re not already using it. So far, only a few users have access to the reports, but they will be available for all in the coming weeks.

    Do you think real-time analytics data will help you improve the your site’s traffic? Tell us what you think.

  • Google Analytics Real-Time Launches for Real Time Traffic Data

    Google announced the launch of a new set of reports in Google Analytics today, which shows you what’s happening with your site as it happens. Pretty cool.

    It’s called Google Analytics Real-Time (fittingly).

    “One way that I like to use these reports is to measure the immediate impact of social media. Whenever we put out a new blog post, we also send out a tweet. With Real-Time, I can see the immediate impact to my site traffic,” says John Jersin of the Google Analytics team. “For example, last week we posted about the latest episode of Web Analytics TV and also tweeted about the post. By campaign tagging the links we shared, we could see how much traffic each channel is driving to the blog as it happened. We could also see when we stopped receiving visits from the tweet, which helps know when to reengage.”

    Realtime Analytics

    “Another way I’m using Real-Time is to make sure campaign tracking is correctly implemented before launching a campaign,” he says. “When getting ready to launch a new campaign it’s critical to make sure your measurement plan is working before you start driving visitors to the page. With the Real-Time reports you can find out in seconds whether you’re getting the data you want in Google Analytics.”

    Users can find the reports in the new version of Google Analytics. They didn’t bother to add it to the old one. You should have access to it from a link at the top of GA. If you’re not already using the new version, this might be a feature that makes you go ahead and switch. You’re going to have to get used to the new version sooner or later anyway.

    Now, if they could just get realtime search back.

    Google also announced Google Analytics Premium for its biggest customers. It comes with extra processing power, advanced analysis, service/support, and guarantees. More on this here.

  • Google Gets Around Analytics Issues in Germany

    Google Gets Around Analytics Issues in Germany

    Early this year, reports surfaced that the German government would possibly fine businesses for using Google Analytics, saying that the tool violates people’s privacy, but Google said at the time:

    “Google Analytics complies with European data protection laws and is used by other European data protection authorities on their own websites.”

    Reports indicated that German officials had ended talks with Google to resolve the issue, but Google said it would continue “actively working to address their concerns.”

    Apparently there was some progress made, as Google has put up a post on its German AdWords blog. “While the use of Google Analytics in our opinion is not against the German and European data protection law, had German data protection authorities in the past to have a dissenting view,” says Google Data Protection Commissioner, Germany, Per Meyerdierks (as translated by Google). “We have worked closely with these authorities – represented by the Hamburg Institute for Data Protection and Freedom of Information Officer – concerns regarding the collaborated and implemented a number of improvements to Google Analytics.”

    Meyerdierks says the following government requirements must be met for those who wish to use Google Analytics in Germany (also as translated by Google):

    • Please mention in your privacy policy that Google Analytics is used on your website.
    • Implement the IP mask function instructs the Google Analytics to not save the full IP address of your users or to process.
    • Instruct in your privacy policy on the possibility of disabling the Google Analytics function using a browser add-on to. End users can, if desired, to prevent very easy by installing this browser add-on that analysis information can be sent to Google. This possibility exists for over a year for Google Chrome, Firefox and Internet Explorer is now available for Safari and Opera and has proven successful and efficient solution for users.
    • We have updated Terms introduced to include with the data protection authorities coordinated arrangements for data processing.

    An official statement from German officials can be found here (in German).

  • Google Adds Multi-Channel Funnels to Google Analytics

    Google announced a new set of five reports in Google Analytics today called Multi-Channel Funnels.

    In Analytics, conversions and ecommerce transactions are credited to the last campaign, search, or ad that referred the visitor when he or she converted,” Google says in the help center. “But what role did prior website referrals, searches and ads play in that conversion? How much time passed between the visitor’s initial interest and his or her purchase?”

    “The Multi-Channel Funnels reports answer these questions and others by showing how your marketing channels (i.e. sources of traffic to your website) work together to create sales and conversions,” it says.

    The reports are generated from conversion paths and sequences of interactions (clicks/referrals) from the 30 days that led up to each conversion/transaction. Conversion path data looks at paid/organic search, referral sites, affiliates, social networks, email newsletters, display ads, custom campaigns, etc.

    Here are a couple videos about Multi-channel funnels, including a walk-through:

    Google Analytics users can use the reports by clicking on the My Conversions tab. AdWords customers are encouraged to link their accounts with their Analytics accounts.

    Starting today, Google says, uses will see complete data in the reports for the past two months, but they’ll be expanding it to include data dating back to January over the coming days.

  • Google Analytics Update: Better Understanding of Site Interactions

    Google announced an update to sessions in Google Analytics. The company says it will lead to a “clearer understanding of website interactions.”

    As it stands now, GA ends a session when over 30 minutes have elapsed between pageviews for a single visitor, at the end of the day, and when a visitor closes their browser. In such cases, the next pageview from the visitor will start a new session.

    Now, GA will end a session when over 30 minutes have elapsed between pageviews for a single visitor, at the end of the day, and when any traffic source value for the user changes.

    Google says traffic source info includes:

    • utm_source
    • utm_medium
    • utm_term
    • utm_content
    • utm_id
    • utm_campaign
    • gclid

    Update to Sessions in Google Analytics: http://t.co/fQys3IR #measure #googleanalytics 3 hours ago via web · powered by @socialditto

    Trevor Claiborne of the Google Analytics team says on the Analytics Blog:

    This change only applies for visits going forward from today, and your historical data will not change. We’re bringing the definition of session in line with the common definition of a visit. If a visitor leaves your site and returns soon after with a different traffic source value, each visit will be measured with its own session.

    Since Google Analytics will start new sessions for all new campaign information, sessions will now have the more accurate attribution information. This will be especially helpful if you use Multi-Channel Funnels. Additionally, by continuing a session when the user closes their browser for only a very short time, sessions will more accurately model a user’s engagement with the website. Overall, this change may slightly increase the number of visits. Based on our research, most users will see less than a 1% change.

    Google also added some stuff to custom reports in Google Analytics this week. This includes 45 new metrics/dimensions, a simplified report builder and the ability to build entire groups of reports.

    Google Analytics Custom Reports