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Are you
Measuring Visitor Engagement and Behavior?
When visitors arrive on your website, what are they doing? Is it what
you want or expect them to do; or are they aimlessly wandering around
and not finding what they came in looking? Are your potential customers
abandoning your site just seconds after their arrival? If you are
puzzled because you don’t know what visitors are doing, or why, then how
can you ever create a decent strategy to offer your visitors a better
experience on your website?
The means of engaging users is unique to each website. The
Sports Illustrated website does it by displaying only the latest
sports headlines and providing the actual content a click thru away;
content like writer’s opinions, the NBA Draft and, of course, their own
swimsuit issue – giving the user navigation control and also increasing
valuable inventory through page views.
A
site like
Yarn Market , on the other hand, offers crisp, high resolution
images of every single product which makes it simple for their visitors
to view the colors, quality and intricate patterns of the various types
of yarn. Again, giving the user control and increasing conversions.
It’s important that as a site owner you find your competitive advantage
and unique selling proposition so that you can offer your visitors a
tailored experience that will keep them coming back; however, your
constructed experience has to be built to your specific audience’s needs
and wants. You cannot push and audience that needs to be pulled, or pull
an audience that needs and expects to be pushed.
If
you really want to gain success, your website should be built from the
audience back; and although I do not advocate giving your audience
complete control over the navigation and reigns of your website –
through tailored construction you can definitely create a perceived
control that should always increase sales/conversions/page views.
In
the rest of this article, I will talk about why it’s important to track
user behavior and metrics that are helpful in deciphering how well your
website is doing in keep your visitors engaged.
Why it’s Important
No
one understands the
metrics that matter better than the site owners themselves. The key
is not getting lost in a mountain of numbers, but really zooming in on
the few key metrics that really affect the bottom line, rather than all
the other hundreds of metrics that contribute to measuring online
success. The concept is simple; keeping users engaged will help to
retain visitors, increase conversion rates, and consistently help
deliver more revenue.
There are a multitude of reasons that owners should track visitor
behavior, here are a few:
- Pinpoint areas on the website that need to be improved.
- Analysis of
visitor paths vs. dead content (content that gets visited
infrequently) shows sites owners that either the content should
be presented in a different fashion, be moved from the current
area or possibly even deleted from the website entirely.
- Further promote popular reviews/articles/products.
- By recognizing
areas of a website that are frequently viewed and requested,
site owners can simplify the paths to these popular sections by
making them more accessible.
- Test new products/ads/conversion triggers.
- Using A/B
testing and analyzing visitor’s reactions to new features can
help a website offer the most optimal combinations in terms of
ad/conversion trigger placements.
Observing your visitors’ behavior will help you address the actual pains
they are having with your website. If they are bored, entice them with
rich content and media. If they don’t know where to go, simplify their
path by removing roadblocks and bottlenecks. If they can’t find what
they are looking for, analyze internal search terms and modify your
site’s search functionality. And, if they are too quick to abandon,
give them a reason to stay online by offering a free product/download or
competitive pricing on your latest product(s).
Metrics to help measure
Engagement (or lack thereof)
- Percent of Visitors under 60 seconds
- Using this
metric along with conversion rate will let you know if users are
easily finding what they are looking for or not. A high
percentage of visitors in this area with a low conversion rate
indicate you should consider updating your material.
- Customer Retention Rate
- Retaining
customers is always a good sign that they are finding your
website useful
- Internal Search Terms
- This will give
you a sense of visitors’ intentions on your website (are you
offering the right content?).
Avinash Kaushik had a great Blog post on this topic.
- Average Number of Visits per visitors
- Monitor this
metric to help determine how attracted your visitors are to your
content. Remember, a return customer always costs less than a
new one.
- Top Pages and Content Requested
- Knowing what
visitors are looking for can be helpful for site owners to
tailor their content, making it more prominent and informative
to the audiences’ needs.
source for the metrics:
Web Analytics Demystified.
“Insight” is a word commonly use in the
Web Analytics World
because it’s a major reason people use web
analytics: for a better “insight” into their audience (with an online
relationship you cannot have your sales staff read non-vocal cues or
easily engage a prospect in a conversation). Having an online strategy
that is supported by the intelligence and insight you’ve received is
more effective than a strategy developed by
any other means (unless of course you have unlimited amounts of money to
burn or the Coney Island fortune telling machine from the movie “Big”).
Providing a user experience that engages visitors
will prove to be a big step in helping you and your organization reach
your online goals. |