Tag Archives: Google Analytics

The New PR Reporting Landscape: How To Show Value and Drive Decisions

By Rajagopal Sathyamurthi (CTO & Co-Founder) and Leta Soza (Director of PR Engineering & Ops) at AirPR

Public Relations constantly grapples with the ability to report meaningful results in a manner that resonates with executives and members of the C-Suite.

Until the emergence of “PRTech” began to enable dot-connecting between PR activities and business goals, the PR industry generally used output driven metrics (impressions, number of press hits, AVEs, etc.) to communicate its value; but these barometers rarely tie back to business goals and don’t do much to inform future decision-making.

All of this is changing as PR shifts its focus from reporting on outputs to data-driven outcomes. Metrics such as visitors to site, engagement, and message “pull-through” are quickly gaining ground as the new gold standards for PR measurement. A widespread adoption of these metrics, however, is predicated on a reporting mechanism that can neatly and efficiently package this data.

To help solve this widespread challenge, AirPR recently launched a Reporting Suite that uses aggregated PR activity output data from our Analyst product to generate automated, actionable reports based on the customized success metrics of any company.

One of the key components to leveraging the power of the Reporting Suite is our solution’s unique integration with Google Analytics. This integration allows us to analyze and visualize specific subsets of Google Analytics data.

The Google Analytics Core Reporting API exposes a few key metrics which have great utility for PR professionals: users and goal/event conversions. Pre-processing and ingesting this metric data into our Reporting Suite allows PR pros to see trends over time as it relates to traffic and engagement driven by PR content.

When PR can quickly survey this data, the question isn’t, “do spikes in coverage volume correspond to spikes in traffic?” Rather it is, “which narratives, outlets or topics drive the most traffic, engagement, or amplification?” Also, “how can successes be replicated?” 


These key metrics combined with AirPR’s data, classification features, and proprietary algorithms also provide a simple way to slice, dice, and visualize complex data in seconds.

Dimensions such as full referrer (content sources) and date (subset of time) are crucial to PR pros understanding which media outlets and specific pieces of content are more impactful for their business over different time ranges. 

AirPR Analyst enhances the direct attribution data from Google Analytics with additional sources of PR data to track and display the performance of content that contain links back to company websites, as well as the impact of articles that do not contain links or those with links that do not get clicked. 

Last but not least, our Reporting Suite aims to impact how PR success is defined. Not only will PR have a clearer picture of what delivers for their brand or client, they can quickly and succinctly speak to business leaders in key data points, which highlight success stories.

No matter what technology or methods you are using, here are a few simple tips for communicating success like a PR boss, and ensuring that the executive (to which you report) can clearly see the value of your hard work and effort:

Top-line and bottom-line it.
 • The best of the month in terms of X metric was Y content and what this means is Z.


Use numbers to tell the story. 
 • We saw an X% change in Y month over month, and what that does for us is Z.


Speak to business wins.
 • This is what X activity did for business goal Y.


Share what’s next. 
• With X data, we are going to focus on Y.


The remaining hurdle for PR pros is to begin thinking differently about what metrics matter in terms of future decision making. While impressions and press hits are certainly important in terms of “activity-based metrics”, they don’t necessarily tell the whole story. Our information-rich environment implores us to continually evaluate which pieces of media or content properly convey key messages, reach our desired audiences, generate top-of-funnel business leads, and ladder up to business goals.

Posted by Google Analytics technology partner AirPR

Google Tag Manager Fundamentals now available in 14 languages on Analytics Academy

In 2015, Analytics Academy launched Google Tag Manager Fundamentals to teach how Google Tag Manager can simplify tag implementation and management. This course content is now available in Chinese, Czech, Dutch, English, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Turkish. 


Google Tag Manager Fundamentals shows you how to use tools like Google Analytics and Google AdWords to improve your data collection process and advertising strategies including:

  • the core concepts and principles of tag management using Google Tag Manager 
  • how to create website tags and manage firing rules 
  • how to enhance your Google Analytics implementation 
  • the importance of using the Data Layer to collect valuable data for analysis 
  • and how to configure other marketing tags, like AdWords Conversion Tracking and Dynamic Remarketing.

Check out Google Tag Manager Fundamentals today! Make sure to use the language picker in the lower right corner of the page to select your language.*

Happy tagging!

*Note: This course is not currently open for certification, but all of the lesson and assessment content is available for you to learn and test your knowledge. Join the Google Analytics Academy G+ community to get updates on existing and new course content! 

 

Spotlight on Optimize 360, part of the Google Analytics 360 Suite

Because better web experiences start with integrated marketing tools

A recent survey of marketers found that only 26% believe their marketing tools are well-integrated and work seamlessly together.1

And with all the channels and screens that customers are using – plus all the data that results – poor integration makes it hard to understand and respond to all the journeys that customers take to interact with your brand.

When your marketing tools are integrated, you can use all the rich behavioral insights you’ve learned about your customers to make their experience on your site better. You can quickly identify areas of your site that can be improved upon and more easily tailor your site for specific audiences so your business can provide the optimal site experience to each customer.

That’s why we created Google Optimize 360 (beta). This new testing and personalization solution is built with full native integration for all the data that matters to your business.

Get a clearer view and faster action

The Google Analytics 360 Suite was built to make sense of all this data. Optimize 360 helps you take that integrated data and build better web experiences, not just for the "average user" but for individual users with all their different needs and goals. It offers you:

  • One data source. Work with confidence as your web analytics data and experiment data can now work together in one tool. 
  • Experiment and business objectives are the same. Many businesses already use Analytics 360 to measure key activity on their site as they make critical business decisions. Now their experiments can easily test against those same activities. 
  • Simple, powerful personalization. It's easy to use the Analytics 360 segments you’ve already discovered to deliver more personal web experiences. 

 Enterprise-level testing and personalization made simple

Refresh your site messaging or re-imagine the entire customer journey — just about anything is possible with the easy-to-use visual editor in Optimize 360.

Once you’ve created a new variation of your site to test, you can select your Analytics 360 goals as experiment objectives and target your Analytics 360 audiences. After you’ve launched your experiment, you can review experiment reporting that matches your web analytics reporting. It's both easy and powerful ― because testing and personalization are seamlessly integrated with Analytics 360 from start to finish.

The Motley Fool increases order page conversion rate by 26% with Optimize 360

Many Optimize 360 customers have seen first-hand the benefits of an integrated and simple-to-use testing solution. The Motley Fool is one such customer.

The Motley Fool is dedicated to helping the world invest — better. The company was begun by brothers Tom and David Gardner in 1993 as a simple investing newsletter for family and friends. The Motley Fool is a global financial company now, but newsletters remain a key product.

During regular reviews of their Analytics 360 data, The Motley Fool team began to see a weak link in the sales chain — email campaigns were driving visitors to the newsletter order page, but a high percentage of those sessions weren't leading to an order.

The Motley Fool team began experimenting with ways they could make the newsletter order process as simple and easy as possible for their users. They used Optimize 360 to put their ideas to the test and measured their results against an already created Analytics 360 goal that was measuring newsletter orders.

“The ability to use our existing Analytics 360 data in a testing platform was huge for our team,” says Laura Cavanaugh, Data Analytics Manager for The Motley Fool. “Our server-side event tracking for key metrics like leads and orders is 99% accurate — far better than with other sources."

Even before results came in, Optimize 360 made a big impact on The Motley Fool team by saving valuable time and resources. “One of our marketing managers can set up a test from start to finish in less than 10 minutes,” says Cavanaugh.

When the experiment results did come in, they were clear and powerful. The redesigned order page resulted in an improvement in conversion rate over the original order page.

And The Motley Fool isn’t stopping there. Now they plan on testing new elements for many different audience segments, like better landing pages for new prospects and custom experiences for loyal customers.

And having the combination of Analytics 360 and Optimize 360 gives them a more complete view of the greater business impact each of their changes have.

Read the full case study with The Motley Fool for more details.

More to come 

This is only the beginning. In the coming months we’ll share even more product features and integrations that we’re now building into Optimize 360, so you can take seamless action on your Google data wherever it exists.

Want to learn more? Visit our website to read more about Optimize 360.

1Source: Forrester Research, Inc. Discover How Marketing Analytics Increases Business Results

Spotlight: Smarter Marketing with Analytics 360, part of the Google Analytics 360 Suite

On the Google Analytics team, we believe a primary goal of analytics is to make your marketing smarter.  It should help you understand your customer’s journey, gain and share insights, and create an engaging experience for your audience.

But just as your organization can’t achieve these goals in a silo, neither can your website analytics data.  Your customer’s journey includes both their experience with your marketing campaigns as well as their experience on your sites and apps.  So you need complete data, connected from marketing through to site experience, to actually gain insight and deliver a great customer experience.  

Analytics 360, part of the Google Analytics 360 Suite, is proud to provide this type of end-to-end understanding with our existing AdWords integrations. Beginning today, we are now offering this same capability with the DoubleClick Digital Marketing platform.  In addition to our existing integration with DoubleClick Campaign Manager, you can now view user engagement information for users acquired through DoubleClick Bid Manager and DoubleClick Search campaigns directly within Analytics 360.  It’s super easy to connect your Analytics 360 account to DoubleClick Digital Marketing and there’s no implementation work needed (e.g. no site or campaign re-tagging).

With these new capabilities, marketers using Analytics 360 are better able to see the customer journey from when a customer was exposed to their marketing campaigns all the way through to that customer’s eventual purchase on their site (or lack thereof).  User engagement with your site can be analyzed for both users who viewed an ad (view-through) and for users who clicked on an ad (click-through). View-through information is especially important for display, video, and mobile because users often view these ads and then visit the website later rather than clicking directly on the ad.  

Companies like Panasonic are already using our integrations with marketing media to improve their return on investment (ROI) from digital marketing campaigns.  With the Analytics 360 ads integrations, Panasonic was able to aggregate all digital campaign data into one platform to gain insight about their customers.  They then shared these insights back to their media tools to better find engaged audiences and provide those audiences with the right experience at the right moment, driving an ROI increase of 30%

In light of these latest integrations with Google ad technologies, we wanted to take a moment to discuss the two capabilities we enable across all our ads integrations that help you achieve smarter marketing:  1) understanding the customer and their journey and 2) creating relevant experiences for users.


Understanding the customer and their journey

They saw and / or clicked on your ad and arrived on your site.  But who are they?  What happened next?  Did they bounce immediately?  Did they research specific products?  Did they sign up for your newsletter?  What were the users who interacted with your digital marketing doing on your site?  Ads integrations with Analytics 360 can help you answer these questions and more, for example:
  • You are launching a new product and start running display and search advertising campaigns to attract customers.  You find that one campaign has a low conversion rate and you’re considering deprecating it.  But you review your site analytics data for this campaign and find that some specific ad exchanges and certain keywords are driving many new users to your site.  And some of these exchanges and keywords are driving new users who are highly engaged — they view a lot of product detail pages and spend a lot of time on your site. So, instead of shutting down the campaign, you refine the targeting for the ads in this campaign to focus more on the ad exchanges and the keywords that drive engaged new users to your site.  Then, you create a remarketing campaign to bring these engaged new users back to your site for purchase.
  • One of your campaigns drives a lot of click and view-throughs, but has a low conversion rate.  Analysis in Analytics 360 reveals that most users bounce immediately, but a certain segment who click on or view that ad (e.g. women aged 18-35) have a really high conversion rate.  You refine the messaging and creative in your ads, adjust where these ads are served, and bid higher in order to find and attract more of this high-performing audience.
Creating relevant experiences for users
User behavior on your site can tell you a lot about them and what they’re interested in.  Shouldn’t you use that information to inform your marketing strategy? Some examples:
  • You run a shopping site and have users who spend a lot of time looking at an item or even put that item in their cart, but don’t end up purchasing.  At the end of the season, the clothes on your site go on sale.  You create remarketing campaigns to these users who showed interest but never purchased letting them know that the item they were interested in is now on sale.
  • You are a cable company and you’d like to offer your new online streaming HDTV service to existing customers who subscribe to your high speed Internet plan.  You create remarketing ads for customers who have the high speed plan, driving higher lifetime value for these customers.
These are just a few examples of how analytics data can blend with campaign data to create real value for both companies and for their customers. It's a win-win — customers get marketing that is truly relevant to them, and companies put their marketing dollars to work with the customers who are most likely to be interested.  

Visit the Google Analytics 360 Suite Help Center to learn more about our new integrations with DoubleClick Bid Manager and DoubleClick Search.  You can also learn about our existing integrations DoubleClick Campaign Manager and with AdWords.  Stay tuned for more updates from Analytics 360 as we continue to invest in new and exciting capabilities. Happy analyzing!

Introducing Google Tag Manager for Real World Tags

Google Tag Manager is great for easily deploying and organizing all your site and app tags. But what about the complex problem of tags in the real world? Libraries, dentist offices, and college universities are a big mess of file folders with complex tagging systems. (The Dewey Decimal System for example dates all the way back to 1876!) Street artists have to manually spray paint their tags, and retailers have to keep track of tags on their wares. Conservationists and marine biologists tag animals such as sharks in order to fully understand their behaviors. But how to wrangle your universe of real-world items is the question.
The Tag Manager team thought deeply about this issue and decided there had to be a better way to manage the broad spectrum of real world tags. Finding things like folders by numerical sorting in stacks of thousands is simply too difficult. What if one is out of place? That’s why today we’re excited to announce Google Tag Manager for real world tags!

Simply place the patented Google Tag Manager RFID tag on what you want to manage, such as the above LP, and we’ll do the rest.

Feature Overview 
Google Tag Manager for real world tags seeks to automagically inventory, categorize and help manage your real world tags no matter what variety they are. And by using the power of the cloud, the hard work will get done for you!

Inventory
Once placed on the desired item, Google Tag Manager for real world tags will create a record of that item in your Tag Manager dashboard. Now you have a record of this item from your mobile device or workstation, so you can manage it from anywhere in the world.

Automatic Categorization 
We’ll automatically determine what’s going on with your items and scan their contents in real-time. So whether you’re tagging a shark, or just tagging your lunch in the break room refrigerator, our tag management technology will discern what’s being tagged appropriately, and help you easily turn on the set of functions specific to your use case (for example, tracking down your missing leftovers). 

Edit & Create Rules 
You can create rules for your tags without having to even go back to your physical item. For example, are you a street artist? Simply stick one of our RFID stickers on the wall next to your tags, and change the color or style from anywhere in the world through our easy to use interface.

Speaking of sharks, are you a marine biologist? We've got you covered. No longer do you have to manually tag each animal you're tracking one by one. With our new fleet of Google Tag Manager Real World Drones, simply setup a trigger for the animals you're working to protect, and the drones will gently and humanely deploy the necessary tags to all relevant animals:

How to get started ... 
We’ll be releasing Google Tag Manager for real world tags in the coming weeks, and shipping 10,000 physical tags to each registered user of Google Tag Manager to get started. The first release will require you to manually update your tags, but of course you only need to re-tag your items once - after that, it’s smooth sailing.

Happy Tagging!

Posted by the Google Tag Manager Team .
...and yes, April Fools.

Spotlight on Analytics 360, part of the Google Analytics 360 Suite

The Google Analytics 360 Suite has launched, and we hope you're are as excited as we are about everything it offers.  Today we'd like to dive a little deeper into what the Analytics 360 Suite means for the Analytics 360 product specifically.


For those who missed it, Analytics 360 is the new name for Google Analytics Premium, and it's now part of the larger Google Analytics 360 Suite. There are no immediate changes that will impact your use of the product, but a new look and feel consistent with the Google Analytics 360 Suite user experience will roll out in the coming months.  
Analytics 360 is the measurement foundation for the Google Analytics 360 Suite, so we're actively investing in deepening its functionality.  In particular, we're continuing to build out its capacity to understand the customer journey, deliver intelligent insights, and help you deeply understand your customers and your business. We also want to help you take action on what you learn.  


Analytics 360 can be used on its own and will continue to provide all the functionality that our users know and love today.  But it can now also be used with the other 360 Suite products that are available for purchase.  Let us give you an example of how Analytics 360 and our other 360 Suite products can work together.


Say you find a high-performing segment in Analytics 360 — such as customers who spend 50% more than average.  As a marketer, you naturally want to cultivate this audience and find more people like them.  Now you can share this segment with Audience Center 360, our data management platform, to learn even more about these customers (e.g. demographics) using 3rd-party and Google data. Then you can build new audiences with the same characteristics and reach them with programmatic ads via DoubleClick Bid Manager and other 3rd-party DSPs.


Now that you're serving tailored, relevant ads to attract this audience, you want to give them the same tailored experience while they’re browsing your site. So you share the same high-performing segment you found in Analytics 360 with Optimize 360, our testing and personalization tool, to deploy personalized content and site experiences that are a perfect fit for those users.


For many advertisers this campaign would be just one of many advertising campaigns marketing is running.  Fortunately, because all your performance data flows into Attribution 360, our marketing attribution solution, you can evaluate how the campaign aimed at your high-performing segment is performing relative to all your other marketing. With this broad context, you can optimize your marketing across the board and focus on areas of biggest impact.


With all these insights in hand, you're ready to present a business case to your boss for the material marketing changes you’re recommending. That’s where Data Studio 360, our new data visualization tool, plays an important role. It integrates with data from the 360 Suite products and other sources to help you quickly create beautiful stories and bring to life your strategic recommendations.  Plus, it integrates seamlessly with Google Drive, so it continues to up-level workplace productivity, team sharing and collaboration. 


As you can see, the customer understanding you gain with Analytics 360 becomes the starting point for sharing insights across your organization and building a more engaging experience for customers.  Using Analytics 360 in conjunction with the other 360 Suite products helps you make your analytics insights more impactful to your business.


We’ll be highlighting each of our 360 Suite products in the upcoming weeks. If you’d like to learn more about Analytics 360 specifically, please check out our new solution sheet.  
Posted by Jocelyn Whittenburg, Product Marketing Manager

New Study Reveals Why Integrated Marketing Analytics Are Critical to Success in Enterprise Measurement

Marketers have an increasingly complicated job, with access to an unprecedented amount of customer insights and analytics tools. A new study from Forrester Consulting uncovers how successful organizations use marketing analytics tools to develop relevant customer experiences.

Consumers expect to find what they want anytime, anywhere from their smartphones, tablets, and laptop. These micro-moments offer marketers more opportunities than ever before to connect and engage. They also enable marketers to learn valuable insights about consumer behavior. With so much customer data to consider, effective marketing measurement is more important than ever before.

To understand the challenges marketers face in measuring performance and creating a well-integrated tool set, Google commissioned Forrester Consulting to perform an in-depth survey of 150 marketing, analytics, and information technology executives. The research revealed how successful marketers are able to leverage analytics tools effectively so they make the most of consumer interactions.

Key findings:
  • Marketers must be able to tie performance to business results. Among the survey respondents identified as "sophisticated marketers," 53% stated they adhere to well-established metrics that tie directly to business objectives. These marketers support organizations that are at least 3X more likely to hit their goals than other marketing organizations.
  • The right tools are critical to success. Only 26% of marketers surveyed believed that their marketing analytics tools are well-integrated and work seamlessly together. But, marketers with well-integrated tools were more likely to outperform revenue goals.
  • Marketers that implement complete marketing analytics platforms see an increase in performance. Sophisticated marketers who deploy a complete marketing analytics stack of five or more tools are 39% more likely to see improvement in the overall performance of their marketing programs.
To learn more about improving marketing performance with analytics, check out the full study, "Discover How Marketing Analytics Increases Business Performance."

Post By, Suzanne Mumford, Head of Marketing, Google Analytics 360 Suite


L’Oreal doubles anticipated revenue with Analytics 360 and DoubleClick Bid Manager

For a special holiday campaign, L'Oreal Canada wanted to build a special audience: the best potential customers for their artisinal Japanese brand Shu Uemura.

Using the Google Analytics 360 Suite, the L'Oreal team built an audience of people who had interests often shared with makeup users -- yoga, for instance, and certain types of travel. They used Google Analytics to bring these people to the Shu Uemura website, then ran DoubleClick banners to convert them into customers.

The results were game-changing: 2X the expected sales and a return on ad spend of 2200%. Now the L'Oreal Canada team is sharing what they've learned with all of L'Oreal's global brands.

If those kinds of numbers sound good, watch the video for more details.


Start measuring your TV ads with the precision of digital

“The challenge with television is that there’s no link to click on,” says Alex Bain, Marketing Analyst for Nest. The company makes products for the thoughtful home, but was having a hard time understanding the effect of its TV ads on digital visits and sales.

That's why the Nest marketing team turned to the Google Analytics 360 Suite while running a set of six TV ads last holiday season. The suite's TV attribution features are designed to measure the impact of ads on search activity and website visits. As a result, Nest could see the channels and times of day where its ads had the most impact. The metrics arrive almost immediately, so the Nest team found itself spending less time trying to get answers and more time taking action on what they learned.

The good results that Nest is getting are available to anyone. Watch the video for more details.
 
 Post by, Suzanne Mumford Head of Marketing, Google Analytics 360 Suite

Progressive improves the mobile experience with the Google Analytics 360 Suite

What if improved analytics showed you a sales opportunity that you didn't even know you were missing?

As you'll see in this video, that's one of the things Progressive Insurance learned from using Google Analytics 360 Suite. The Progressive team discovered that their mobile app visitors wanted more than just helpful insurance quotes; they wanted to buy on the spot. The company responded by improving the customer experience and giving them exactly what they want — the option to buy insurance. The results have been more than satisfactory.

“We sell insurance, but if you think about it, our product is actually data,” says Pawan Divakarla, Progressive's Data & Analytics Business Leader. “Organizing data is crucial for us.” Perhaps your own company is finding that data management is becoming more important to success in today's multi-screen world? If so, watch the video for more of the Progressive story.



To learn more about the Analytics 360 Suite, visit our website.