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How to Measure Online Engagements
You’re tracking engagements on your website, but are your analytics giving you the insights you need?
Avinash Kaushik has some interesting thoughts on measuring Engagement in his latest book, Web Analytics 2.0. Here are the highlights:
Do ‘time on site’ and ‘repeat visits’ really measure engagement?
Fact is, measuring engagement with only quantitative data (web analytics) is a challenge. Your web analytics tell you the “what”, but not the “why”.
For instance, your site visitor spent 15 minutes on your site, but your analytics won’t tell you whether or not your visitor spent happy or frustrating minutes with your site. Also, your analytics won’t tell you whether or not your visitor ran off to fix a sandwich for 10 minutes, meaning, he really just looked at your site for 5 minutes. Further, your visitor came back 2 mores times (which your tool will count as a returning visitor) , but was he returning for updates or trying to find your contact information for the third time? Unless he closed a sale (which assumes a happy experience), you really don’t know if your customer had a positive or negative engagement with your site. You get the point…
Avinash notes that web analytics is “limited in that it can measure the degree of engagement, but not the kind of engagement.”
Based on this definition, recency and frequency of site visits really reveal just the degree of engagement. So, five visits in a one-week period (the degree of engagement) doesn’t tell you if the visits were negative or positive, which Avinash refers to as the “kind of engagement”.
In summary –
Degree of Engagement
– Web analytics measure the degree of engagement.
– It’s important to measure the degree of engagement along with outcomes. Outcomes will tell you how successful the engagement was. For instance, did the customer end up buying from you (outcome), as a result of coming back to your site a few times?
Kind of Engagement
– Surveys and primary research measure the kind of engagement someone had on your site.
– Most likely someone who is making repeat purchases from you is happy with your products and service. They keep coming back for more.
In order to measure engagement on your site, you should look at both – degree and kind of engagement – web analytics and qualitative data.
What are your thoughts on this and how are you measuring online engagement?
How to assess the maturity of your digital marketing
It can be quite challenging to get your management’s buy-in on measurement strategy, analytics resources, and the need for optimization. Though it’s almost 2010, we still have Avinash Kaushik evangelizing web analytics and Bryan Eisenberg advocating for the need to test and optimize (and rightfully so!), not to mention the many analytics and optimization sessions offered at Marketing Conferences.
Fact is, a lot of companies need desperate help, don’t get it yet, or don’t realize the missed opportunity. And here you are, trying to sell them on everything you believe in… So, how do you get your management on board? There are obviously several ways to get them on board (e.g. “Stragegies for Embarrassing your Organization”, Avinash Kaushik, Web Analytics 2.0, p. 429), but another way to get their attention quickly may be to give them a reality check on where your organization stands.
Use the [x+1] Digital Marketing Maturity Model to assess the maturity level of your organization. The [x+1] Digital Marketing Maturity Model defines the capabilities required to convert prospects to customers through an integrated marketing experience.
Pillars of Digital Performance-Based Marketing consist of
• Target Market
• Offer
• Creative
• Analytics
• Marketing Integration
• People / Skills
Are you a broadcast marketer or a value validator? Do you know any organizations that are channel champions? I can tell you that when I worked at AOL back in 2003, we were between value validators and channel champions. Pretty impressive, given that it was 2003! But, aside from smart marketers, we also had management support.
Another source to help you assess your digital marketing maturity would be Webtrends’ Digital Marketing Maturity Model (DM3).
The DM3 (beta) provides a framework for assessing and building digital marketing maturity over time in six core areas:
• Measurement strategy
• Analytics resources and domain expertise
• Data integration and visualization
• Data analysis and insight
• Adoption and governance
• Ongoing optimization
So, how mature is your digital marketing? And, what are you going to do to take your organization to the next level?