miercuri, 29 septembrie 2010

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


So You Call Yourself an Analyst? Part 2: Analysis Redefined

Posted: 28 Sep 2010 01:54 PM PDT

Posted by JoannaLord

Well here we go, you ready to jump into analytics, part deux? Just a heads, up this is the second post of a three post series. The first post, "So You Call Yourself an Analyst, Part 1: Asking the Right Questions, walked through ways in which you could reevaluate the questions steering your analytical efforts.

The tough love truth is that most marketers are not analyzing the right data. We have so many tools to help us "analyze," that most of us are sitting in front of our dual monitor set-ups, staring at reports, excel grids, and pivot tables wondering what the hell we are supposed to be seeing. This is analysis paralysis, and I am here to help talk you back to a place of insight and action.

#1 Anomolies take precedence

I get asked a lot, "where should I start?" Simply put -- start with the data that looks strange. The majority of your time should be spent on things that surprise you, things that concern you, and things that shift the momentum of your website's performance.

For example, last week at SEOmoz, I was pulling our weekly stats and saw this:











I saw that our Rank Tracker tool traffic fell of a cliff. #awesome. You can bet this was prioritized, and we spent the next hour poking around the data before realizing the tracking code had been implemented wrong during a site update. {facepalm} So how do you research these anomalies?

Analytics Intelligence is one of the more obvious places to start if you are using GA. It is under the "Intelligence" tab  and allows you to set alerts for when your data goes "off pattern." It notifies you when numbers fall below or peak above user-set parameters. These notifications are controlled by a sensitivity gauge that you control, and when an alert is triggered you are notified by email.

The "Compare to" feature is another great way to see issues quickly. In GA you can compare two date ranges and see how they measure up, which is a great way to see discrepancies in otherwise stable datasets. You can compare the vital stats of any section of your site from one date range to another. I use this all the time.

Compare to GA feature









 

        (Example of "Compare to" feature, making drops in data, week over week, obvious)
 

There are a number of other ways to isolate out changes in your site's data, most of them involving things like manual benchmarking or daily monitoring. I know not everyone uses GA, but the two features above are a great way to see anomalies as they are happening, not after the fact. 

#2 Align your analysis with your company's current goal(s)


Next up, you should turn your attention to stats that directly match up or feed into your company's goals. It should be noted that some analysts would prioritize this data to the top of your list, but I personally think that stable data is just that...stable. For that reason, I think only after you have problem data isolated out and understood should you turn your attention to "other data."

When I say "other data" I mean-- the data that will let your company know if its hitting its goals. It is up to you to know the roadmap for your company and isolate out data insights that help keep you on track. Once or twice a month I go in and "explore" but analysis, for the most part, should not be exploratory. So what are some specific features that can help you analyze key data?

Advanced segmentation is one of my favorite GA features. It enables you to quickly cross reference different metrics, dimensions, user types, and variables. You can save segments and apply them across multiple profiles, so if you have a key metric the whole company is watching and working on, they can easily log in and check progress with a saved segment. Here is a video on advanced segmentation if you are looking to get started.

Visualization of metrics is too often overlooked in my opinion. There is a number of visualization options in GA that allow you to see the data differently. I am a firm believer in viewing the same data set in a variety of ways, because in my experience it forces your brain to revisit relationships, trends, etc.

Visualization in Google Analytics













     
(Visualization options in GA, I particularly love bar graphs for gauging relationships)

Lastly, I do want to mention the weighted sort feature in GA, since it is so new, and a lot of people probably still aren't using it. After months of asking for it, GA gave us the ability to take a metric in list view and "freeze" it so we can apply a second filter. If you don't have GA, Dr. Pete shows us how to create your own here. This helps us analyze only data with the greatest impact.

#3 Not all data is good data, know when to move on

This is a tough one for a lot of analysts. It can be a "data-head high" to get into the numbers and spend hours trying to prove a hunch, but it is important you know when to walk away. Yup, that's right...I am telling you to give up, throw in the towel, wave the analytical white flag. You can't change the numbers. You just can't. Sometimes the analytic Gods will win, and sometimes you will, let it be and move on.

What are you left with?

The data that matters. The hardest part about analytic packages like GA, Omniture, and others is that there literally is an unlimited supply of data. By using company goals to prioritize your analysis and using all of the features at your disposal, you begin to see that pile of data take shape.

Repeat after me friends: "I will only spend time on data that will return the love."

Next week I will finish up the series with the third post focused on applying value to this key data and using those values to help decide on action steps. I will also wrap up the series with some examples of how an analyst can better present all of this data to those that need to see it. I will try to keep it shorter than this week's post, but no pinky swears on that one.


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Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog


The Rise of Page View Journalism

Posted: 29 Sep 2010 07:23 AM PDT

Post image for The Rise of Page View Journalism

In the early days of newspapers, success and advertising was measured by total circulation. The ability to measure how many people were reading just the business section, lifestyle section, or sports section didn’t exist. As more consumers switch their news reading habits to online consumption, our ability to track which section and pages are being read has improved. However, this enhanced tracking has a dark side: the rise of page view journalism. Simply put, page view journalism is the deliberate creation of stories that are designed to increase page views. It often results in an increase of low quality, high volume reporting and off topic stories.

people will have to reach the conclusion that there is some quality news that is worth paying to have access to …
While page view journalism is often attributed as the primary cause of demand media style content, the fact is it’s so pervasive now that it has almost become the norm. Look at the homepage of Techmeme on any given day and you’ll see an increasingly large number of websites trying to siphon off some of that traffic by “reblogging ” the top stories of the day, adding little or no value to the discussion. While rebloggers are at the lower end of the food chain, page view journalism also occurs at the top. Techcrunch, for example, covers with voluminous detail almost every story that is even slightly connected to twitter. It wouldn’t surprise me if MG Siegler did an expose on how Mary in the AP department at Twitter killed the staple market by switching to paper clips. Don’t laugh…it’s not that far fetched.

Want an example of how to lose your focus? Check out Mashable, a site that regularly stretches to cover things like  Tiger Woods and Fashion Week in an effort to bolster page views. The king of page view media is the Huffington Post, which reblogs, over-covers everything, and has gone off-topic so much it no longer has a main topic.

if you aren’t paying something, then you aren’t a customer: you are the product that’s being sold…
So what’s the cause of this page view journalism? It’s economics. The fact is that an online customer is worth only a quarter of what a print customer is worth. For newspapers, those economics simply don’t make a profit; for virtual newsrooms or lean new media ventures like Techcrunch, they do. As we take advantage of the cognitive surplus and the lower cost barrier to entry, the news shifts from being a scarce commodity to something we have an abundance of. The fact that our attention spans are changing and short, reblog-style posts are preferred by many, as opposed to in-depth 3-4 pages articles in the  New York Times or Wall Street Journal also plays a role. Simply put, a newspaper has a hard time justifying a reporter’s salary to cover something in depth when revenues are decreasing and advertisers are paying less. Publishers like Gawker who don’t have to deal with real world expenses like union wages, delivery costs, health care benefits, and pension plans have lower operating costs. Greed, however, is a universal concept. Even if you operate in a business with lower operating expenses, publishers still want to extract the most profit so, instead of overpriced classified ads, they go after high search volume terms to drive up CPM revenue.

As long as there’s a way to make money off of impressions, this trend will continue. As long as there’s a glut of news, the quality will spiral downward. As long as the quality continues to drop, so will the ad revenue … It is a vicious, self-fulfilling prophecy. The only way out is for publishers at the fore to go the route of publications like All Things D to put out quality news. Then people will have to reach the conclusion that there is some quality news that is worth paying to have access to. People may continue to want “free” news, but it’s like the saying goes “if you aren’t paying something, then you aren’t a customer: you are the product that’s being sold.”

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis WordPress Theme review.

The Rise of Page View Journalism

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How to Do A Content Audit of Your Website

Posted: 28 Sep 2010 08:08 AM PDT

Post image for How to Do A Content Audit of Your Website

If you have a website that’s been around for a few years and you’re looking for ways to make some improvements, one of the tactics I recommend is doing a content audit. 

When you do a content audit you have a few goals in mind:

  • Get rid of any low quality or unimportant pages
  • Look for pages or sections that can be improved or updated
  • Improve your rankings by more effectively using your link equity, internal anchor text, and interlinking your content

Get the Data

your inbound link equity can only support a certain number of pages …
The first thing you need to do is to get an understanding of where your website currently stands. You’ll need a list of the pages of your website, the number of inbound links, and amount of visitors your page receives. If you are using Webmaster central, you can export a spreadsheet of all the pages with the number of links. The next thing you have to do is add a column for page views. I like to use a timeframe between a year and year and half.

Depending on the number of pages your website has, it could take a while to get all this data. This is the perfect task for an intern or outsourced labor from a place like ODesk. I recently performed this task on a website that has 1800 URL’s. It cost me $75, and I had the data back in just over 24 hours.

Identify the Low Performing Pages

The two primary factors I like to look at are how many links does a post/page have and how much traffic did it generate in the past 18 months. Any page that generated less than 100 page views is a candidate for deletion. Additionally, any page that generated less than 25 links is also a candidate for deletion.

Delete or Rewrite

At this point you’ll have a list of pages that generated minimal links and/or traffic and are therefore candidates for deletion or revision. This is where it requires some decision making. If a page generated a lot of links but not much traffic, I’m probably going to keep it intact. The same is true for pages with high traffic but a low number of links. When pages are low on links and low on traffic, you have to use your judgment. In some cases, the post was a throwaway post–important at the time but not important now. Those are easy to justify deleting. In other cases, you’ll want to keep them.

At the very least I would suggest looking at the pages to see if you can improve them. In some cases the information is outdated and needs a complete rewrite. In other cases it just requires a little updating. One of the tools I’ve found to be helpful is Scribe SEO (see my  Scribe SEO review). It gives you a quick overview and can sometimes make a few quick easy suggestions to improve a page. A third option is creating a living URL style page. When you rewrite or revise pages you really want to look for ways to maximize your internal anchor text and linkage whenever possible.

Why Should You Delete Old Posts or Pages

When I talk about this practice, a lot of people wonder why would you bother deleting pages. After all, there’s no harm in keeping them around and you’ve already spent the time and energy having them created. For the answer, we need to look at the concept of link equity. Each website only has a certain amount of links, trust, and authority coming into it … this concept is called link equity. That link equity can only support a certain number of pages. For example a brand new website with few links won’t be able to have thousands of pages in the index: the search engines simply don’t have enough signals of quality to support anything more than superficial crawling.  Additionally IMHO ever since the “mayday update” the days of “infinite websites” have come to an end.

When I mention deleting old posts, sometimes bloggers look like they are going to break down in tears, as if I asked them to abandon a puppy with no food or water outside in a freezing snowstorm. If you’re the type of person who has a deep emotional attachment to your posts, you aren’t running a business website. You are creating Aunt Millie’s Christmas Letter.

Backups and Redirections

Before you delete a single post make sure you have multiple backups of all of your posts. You want the ability to bring your posts back if you delete one by accident. If you use WordPress, you can trash a page/post and it’s deleted from public view, but it lingers in limbo for 30 days and is easy to bring back. If any of the pages have more than a handful of links you should set up a redirection. Try to redirect to a similar-themed post or revised post if possible. If not then the homepage, the sitemap, or archives page. A controversial step is to redirect to a different commercial page or to create a link hub somewhere else. Let your conscience be your guide to your approach.

Lastly, you want to trap for 404 errors and redirect anything you might have missed. Again, if you use WordPress, the redirection plugin takes care of the 404 and redirections in one spot.

What are the takeaways in this post:

  • Make a list of all your pages with inbound links and traffic stats from the past year
  • Identify and isolate the worst performing pages
  • Subdivide the list into pages to delete or pages to revise/rewrite
  • Backup pages before deleting
  • Set up redirections for any pages that are deleted
  • Monitor 404 errors for any deletions or redirections you missed

Creative Commons License photo credit: ansik

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis WordPress Theme review.

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Daily Snapshot: Meeting with Families in Des Moines and Richmond

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
 

Photo of the Day

Photo of the Day

President Barack Obama poses for a photo with a customer during a stop at Barelas Coffee House in Albuquerque, N.M., Sept. 28, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

View more photos.

Today's Schedule

In the morning, the President will meet with a family at their home in Des Moines, Iowa and hold a discussion on the economy with families from the area. In the afternoon, the President will travel to Richmond, Virginia and meet with a local Richmond family at the Southampton Recreation Association before hosting a discussion on the economy with families from the area.

All times are Eastern Daylight Time

9:30 AM: The Vice President meets with Senator Carl Levin

9:30 AM: Bipartisan Fiscal Commission meeting WhiteHouse.gov/live

11:05 AM: The President meets with Des Moines family

11:15 AM: The President holds a discussion on the economy WhiteHouse.gov/live

12:45 PM: The President departs Des Moines, Iowa en route Richmond, Virginia

2:00 PM: Open for Questions: Small Business WhiteHouse.gov/live

2:45 PM: The President arrives Richmond, Virginia

3:20 PM: The President meets with Richmond family

3:35 PM: The President holds a discussion on the economy WhiteHouse.gov/live

5:05 PM: The President departs Richmond, Virginia en route Andrews Air Force Base

5:40 PM: The President arrives at Andrews Air Force Base

5:55 PM: The President arrives at the White House

 WhiteHouse.gov/live  Indicates Events that will be livestreamed on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog

A Living-Room Discussion with Middle Class Families
A look at Vice President Biden's visit to the home of Bob and Lorie Cochran in Manchester, New Hampshire for a discussion on the economy and other issues that are important to middle class families.

The President on Our Veterans & Choosing Priorities in Albuquerque
Meeting with Andy and Etta Cavalier at their home in Albuquerque, New Mexico, President Obama spoke openly on the economy with area families in the Cavaliers’ front yard.

President of the Small Business Where GOP Announced "Pledge" Applauds Small Business Jobs Bill
The owner of Tart Lumber, where Republicans announced their “Pledge to America,” comes out in support of the Small Business Jobs Act the President just signed -- and that Republicans almost universally voted against.

Get Updates

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Seth's Blog : Needs don't always lead to demand

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

Needs don't always lead to demand

One of the accepted holy grails of building an organization is that you should fill a need. Fill people's needs, they say, and the rest will take care of itself.

But... someone might know that they need to lose some weight, but what they demand is potato chips.

Someone might know that they need to be more concerned about the world, but what they demand is another fake reality show.

As my friend Tricia taught me, this is brought into sharp relief when doing social enterprise in the developing world. There are things that people vitally need... and yet providing it is no guarantee you'll find demand.

Please don't tell get confused by what the market needs. That's something you decided, not them.

If you want to help people lose weight, you need to sell them something they demand, like belonging or convenience, not lecture them about what they need.

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