July 2009


27 Jul 2009 02:23 am

National Public Radio had a long running show called This I Believe.

In it a person shares their private philosophy. Each story is extremely inspiring and I am a huge fan of the show.

A couple of my favorites: Muhammed Ali, and from 1953 Margaret Chase Smith.

I wish I had something personal that was insightful enough to share. I don't.

But I had the program This I Believe on my mind when last year I was asked to write something for the Korean version of my book, Web Analytics: An Hour A Day.

Here's my little professional manifesto of a few things I believe….

 

I have to admit that I love the web. Love, love, love.

It's quite simple really, in our humble history there are few things that have transformed human beings in the way that web has. And to think that it is still just a baby.

I am amazed at how it has democratized access to information, it has allowed the little guys compete with the big guys, it has created opportunities for people and businesses where none existed.

The web also provides a unique and wonderful opportunity to understand our customers (visitors to our websites), to learn from their actual behavior and transform how we do business, to achieve the near impossible: improve satisfaction and revenues!

Here are five things I believe in when it comes to achieving success with web data:

1. I believe in the power of people (your employees), not tools.

I have a 10/90 rule . If your budget is $100 then spend $10 on tools and professional services to implement them, and spend $90 on hiring people to analyze data you collect on your website.

The web is quite complex, you are going to access multiple sources of data, you are going to have to do a lot of leg work. Blood, sweat and tears. You don't just need tools for that (remember 85% of the data you get from any tool, free or paid is essentially the same). You need people!

Hire the best people you can find, tools will never be a limitation for them.

2. I believe that reporting does not equal analysis.

Most "Analysts" and Marketers think that their job is to simply churn reports out and drop them over the fence and that's enough to create data driven cultures.

False.

Reporting is the act of providing data. Analysis is the act of providing actionable information.

No company will succeed by having a army of report writers, they will succeed by having a small group of "Analysis Ninja's " who transform data into information.

If you get just data, reject it and reject the person who gave it to you.

3. I believe in not just understanding the What, but also understanding the Why.

I am a Mechanical Engineer who has a MBA. Put another way I am a quantitative person.

It was tough for me to realize that all the quantitative data that we have access to can only help us understand the "What" on our websites. What happened, what pages were seen, what products did people buy, what pages did they leave from, what campaigns they came on etc etc etc.

But no matter how hard we tried all that data is not very good at understanding the "Why". Why did people click in the order that they did, whey did they abandon the cart, why did they buy from our website when we don't give discounts, why did they all leave from this page and on and on and on.

To understand Why use Surveys, Usability Tests, talk to your customers and really listen.

The above lead me to creating the Web Analytics 2.0 strategy, at the center of which is the desire to be smarter than we have ever been before.

It demands a lot of you because you deserve a lot more than you have today.

4. I believe that God created the Internet so we could fail faster.

In the offline world it is very expensive to experiment and test, the cost of failure is very high. As a result we don't take risks. We keep doing what we think "works", until the day we go bankrupt.

The web changes that.

You can take dramatic risks, at very low costs and learn big. Your website is nothing but a machine built to make you smart by taking lots of risks.

Why should you tolerate ideas getting killed on conference room tables or by your HiPPO's?

Why accept opinions when you can convert them into hypothesis and get them validated for cheap and quickly?

Why not let your customers actively be a part of helping you create customer experiences that deliver value to them AND to you?

The cost of taking risk on the web is low. You can try a idea. As soon as it is live data starts following it. If the idea is a total loser then kill it fast, does not have to cost you a ton of money. What is more likely is that you will find winners that you had never imagined.

Give it a try. Fail faster.

5. I believe that Web Analytics is complex, but it is also very sexy and hugely rewarding.

Nothing in life is easy. Everything takes some time to learn, some effort from your end, some investment in time. The same is true about Web Analytics.

But you'll be astonished how much progress you can make in just a few hours if you put your mind to it. Don't be scared of data, don't buy into people who try to scare you by telling you how hard it all is.

Don't believe me? Read the primer on web Analytics, it can jump start the process of changing your life – in three and a half hours!!

It is such a high when you dive into unraveling the mystery of data, discover yummy insights and to fix customer problems – helping people you have never met, helping make their lives just a little bit easier.

Start fast. Start today. Don't stop.

Five simple things I believe in, things that I hope will help ignite your own love affair with web analytics. It will be an exciting relationship, just like the one you have with your spouse or partner or boy/girl friend – every evolving with never a boring moment.

Good luck and god speed.

 

So what do you believe in ?   Please share one thing, or five.

13 Jul 2009 02:49 am

a bunch 1I was quite impressed by the Econsultancy's Online Measurement and Strategy Report. Many Analyst "reports" tend to push a company / vendor / consultant agenda, refreshingly the Econsultancy report did not. They asked a wide spectrum to actual customers and reported the reality on the ground.

They had some biting, but fair, observations about short comings of Google Analytics. I appreciated that very much.

But the most valuable part for me was section 6.7.2. It was a listing of 11 barriers to an effective online measurement strategy. 11 painful reasons why extracting value from web analytics is still worse than attempting to climb Mt. Everest for some of the top companies.

Curious?

Here they are:

  1. Lack of budget/resources (45%)
  2. Lack of strategy (31%)
  3. Siloed organization (29%)
  4. Lack of understanding (25%)
  5. Too much data (18%)
  6. Lack of senior management buy-in (18%)
  7. Difficulty reconciling data (17%)
  8. IT blockages (17%)
  9. Lack of trust in analytics (16%)
  10. Finding staff (12%)
  11. Poor technology (9%)

Makes for a slightly depressing read does it not?

Many, if not all, of these challenges are really hard and often the solutions are unique to each company. In as much it would be impossible to write a here is how you fix it all blog post.

Rather I am going to try and share some thoughts / ideas on that will atleast help you take step one. I very much encourage you to share your wisdom with us through comments.

First: A Brilliant Insight / Borderline Rant. : )

Before we go on nothing something absolutely astonishing…. we live in a culture where every Analyst, Blogger and Consultant is writing / posting / talking / presenting comparisons on web analytics tools.

questioning why 2We can't seem to take one step without stepping into one more pile of opinions about why this tool is great and what one is bad.

Yet the top ten barriers have absolutely no connection to features, and barely have any connection to tools. Its #11. An afterthought.

I wonder why we are not writing / posting / talking / presenting on how to solve these non-tool problems, things that actually matter to companies and practitioners in the real world.

Just because we are programmed to publish reports comparing tools?

Tools can provide a marginal advantage to a company of any size. But given where we are in our evolutionary stage we have much bigger fish to fry.

I hope its out with lets drop our clothes and compare sizes and in with adding real value to practitioners by focusing on issues like the above ten.

Do I hear a amen?

Now on with the show. . . . .

#1: Lack of budget/resources:

In some sense this problem never goes away. It bedevils you when you are small and just want to buy a web analytics tool or just start testing. It will still be a issue even after you have been successful with Site Catalyst and now want to plunk down a million and half dollars to buy the behavior targeting platform.

How do you overcome this challenge?

Start for free and earn your right to ask for budget.

No matter what tool you want it is now available for free. Web Analytics. Multivariate Testing. Behavior Targeting. Whatever.

Why are you asking for a tool budget? I know some worry that they don't want to have a tool for a year or two and then switch. Look, no one knows what the world looks like in 18 months, why are your planning for five years?

Implement Yahoo! Web Analytics, Google Website Optimizer, BT Buckets and have at it.

When you run into limits you'll have a proven track record of success which will make it easier to ask for budget for WebTrends, SiteSpect and Kefta.

moneymoneymoney

The only reason you'll get turned down is if you showed no value to the company. Then you might not ask for budget. :)

Other tips for getting more budget:

  • Don't focus on the value of the tool. Quantify the value of the outcome you will deliver. "I want an Analyst for our tech support site because I can reduce calls to our phone center and reduce costs by $1.6 mil and increase satisfaction by 5 points."
  • Enroll your Customers and Competitors to help you. More here: Lack Management Support or Buy-in? Embarrass Them!

#2 Lack of strategy:

I am a bit flummoxed. I am not sure what to make of this.

If the barrier to an effective web measurement strategy is that your business has no web strategy then I think you should look for another job. [You can start looking now, ride out the recession, and then bail at the first opportunity.]

Someone up there, the HiPPO's, truly needs to get it and create a web strategy. Once they create even a rough cut of it you can help them. Without a rough cut this is a lost cause.

broken link

If you are a Director or a VP perhaps you can try and help plant the seeds for a strategy. Especially if you notice Measurement/Analytics is owned by IT (usually a kiss of death – with sincerest apologies to all my IT friends). Get it moved to a business function.

Other tips to try and create some strategy:

  • If you are at a large company with many divisions etc and no consensus, then try to pick one division/country and make them a hero. Don't try to get everyone to agree on a set of metrics.
  • If you think your boss wants to create a strategy, but needs a final push the check out this post for tips: Six Rules For Creating A Data Driven Boss.

#3. Siloed organization.

It is important to realize that silo's can break if you are able to show value. Everyone wants a bonus and they want to get promoted. Oh and they also want to help the company.

Exploit that fact.

Start small. Show some value. Go bigger (cover another business unit or now cover Marketing or Paid Search in addition to Email Marketing). Show value. Go bigger still.

That was my strategy.

farm harvest silos

When I started it was me and one Analyst in the "center" and no one would listen to us. Not the business units. Not the business functions (IT, eCommerce owners etc). But we executed the above strategy and over time I proved how data can be valuable to one silo in the company. They wanted move.

My reply: "We have got to break down the IT and Analytics silo, we can't be filling out tickets all day to make minor changes."

Ok, some painful business gyrations, I got a couple technical folks transferred.

Next spent more time doing things faster better with help of the team, proved more value, earned credibility.

Question: "How can we move to the next level?" Answer: "We need to move into doing more qualitative analysis, but that function is in that other silo." Feedback: "Well then lets go fix that."

It got fixed. One more silo broken, a more cohesive team, significantly improved execution.

Maybe you don't want to break silos around data execution. I doubt your execution model would be different. Make the best of what you have today. Work hard all day. Strike oil. Go back to work harder next day.

Most people don't want to work this hard. Most people don't have the kind of patience required. Then it is easy to complain and wait for someone to fix the silos. Won't happen. Sorry.

#4: Lack of understanding.

It is unclear from the report exactly what falls into this bucket, it seems to be this general complaint: "No one understands me, no one appreciates me (except my mom!), no one will help me."

overwhelmed confusedIf there is a lack of understanding of the value of data then have someone from your management team to attend one of the Vendor webinars (Omniture does a bunch of these). These webinars present one client's experience (usually extremely rosy) and perhaps that can get your boss to appreciate value of data.

If there is a lack of understanding of what analytics can do, get Google Analytics and slap it on a micro site if you have to and improve organic search to show how you can improve the number of visitors from search. Notice everything in this sentence is free except your time.

If there is a lack of understanding of what technologies exist in the market, do a quick Google search, identify the main vendors, get them to come do a dog and pony show for you (online or in person). Sure there will be some showmanship, but you and your boss will also learn a bunch.

Other tips for creating an understanding:

  • If you are low or mid level employee then realize that you can't do this. Find a Sugar Mommy (or Sugar Daddy) who will help you.
  • I'll repeat this again: Any understanding can be created by doing rather than by simply talking.

#5: Too much data.

Finally a web analytics problem!

I am astounded only 18% complained about this. Just goes to show how many people are still executing Web Analytics 1.0, clickstream only, strategies. If they were truly doing Web Analytics 2.0 strategies more people would say this, and it would be a good thing.

Can I be blunt?

This is a problem we, Practitioners, create. We are simply so eager to impress others about how much data we have and how we are so fantastic that we have 28,205 metrics we can reports on day one.

Who cares!

too much data

Two words: Critical Few.

You must not send a single report out, no not even a number via email, until you have identified what your critical few metrics are. That process starts with the question: What the heck are we solving for with our website?

Ok so maybe a bit more polite than that.

But honestly identify the one Macro Conversion (big goal) for your website and, up to, three Micro Conversions.

Now focus on just the few metrics help you measure success of these four things, with the highest priority being the Macro Conversion. [Blog post with ideas: Measure Macro AND Micro Conversions.]

Do nothing else. Ok do nothing else until you have mastered these. Don't irritate your companies with lots of reports with lots of metrics.

Other tips for reducing amount of data:

  • If you can't get your management to identify goals for you, update your resume and apply for other jobs. While you are waiting focus really hard on only reporting metrics that will help 1. increase revenue 2. reduce cost and 3. increase satisfaction. Can't go wrong with those three.
  • If that does not work report these six metrics, just six, and you'll be adding value: Six Web Metrics / KPI’s To Die For.

#6: Lack of senior management buy-in.

For me this is the same as #1. They don't want to give you budget or resources because there is no buy in. Perhaps because you have reported too much data which leads to a lack of understanding resulting in a lack of strategy.

Focus on the things we have discussed before and you'll have the thing you crave from your management:

love new york

For more here are three posts that fall in this space:

Six Rules For Creating A Data Driven Boss

Management Support or Buy-in? Embarrass Them!

How To Excite People About Web Analytics: Five Tips

Other tips for getting senior management buy-in:

  • Realize that there is a difference between reporting and analysis. Be a Analysis Ninja, not a Reporting Squirrel.

#7: Difficulty reconciling data.

Let's tackle this at two levels.

At a macro level you should know that it will be impossible to reconcile data and that it is ok. I believe that one the web we must execute a Multiplicity strategy.

multiplicity web analytics sm1

That means different tools, with different data sources, different metrics. Again, this is ok. There is exponentially more value in using these data sources than the alternative.

In this case invest in educating your manage met team why the numbers differ. They won't accept it entirely. Start with making small decisions based on this data, show value, earn trust, move to bigger things.

At a micro level this refers to reconciling numbers between Google Analytics and NedStat. Or between HitWise and Compete. Other such cases.

If this is your case then please use the Ultimate Web Analytics Data Reconciliation Checklist to identify where the issues might be and fix them. You'll never them them to match 100% but if you get say close to 10% delta, you are pretty much there. Move on to other problems.

#8: IT blockages.

If you think you have a chance to take direct ownership of large (or all) parts of the IT work required (tagging primarily) then follow the strategy I have outlined in point #3 above (breaking silos).

It is likely that your company will simply not allow you to touch the site. In this case both to do web analytics work (tags etc) and online marketing work (update pages, fix urls for SEO etc) you are stuck with IT (an organization that tends to be ultra conservative).

Use the sparkling power of data to unclog the blockages.

My friends Shane Atchison and Jason Burby from Zaaz have long advocated creation of models that identify the cost of delays. Here's one of their earlier models. . .

monetizing potential returns

Current conversion rate and the value is identified at the top. In the first column are subsequent improvements in conversion rates, based on the goodness that Zaaz is going to bring to the table. The columns indicate incremental orders and value and, sweetness, the impact of a launching the changes in a month of in four months.

The last column shows the cost of the delay.

The worst improvement in conversion will cost the company $342,930 in real revenue. The expected improvement is to 9.25%, which would mean a three month delay will result in $1.5 million in lost revenue!

Do you think you can get IT to get unclogged? You betcha.

Here's another one where they have monetized lost opportunity from delays in improvement for conversions that happen offline from online leads. . . .

lead generation monetization

Intelligent decisions can be made if the project should be delayed three months or six months. :)

Don't pick political battles with IT. Use data.

#9: Lack of trust in analytics.

I think there is overlap here with #7. [Linus perhaps we need some consolidation? Also between #6 and #1?]

If the problem is that they don't trust the data, then use the techniques described above in #7.

If the problem is they don't trust web data then use these techniques:

1: Give up. Pick a different boss.

2: Educate them about the “perfect” source they love.

3: Distract your HiPPO’s from data quality by giving them actionable insights.

4: Dirty Little Secret One: “Head” data can be actionable in the first week / month.

5: Dirty Little Secret Two: Data precision actually goes up lower in the “funnel”.

6: Realize the solution to your problem is not implement one more tool!

7: Pattern your brain to notice when you've reached Diminishing Margins of Return.

8: If you have a small site, you have bigger problems than data quality.

9: Be Aware of two upsetting distractions: Illogical customer behavior. Inaccuracy benchmarks.

10: Remember you can fail faster on the web.

More details here: Slay The Analytics Data Quality Dragon & Win Your HiPPO’s Love!

#10: Finding staff.

I have advocated the 10/90 rule for magnificent web analytics success for almost five years now. People are the key (and in some sense I am disappointed they come our #10 here).

Finding staff is certainly not easy, but I don't believe that it is all that hard. I think we tend to look too narrowly.

We look for people with ten years of Omniture experience. Or with experience in WebTrends, Optimost, iPerceptions and making coffee.

These are very hard to find, and narrow the pool of potential candidates waay too much. We are a young industry and that means it is hard to find people with deep experience in one specific tool.

The ironic thing is that so much has changed about Omniture (or GA or whatever) and the web so much in the last five years that any tricks you knew from five years ago are irrelevant now.

office workers

When you look for Analysts look for people in the Finance function. Look for people who are doing traditional Business Intelligenc work. Look for fresh college graduates who have the web in their blood (unlike us old folks) and teach them what buttons to press in Xiti.

Don't close your eyes to other possibilities. A peer of mine just hired someone who was in the HR team doing People Analytics (what a great analyst!).

Other tips for hiring people:

#11: Poor technology.

I almost don't want to dignify this with a comment. After all we live in a world where the freest of the free tool can still help you make a ton of progress for months.

Let me say this. . . . if you are looking for technology to do traditional web analytics or web analytics 2.0 then you are in luck. Lots of magnificently powerful technology exists all the way from free to you'll have take off all your clothes and even your underwear and send them with your chq expensive.

The only places I find "poor" (hate that word, I prefer early evolution) technology is on the bleeding edge. If you are unable to collect real rock solid data for mobile analytics or social media analytics or truly distributed content analytics then you have my sympathy.

As a human race we have not really figured out what these things are, and they are changing with every passing day. It will take us some time to figure our optimal data collection and associated technologies.

But other than that don't give, or accept, the excuse "poor technology".

End of story.

My highest expectation from this post is that it will give you possible starting points as you start to tackle some of these tough challenges. If you got three ideas you can take back and action, you have just made my day.

Ok your turn now.

What do you think of the 11 findings in the Econsultancy study? Do they reflect your reality? Would you prioritize them the same way they did?

Have you dealt with and conquered some of these challenges in your life? Even if it was one of them, would you please share your experience and lessons with us? It would be greatly helpful.

Thank you.