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Analytics Can Help You Debunk A Perceived Falure
By: Stoney deGeyter 2008-02-28 Problem: Client says that site traffic and sales have decreased since starting SEO campaign. You know that since taking over SEO you have eliminated hundreds of pages of duplicate... ...content and increased search spidering of important pages. Site usability has improved significantly and rankings for key terms are also improving. Many site architectural issues have been uncovered but remain unresolved and can only be fixed by the client. What do you do? I was posed this problem recently and my first thought was, lets look at the analytics. Unfortunately, the client refuses to give us access to their analytical data, which means everything Im about to say here falls under the category What-Could-Have-Been-Though-We-Wont-Know-For-Sure.
Here is what I was hoping to find out: First I wanted to look at the traffic numbers to see if the optimized product and pages are showing the same level of traffic decline as pages we had not yet optimized. This could be quite telling. If we found that while other pages show a decrease in traffic by X amount but the pages we have optimized for specific keywords are showing less of a decrease, or even an increase, then this can show that the optimization is effective in bringing in traffic. We would also want to look at traffic that came to the site via search engines to see if that has increased or decreased. We could compare pre-SEO search traffic with post-SEO traffic while also looking at the keywords that are driving the traffic to see if there have been any changes that correlate to the optimization efforts. Next we would want to look at conversion data. Has the conversion rate increased or decreased on the site overall? How about just the areas that have been optimized? Without access to the data Im not even able to guess as to whats causing this clients decline. And beyond that we can only make assumptions as to the benefit that the SEO campaign has provided them, though the measures I stated in the problem above help us make some of those assumptions. The bottom line, without analytics there really is no way to measure success. You wont know if you are successful and you wont be able to determine whats causing the perceived failure. And if you cant know that, youre better off not doing a marketing campaign to begin with. CommentsTag: Analytics Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Have a bookmark! - ![]() View All Articles by Stoney deGeyter About the Author: Read this article and more at the E-Marketing Performance Blog. Stoney deGeyter is president of Pole Position Marketing (www.PolePositionMarketing.com), a search optimization marketing firm providing SEO and website marketing services since 1998. Stoney is also a part-time instructor at Truckee Meadows Community College, as well as a moderator in the Small Business Ideas Forum. He is the author of his E-Marketing Performance eBook. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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