Topic 4 Class Notes-RFD
Topic 4 Class Notes-RFD
KPIs will be essential tools in aligning your digital marketing efforts around common
goals and managing performance towards them. KIPs are a special subset of high-level
metrics that are used to measure performance against key organizational goals or
objectives. Many KIPs measure key outcomes or macro conversions for your
organization.
Types of metrics
There are three main types of web analytics metrics: counts, ratios, and other
calculations.
• A count is a number of items -usually whole number e.g 10, 800 orders.
• Ratios are calculations of two amounts in order to show the relationship between
them—most commonly dividing one count by another. Most of the ratios used in
web analytics are actually rates, which are a special form of ratio where the two
amounts have different base units (page views per visit).
Advantages of ratios
They compensate for fluctuations in volume, making it easier to compare the relative
performance of different items. For example, campaign A generated 300 orders from
10,000 visits (3% conversion rate). A smaller Campaign B created only 50 orders from
1,000 visits (5% conversion rate). Even though Campaign B had a lower volume of visits
it converted them at a higher rate than Campaign A (5% instead of 3%). You can’t ignore
the raw counts for orders (300 versus 50), but the rate is often useful in side-by-side
comparisons.
• The third type of metric is any kind of mathematical or statistical calculation that
is not a simple ratio, which may involve multiple counts and other operations
besides just division. An example of a metric that is a calculation is (Visits-
Entries)/Visits. Majority of metrics you will use in your web analytics tool will be
just counts and ratios. Calculations are part of the complex web analytics analysis
while counts and ratios are sufficient for most business users to start deriving
insights from web analytics.
Common Metrics
Web analytics uses common metrics and most of the metrics appear by default in many
reports, therefore you need to understand what they mean so that you can interpret them
correctly.
Page Views
A page view (or pageview) represents an instance of a page being loaded and viewed in
a web browser. From a business perspective, page views indicate how much overall web
content is being consumed by site visitors. Users can produce multiple page views for a
single page if they navigate repeatedly to the same page during a visit. For many media
sites, page views take on a special meaning because each page view represents an
opportunity to display advertisements. It’s an old metric but widely used to understand
content consumptions.
Challenges of page views
• With introduction of interactive content (web 2.0), page views metric has become
irrelevant e.g Flash
• Page view does not apply to tracking other onsite interactions, such as
downloading files or clicking on external links.
Visits
A visit encompasses all the interactions that a user has with a website during a single
sitting or session. From a business perspective, visits reveal how popular your website is;
the more visits, the more popular it is. During a single visit, an individual might browse
several pages, view multiple videos, and perform various searches. In contrast, a visitor
could simply abandon the site after seeing one page—both count as a visit.
As an industry standard, most web analytics tools will terminate a visit after 30 minutes
of inactivity. If a visitor stepped away from her computer to answer the phone and didn’t
return for an hour, her interaction with the website would count as two separate visits
(one for before the phone call and another for when she returned).
Unique Visitors
Unique visitors (or visitors) are the inferred users who visited a website during a specific
reporting period. From a business perspective, unique visitors show the audience reach
of your website. When an individual visits a website more than once during a reporting
period (daily, weekly, or monthly), she will be counted as only one unique visitor. When
a visitor first comes to a website, the web analytics tool uses a persistent cookie to assign
her a unique, anonymous ID that will identify her if she returns to the site.
With unique visitors, we infer each unique visitor is a unique individual; however, in
web analytics a single individual can be seen as multiple unique visitors or multiple
people can be mistakenly viewed as a single unique visitor. For example, if you browse a
website from a work computer, home computer, and tablet device, you’ll be seen as three
separate unique visitors. If you visit the same site using two different web browsers, each
visit through the Firefox and Chrome browsers will be viewed as separate unique
visitors. If you delete your tracking cookies between visits, you’ll be seen as multiple
unique visitors.
Bounce Rate
Bounce rate is the percentage of entering visits (entries or entrances) that are single-page
visits or entering visits that leave (bounce from) the site after viewing only one page.
From a business perspective, the bounce rate reveals the effectiveness of your entry
pages. In other words, what kind of first impression are these pages having? Are your
landing pages encouraging visitors to go deeper into your site? If a particular page has a
high bounce rate of 80%, that means four out of five visitors entering the page are
bouncing and not viewing any additional pages. Typically, a high bounce rate means
something is wrong with the landing page, which could be due to a number of factors:
• Messaging and content that doesn’t match visitors’ expectations
• Poor page design or layout
• Slow loading times
• Web browser compatibility issue (perhaps it doesn’t display properly in the
browser)
• Insufficient links to other related content
• Confusing site navigation or no search options
• Weak or hidden call-to-actions (for example, call-to-actions are placed “below the
fold” of the web page where the visitor needs to scroll down to see them).
A high bounce rate can also be no fault of the actual landing page, but in fact due to a
problem created by the upstream traffic source, for example a wrong campaign message
would lead to a high bounce rate. For example, you would anticipate a high bounce rate
on a store location page because visitors search for address information and leave when
they find it. The same applies to blog posts where visitors are looking for only
information that answers a specific question and nothing more. If a landing page was
designed to direct visitors to external partner websites, you’d expect the page to have a
high bounce rate.
Exit rate
Exit rate is the percentage of visits that terminate or exit on a particular page. From a
business perspective, the exit rate highlights potential site issues that cause visitors to
leave your site prematurely. Every visit or session ends at some point, but when or where
visitors exit can be important. In the case of a multi-step process, such as making an online
purchase, you don’t want the majority of your visitors exiting at the second step (billing
information page) in a six-step process. The exit rate is different from the bounce rate
because it focuses on all visits, not just entry traffic to web pages. For example, the exit
rate will include single-page visits (bounces) to a particular page as well as visitors who
navigate to the page and then abandon the site.
Context is equally important when evaluating exit rates for key pages. If a web page is a
logical exit point, then you would expect it to have a high exit rate. For example, an order
confirmation or thank you page that is shown after a successful online purchase would
have a high exit rate. When a page is an initial or transitional step in a multi-step process
or multi-page content series, you expect to see some attrition from step-to-step, but an
unexpectedly high exit rate may indicate a problem. For instance, a recent web design
update mistakenly removes a form field option that impedes a visitor’s ability to proceed
forward.
You might have other key pages on your site that you would prefer not to have a high
exit rate, such as your search results page or homepage. In some cases, it will be easy to
spot the problem that is causing the high exit rate (broken links, missing content), and in
other cases you may need to use onsite surveys to determine what is causing visitors to
exit prematurely. Although web analytics can answer many behavioral questions (who,
what, when, where, how), it can never answer attitudinal questions, such as why
someone is choosing to abandon a website.
Conversion Rate
Conversion rate is the percentage of visitors (or visits) that reached a particular outcome
or performed a target action. Conversion rate refers to the number of people who
complete a desired conversion (primary or secondary) out of the “total audience” that
was exposed to that opportunity/possible action.
From a business perspective, the conversion rate displays how effectively your website
is getting visitors to do what you want them to do. Each organization’s online business
goals will define what it wants visitors to do and what represents a conversion (a desired
action, behavior, or outcome). For retailers, a conversion is a purchase or order.
Organizations should keep the list of KIPs for digital business lean and mean (few). Too
many KIPs will make your company data-intensive but less data-driven. Consider
simplifying or consolidating your list of KPIs so you can focus on what truly matters to
your company’s success. KPIs will be essential tools in aligning your digital marketing
efforts around common goals and managing performance towards them.
Hence, to comprehend what went wrong or what will help you get back on track, the
following steps are the most essential ones to incorporate in a web analytics process:
Step 1: Determine the Key Performance Indicators to use
As mentioned before, determining the KPIs is an important step. Web analytics has some
very popular and generically used KPIs that are put into practice for most performance
judgments. Without KPIs, the process of analysing the performance of a website is
incomplete. Some of the most widely used KPIs are:
• Bounce rate
• Visits/Sessions
• Page views
• Entry & Exit pages
• Unique visitors average time on site
• Percentage of new visits
Step 4: Analyze the differences in the cut-off and the KPIs generated on the website
Professional web analytics have industry averages and benchmark data with them to
assess the performance of a website. Once baseline statistics have been generated, you
can now see how far off these are from the benchmark. For instance, the bounce rate your
website records may be extraordinarily high compared to an average of all others in the
e-commerce field.
Step 5: Optimize performance with corrective action
Performance of a website can be improved when new strategies are formed after
analysing KPIs. With the help of the results generated, a business can change the layout
and design of the website, optimize specific pages in terms of Search Engine Optimization
(SEO) elements, take care of code errors and broken links, build liaisons with referrers
and even change the services offered to achieve bigger goals. There is an array of
corrective actions that can be taken in this regard. However, all of it depends on how
well KPIs are used to generate reliable statistics.
Today, the vast majority of companies have a website (often multiple), run online
campaigns across various online channels (e-mail, display, paid search), and use a wide
range of digital technologies and services. When determining what type of KPIs your
organization should use for its digital initiatives, it can be helpful to begin with some
basic questions:
These questions will help you to clarify what you’re trying to achieve online, what’s
important to measure, and what’s not essential (which can be equally critical). One of the
fascinating things about the Internet is the wide variety of innovative business models
that have emerged and will continue to appear. Most of the organizations must align their
digital metrics with one of the five common online business models or scenarios.
1. E-commerce
Main objective: Grow online sales of products or services
Relevant industries: Retail, travel, high tech, consumer products, media (subscription-
based)
Key Metrics
• Revenue. Represents the most important focus for retailers
• Orders. Shows how many transactions were processed.
• Conversion Rate (Orders/Visitors or Orders/Visits). Indicates how effective you
are at converting traffic into orders.
• Average Order Value (Revenue/Orders). Shows on average how much
customers are spending on each transaction.
• Revenue per Visit (Revenue/Visits). Gives you a sense for the average
contribution of each visit to your revenue goals; can be useful for evaluating the
quality of different traffic sources.
• Average Selling Price (Revenue/Units Sold). Reveals the average price point of
items being sold on your site.
• Units per Transaction (Units Sold/Orders). Indicates how effective your site is at
cross-selling products
2. Lead Generation
Main objective: Increase number of qualified leads that result in future sales of
products or services
Relevant industries: Business-to-business manufacturing and service providers,
high tech, automotive, financial services, health care, education, non-profit
Key Metrics
• Leads. Represents potential prospects that are more likely to become customers
than just general business inquiries. What makes a lead more qualified is
subjective and unique to each business.
• Inquiries. Shows the number of raw business inquiries (qualified or
unqualified).
• Inquiry Conversion Rate (Inquiry Completions/Visits). Reveals what portion of
visits end up submitting an inquiry, typically through some kind of online form.
• Cost per Lead (Acquisition Cost/Leads). Indicates the marketing costs of
acquiring each lead or inquiry.
• Form Completion Rate (Inquiry Completions/Inquiry Starts). Shows how often
an online form is completed after it’s started. Can highlight inefficiencies related
to online forms.
• Micro Conversions (Downloads, Trials, Demo Views). Reflect different key
steps or milestones in the overall conversion process of becoming a qualified lead
3. Advertising
Main objective: Increase content consumption and relevant audience share
Relevant industries: Media
Key Metrics
• Unique Visitors. Reveals the audience reach for your digital content.
• Page Views, Video Starts, and Mobile Views. Represents the overall level of
digital content consumption. Ad impressions are often associated with each of
these different content views in either a one-to-one or many-to-one basis (a page
may display multiple ads) so it can serve as a proxy for ad inventory.
• Page Views per Visit. Provides insight into how much page content on average
is being consumed during a visit.
• Registration Rate (Registrations/Visits). Shows a conversion rate for how many
visits are registering for e-mail newsletters, which can be a key driver for repeat
traffic.
• Video Consumption Rate (Video Starts/Visits). Indicates what percentage of
visits is consuming video content, which is a key media type that is growing in
popularity at media companies.
• Visits per Visitor (Visits/Visitors). Shows the frequency in which visitors are
consuming your digital content within a specific time period (such as visits per
month per visitor).
4. Self-Service
Main objective: Reduce customer service costs and increase customer satisfaction
Relevant industries: Utilities, financial services, high tech, government, retail, travel,
consumer products, automotive
Key Metrics
• Self-Service Task Completions. Represent key tasks or actions that were
accomplished online by visitors (download a document, view a how-to video, use
an onsite tool, change account information, register a product).
• Self-Service Cost Savings [(Call Center Cost – Online Cost) x Task
Completions]. Provides insights into how much is being saved by online self-
service. This metric requires estimates for what it costs to process tasks through
both the call center and website.
• Support Requests per Visit. Shows how often a visitor sought out contact
information because they were unable to complete a task or answer a question.
This “failure” event can be triggered when someone clicks on a Contact Us button
or page in order to speak directly with a support representative.
• Content Feedback Score [Positive Feedback / (Positive Feedback + Negative
Feedback)]. Indicates how often online content successfully answers visitors’
questions. This metric can only be captured if visitors are asked “Was this content
helpful?” at the bottom of each support article then click Yes or No buttons.
• Search Effectiveness Rate (Task Completions / Searches). Reveals how often
your internal search engine assists in helping visitors to complete key self-service
tasks or actions. Onsite search is usually an essential component of most support
websites or tools
5. Informational
Main objective: Engage visitors and increase awareness for brands, products, or
services
Relevant industries: Consumer products, government, non-profit
Key Metrics
• Unique Visitors. Reveals the audience reach for your digital content.
• Page Views, Video Starts, and Mobile Views. Represents the overall level of
digital content consumption. Alternatively, you may identify a subset of strategic
content and focus on how much of this strategic content is being viewed.
• Page Views per Visit. Provides insight into how much content on average is being
consumed during a visit
• Macro/Micro Conversions (Registrations, Coupon Downloads, Social
Engagement, Forward to a Friend, RSS Subscriptions). Reflect different forms or
levels of engagement, including likes, tweets, and comments, as well as more
traditional downloads and registrations. The macro conversion will be the key
outcome of your digital marketing efforts.
• Registration Rate (Registrations/Visits). Shows a conversion rate for how many
visits are registering (or connecting through Facebook) for e-mail newsletters,
special offers, product availability updates, or online tool access, which can be
useful in ongoing marketing efforts.
Digital marketing initiatives are primarily focused on influencing specific actions. When
you think about the purpose of your campaigns, websites, or apps, their success will be
defined by whether they encourage people to complete certain desired actions or not. For
example, the key outcome of an e-commerce site is an order or purchase, which is directly
related to generating sales and revenue. A conversion or outcome can still be important
to evaluating the success of your digital initiatives. For non-transactional sites, a desired
outcome might be subscribing to an e-mail newsletter or completing an online
application. Although these actions may not be directly tied to revenue or cost savings,
they can represent a successful online outcome.
You can measure all kinds of outcomes online, but not all conversions are equal. A macro
conversion is the main outcome that you want visitors to accomplish on your site. These
key outcomes are some of the most important metrics (counts) that you measure. If your
website serves one primary purpose or goal, you will most likely have only one or two
macro conversions. In large corporations, however, a single domain commonly serves
multiple purposes (branding, sales, and support, for example), so different teams may
have their own macro conversions. Clear goals serve to ensure the business prioritize on
the right outcomes (focus on important outcomes).
Frequently, a visitor has to pass through several steps or stages before she can complete
an important outcome. A micro conversion measures the actions or milestones that
precede a macro conversion. The micro conversions act as leading indicators for potential
macro conversions and help you pinpoint where attrition (users have challenges) is
happening in the conversion process.
Sometimes the micro conversions represent actions that need to be completed in a
sequential process. For example, a visitor can’t buy anything if she doesn’t add a product
to her shopping cart. In other cases, a micro conversion might signify that the visitor has
taken a step closer to a final conversion. Most customers move through a series of phases
in their buying cycles:
• Awareness/Acquisition
• Research/Consideration
• Intent/Lead
• Purchase
Companies can map different user interactions to each stage in this conversion funnel
process to understand how visitors are progressing toward the final key outcome.
The university’s marketing team might define some of these activities as essential steps
in a prospective student’s decision-making journey, and others might be viewed as
optional. The application submission would be a mandatory micro conversion that
precedes a prospective student’s decision to register. In this scenario, the university could
evaluate areas where attrition is occurring in its conversion process and identify which
actions are most influential in getting students to register. For example, the marketing
team might find people who watch the videos are three times as likely to register, and
therefore, they decide to feature the videos more prominently on key pages to drive
conversions. The combination of micro and macro conversions will give you powerful
insights into how your digital business is performing and help you to pinpoint areas
where you can streamline or enhance your visitors’ journeys to conversion.