seowebsite17
read my profile
sign my guestbook

Visit seowebsite17's Xanga Site!

Name: seowebsite17
Gender: Male


Message: message me


Member Since: 1/16/2011

SubscriptionsSites I Read
featuredweblogs
featuredquestions
TheXangaTeam

Posting Calendar

|<< oldest | newest >>|
view all weblog archives

Get Involved!

Suggest a link

Recommend to friend

Create a site


Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Two Must Have Filters for Google Analytics

Google Analytics is a very powerful tool that every website should have installed. Those who have browsed through their analytics report know how valuable the information can be for improving conversions and making informed business decisions. As a result, webmasters and marketers must make every effort to ensure their data is as accurate as possible.

To help accomplish this task, Google Analytics has given us the wonderful ability to filter data to our needs. And while there are many different filters you can use for a variety of reasons, there are two filters every webmaster should create upon first installing Google Analytics. These two filters are an absolute must, and failing to implement them may contaminate results and provide you with inaccurate information.

1. Exclude All Employee IP Addresses

The first filter you should create when installing Google Analytics is a filter excluding yours and your employees? IP addresses.

Why It?s Important

Not only will your employees inflate the number of visitors to your website, but more importantly, they may skew more sensitive data such as the number of pageviews and the time on site, since their browsing habits may be very different than a customer?s.

How to Exclude a Single IP Address

Creating this filter is very straightforward. From your Analytics Settings page click ?Edit? to the right of the domain you wish to add the filter to. This brings you to your Profile Settings Page where you click ?Add a Filter?. Select ?Predefined Filter? and add your IP address (as shown below).

analytics add filter image

How to Exclude Multiple IP Addresses

If you have a range of IP addresses to exclude, select ?Custom Filter? and enter the IP range using regular expressions. I suggest using Google?s IP Regex tool to make sure you are entering the correct expression.

2. Include Only Your Hostname

Why It?s Important

Including your domain name and subdomains is an often overlooked but vital filter. Remember that the tracking code Google gave you to use on your website (the UA-XXXXX-X) isn?t a secret. Anybody can see it pretty easily by looking at the source code of your webpage. If somebody uses this same tracking code on their page it will contaminate your data.

You may think this is a rare occurrence, but unfortunately it is very common. Most of the time it is done on accident, when somebody scrapes your code. But it could also be done maliciously. To see if anyone is using your tracking code on their website simply check your analytics under Visitors > Network Properties> Hostnames. We did this for SEO.com and found more than 40 websites using our tracking code, including a hilarious example of a Chinese website that has scraped our code. Can you tell which one is the real SEO.com?

seo.com website screenshot

fake seocom website screenshot

While this may not be that significant to a larger website like ours, it can really have an impact on small- and medium-sized websites by skewing metrics like bounce rates and average time spent on site. Furthermore, if somebody wanted to be malicious they could even include your code on a larger website, inflating visitors and making it harder to segment out traffic that is not yours.

How to Include Your Hostname

Including only your domain name is also pretty straightforward, although you will have to use a custom filter since there is no predefined filter available. To do this, select ?Custom Filter? and ?Include?. You then select ?Hostname? from the drop down menu. To enter you domain name as a regular expression you simply need to add a ?\? before the .com: seo\.com

analytics custom filter image

Always Have an Unfiltered Profile

While these two filters are extremely helpful, you will still want an unfiltered profile with only raw data. This is considered best practice since once you create a filter you can never go back to see unfiltered data, even if you made a mistake.

To create an unfiltered profile click ?Add new profile? to the left of the domain name you want to add it to. Then enter a profile name such as ?www.seo.com ? unfiltered?.

Taking these simple steps allows you to have more confidence in your data and make better informed business decisions.


Source: http://www.seo.com/blog/filters-google-analytics-2/

Serena Williams Shakira Shaquille Oneal Simon Cowell


Tuesday, May 24, 2011

1,276 Reasons #Mozcation is Coming to SLC

Yo peeps, tweeps and fbeeps!

SEOmoz is looking for a reason to come to Salt Lake. They?re calling it a #Mozcation. They are looking for the best place to go, but the obvious choice is SLC. I know it. I know you know it. Now we need to let SEOmoz know it.

I have tapped into the

  • OSE API
  • RavenTools API
  • MajesticSEO API
  • Authority Labs API
  • Google Webmaster Tools
  • Google Trends and Google insights
  • and most definitely the Google Adwords Keyword Tool

and they all point to the obvious destination of the 8-0-1 (That is the area code for Salt Lake City).

I even shook my magic SEO 8 Ball and it said ?ask me again.? And I DID ? and it said ?FO SHIZZLE MY NIZZLE.? (which I believe translates to ?Most Definitely?)

This really isn't me.

In all my research, I have calculated that there are at least, but not limited to, 1,276 reasons (correlation != causation) why #Mozcation should be in SLC.

Below are a couple of my reasons for having #Mozcation here, what are yours? (Add your comments below, or comment on mine, because I know they?re research sound and proven.)

Giddy Up! (Sorry but you might not see the Comments if using Google Chrome)

P.S. I wasn?t lying when I said I checked Google Insights. And I know Nevada is #1, but that is only temporary according to my research!


Source: http://www.seo.com/blog/mozcation-slc/

Meryl Streep Michael Bay Michael Jordan Mila Kunis


Friday, May 20, 2011

Multi-Channel Funnels in Google Analytics

Multi-Channel Funnels are here!Note: Google Analytics has let us know that the feature called Multi-Channel Funnels discussed in this blog post is in limited pilot. That means that Google Analytics is testing the feature and its usefulness to a small group of trusted testers, and have not made any plans or a timeline for a full launch.

Google Analytics is finally getting an upgrade to its outdated attribution model in the new Multi-Channel Funnels. Announced at Ad:Tech San Francisco last week, this new model will show how all of your various traffic sources are working together to create conversions on your site. This is without a doubt one of the coolest features to come down the Google Analytics product pipeline, and here?s why.

Most of us are used to dealing with last-click attribution. When a visitor to your site converts, your analytics tool gives credit to the last channel that brought them there. With Multi-Channel Funnels, we get a bigger picture. It?s similar to the Search Funnels features that AdWords launched last year, except now we get to see how all traffic?search, referral, whatever?interacts as your visitors move in and out of your site.

So join me as I take a look at some of the features of Google Analytics? new Multi-Channel Funnels.

Are You Missing Part of the Story?

Bear in mind that these new reports are only available within the new Google Analytics interface. The good news is that everyone should have access to v5 by now. The bad news? You probably don?t have access to Multi-Channel Funnels. They?re still awesome and once you do have them, they?re gonna change your life. So bear with me.

Multi-Channel Funnels will show up as an option under the Conversions menu. The first report you?ll see is, of course, the Overview. I can almost guarantee that it?ll bring a smile to your face, because it?ll tell you something like:

You've got assists in your funnel. Were you aware?

Sure, it doesn?t really give me a lot of information, but it does tell me that, up until now, I?ve been missing out on important intelligence. Those Assisted Conversions? They tell me that I?ve got traffic hitting the site with one channel and then converting through another. That seems useful, right?

I gotta admit, I?m a sucker for Venn diagrams. The Multi-Channel Mix report on the Overview is really fun for seeing how your various channels interact with one another. Check off the sources to the left and see how they overlap in the diagram:

Venn diagrams are fun AND educational.

Move Beyond Last-Click Attribution

For the meat and potatoes, we?ll dig down into the Path Length report. Here you can see how many ?interactions? with your site it takes before visitors convert.

Path Length Report

Above, we can see that 40% of our conversions occurred after more than one channel interaction. Even cooler, we can see the percentage of conversion value. Over 60% of our conversion cash is attributed to two or more channel interactions. Is it important that we spend some time analyzing ways to get first-time visitors back to our site via other channels? The numbers don?t lie.

But how do we see which channels are best at up-front conversions and which excel at last-click? Well, you?d use the Assisted Conversions report:

Assisted Conversions Report

The report defaults to the ?Assist Interaction Analysis,? which shows us a list of our channels with the number of times they appeared in the conversion path but were not the final conversion interaction. This, compared with the number of times they were the final conversion interaction, hints at the channel?s role. Does it serve primarily as a way to eduacte your visitors about your product, or does it push them to convert? To use the obligatory basketball analogy, is it John Stockton or Michael Jordan?

Know Your Channels? Roles

This new metric is currently called ?Assisted/Last Interaction Conversions,? which, frankly, sucks. I like what Justin Cutroni calls it: the ?Exposer to Closer Ratio?. It is, in a word, awesome. If there?s any better indicator of the contextual efficiency of your marketing channels, I don?t know what it is. Previously, if your social media referrals were showing a low conversion rate, you?d probably stop trying, right? Cancel the Twitter account and stop all the Facebooking? Now you can see that they?re just creating prospects who come back to the site via other means and ultimately convert.

If you change the view from Source/Medium to Default Traffic Groups, you get to see something that a lot of marketers have been clamoring for: Channel Grouping. I had a call this afternoon, in fact, where a client asked me how he could better organize his channels in Google Analytics. I told him the same thing I?ve told all my clients for the past five years: use filters. And then I sighed heavily into the phone.

Thankfully, it looks like those days will soon be over. By default, Google groups your channels into various buckets for you:

Default Channel Grouping

But here?s the best part: you can make your own! If you want to define your own groups, it?s as easy as setting up a new segment. It even uses a similar interface:

Custom Channel Grouping

This is big news. One of the biggest complaints I?ve heard from others users is the inability to modify how Google Analytics presents its data after it?s been collected and run through filters. With customized groups, users are now free to change the information architecture of their reports even more than before. This is a very, very good thing.

For more information on the other Multi-Channel Funnels reports, check out the official help page from Google and the videos below:

Related Posts

  1. Funnel Problems in Google Analytics
  2. Answers to your Top 10 Google Analytics Questions
  3. How they landed that 6-digit sale with Google Analytics
  4. Google Analytics and the John/Avinash Show
  5. Segment your Goal Funnel in Google Analytics

2 Responses to ?Multi-Channel Funnels in Google Analytics?

Great article. In this line you say? ?Above, we can see that 40% of our conversions occurred after more than one channel interaction.? Isn?t the report showing # of interactions and not channel interactions?

@Rishi: Semantics. :) Any interaction?or visit, really?is a channel interaction. It just depends on the type of channel.

Leave a Reply

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/lunametrics-blog/~3/DNQoyIUoK1w/

Kristen Stewart Lady Gaga Lance Armstrong Lebron James


Wednesday, May 18, 2011

A special Google Doodle today: Royal Wedding Logo

Prince William and Catherine Royal Wedding Google logo

Prince William and Catherine Royal Wedding Google logo

Today?s most talkable and hot news among the internet users, bloggers and whole world is Royal wedding between Prince William of Wales and Catherine Middleton happened on Friday, April 29, 2011, in London. On this special occasion, Google wishes married couples by putting special Royal Wedding doodle in its homepage.

Royal wedding snapshot of Prince William and Kate Middleton:

Prince William Kate Middleton Royal Wedding Photo

Prince William Kate Middleton Royal Wedding Photo

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

This entry was posted on Friday, April 29th, 2011 at 7:31 pm and is filed under Google, Internet Updates, Others, Search Engines. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Source: http://www.cogzidel.com/blog/2011/04/a-special-google-doodle-today-royal-wedding/

Kim Kardashian Kim Kardashian Tape Kobe Bryant Kristen Stewart


Monday, May 16, 2011

GoalCopy Updated for Firefox 4

If you?re not familiar with the Goal Copy Firefox extension, you can read the original post here.

For those of you on the cutting edge of Firefox-dom, you may now copy and paste Google Analytics goals to your heart?s content. GoalCopy has been updated for Firefox 4.

Just download the latest version here and get to copying! You might encounter a weird glitch where only the Find/Replace toolbar shows and the Copy/Paste options are nowhere to be found. Just re-enable it through the new Firefox menu as shown below:

Enable the Copy/Paste toolbar

Note: GoalCopy currently only works with the old version of the Google Analytics interface. I?m working on getting it to work with the new one. Patience, grasshoppers.

Related Posts

  1. GoalCopy updated with Find/Replace
  2. Updated Goal Copy for FireFox 3.5
  3. Quick GoalCopy Update
  4. Copying Goals in Google Analytics (A Firefox Extension)
  5. Goal Copy updated for new GA Goal Interface (And now can copy filters too)

6 Responses to ?GoalCopy Updated for Firefox 4?

Thanks Michael.

Are you going to try to update it for the new interface as well? I was sort of dreading that, and if you?ve seen my horrible code, you are probably thinking it would be better to just re-write it from scratch.

I?m gonna try. We?ll see how it goes. And your code looks fine to me!

Cheers!

Didn?t install on my Mac with FF 4.01?

Got this error message? http://screencast.com/t/5IVsRXME

Ok, guys? try it now.

Thank you! I had a rough workaround to make it work with FF4, liking this much better. Do you plan to roll this out to Chrome, as well?

Leave a Reply

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/lunametrics-blog/~3/wIqrPofrtpA/

Beyonce Knowles Black Eyed Peas Brad Pitt Britney Spears



Next 5 >>