Archive for December, 2009

Real-Time Analytics Solutions

Published December 18th, 2009 Analytics, Email Marketing, Social Media No Comments

Real-time web analytics reporting is more critical than ever for many organizations. It’s not realistic to wait 4 hours, or even 1 hour, to see how visitors are consuming fresh content, navigating new product sections, or generally browsing, on many sites. With the recent changes to Google’s search results, integrating real-time social media content, the transition from launch (or post, or release, or whatever) to tracking and refining, has been shortened even more. But even before the social media revolution, marketers have wanted to get real-time data when an email campaign is sent, a microsite is launched, their product is featured on Oprah, etc.

So how do you monitor your website in real-time? Omniture will provide you with some real-time data, likewise with WebTrends, but it isn’t complete. Google Analytics provides you with none (though I see this changing in 2010). So you need to employ a different analytics solution for this need. For enterprises, this might not be for your entire corporate site but maybe just your blogs. For smaller organizations, this may be something you want on your whole site. Regardless, here is a quick breakdown of three popular real-time web analytics offerings, and what I like about each of them.

Clicky

Spy on Clicky


I’ve written about Clicky before as a low-cost analytics solution, and it is pretty cheap. You can get a base level package for just $9.99. We use Clicky on this site and we love it for its ability to breakdown the pathing that specific visitors took through our site. This can be done in real-time or historically. I literally can look at the Visitor report, see what organizations are on my site, and then see what paths they’ve taken, and what source brought them to the site. So, if your reading this shortly after I’ve posted it, I’m probably looking at your network (your ISP or organization name) of the corner of my eye on my extra monitor. If your with a Fortune 500 company, chances are I’m watching the path your taking through my site. Can you see the sales benefits we get from Clicky now? Deployment of Clicky is straightforward and it has some cool “event tracking” type capabilities that can be leveraged.

chartbeat

chartbeat - SwellPath.com


Admittedly, I’ve only been using chartbeat for about a week, but I really like it. The interface is a simple yet effective dashboard. Instead of looking at standard analytics metrics and reporting in real-time; it defines its own reports and metrics, ones that are more relevant to real-time needs. For example, page density and whether visitors are idle, reading, or writing (dependent on your CMS). It also integrates Twitter conversations and incoming links into the dashboard. Chartbeat also runs about $10 a month (for up to 5 sites) and has a 30 day trial for you to check the product out.

Woopra

Woopra Dashboard


I was a big fan of Woopra at first, but I don’t really use it as much as I used to. My biggest problem with the product was that it isn’t web-based, but required an installed application. That aside, it also has a great dashboard, and more comprehensive reporting. It also features the ability to chat with any visitor currently on your site. I haven’t employed that in a real business situation yet, but I have played around with it a bit. Most folks tend to think that Woopra is great for monitoring, and covers the same bases that chartbeat does, so if you’re looking for that type of solution it is worth checking out. Woopra has pricing plans from $5 a month up to $180, based on number of pageviews, so it seems more focused on pursuing larger customers. So if you’re enterprise level, it definitely is worth checking out.

Mobile & Search Converge = Mobile SEO

Published December 4th, 2009 Mobile, SEO 1 Comment

mobile-seoThe growth and evolution of mobile devices inevitably leads to convergence with other technologies and disciplines. One such being search. The convergence of mobile technology and search technology creates complications and considerations for the usability of website content.

A shift in user behavior and technology has led to the evolution of search. Mobile platforms create complications to web searches. Search engines have adjusted to this shift; offering mobile versions of their products that address some of the limitations of mobile technology.

However, to ensure website content can be found and usable, mobile SEO best practices should be utilized. First and foremost, heavy interactive websites (graphics and rich media) have historically created issues with mobile platforms. While Adobe’s Flash Player 10.1 release is looking to change that, it’s far from solved. As such, content needs to be mobile friendly which that means limiting rich media.

If you don’t have content that is supported, you have bigger fish to fry before considering mobile SEO.

Mobile Website Development

As with all SEO, the code is one of the most critical factors and major hurdles for optimizing a mobile website for search engines. One of the common and most used practices for mobile SEO is still building a mobile website counterpart for your standard website. This isn’t always necessary but still a best practice.

For most mobile websites, avoid WAP/WML (Wireless Markup Language) and make use of a more familiar markup language, XHTML. Most mobile browsers these days can handle XHTML. Additionally, common HTML elements are supported such as body, head, title, meta, H1, H2.

Mobile web development is a bigger topic than we’re tackling here, check out W3C’s Mobile Best Practices and the XHTML Mobile Phone tag list.

Mobile SEO Best Practices

As you would for your standard website, developed a list of keywords and map them throughout your site for targeting. Certain mobile tags and attributes should be used to create a mobile search-friendly website. Utilize keywords via the available SEO elements such as H1, H2, alt tags, etc.

The size of a web page is an important aspect to consider when designing mobile-friendly pages. Bandwidth is still an issue, thus keep it simple. Under 20KB is best practice.

W3C has a great tool for helping validate your mobile site – W3C Mobile OK Validator.

Mobile Website Accessibility

Similar to accessibility in standard web development, mobile sites need to be found, crawled and indexed. As such, a mobile sitemap should be developed to assist mobile search engine bots.

Mobile search engines crawl and index sites that are specifically developed for mobiles platforms. As such, they require a mobile XML Sitemap, which adheres to the Sitemaps Protocol with a specific <mobile:mobile> tag.

This is a unique XML sitemap from your standard website XML sitemap and requires a unique location. Anytime you have multiple XML sitemaps, including mobile, you need to have Sitemap Index file to support them.

Once you’ve created a mobile XML sitemap, submit it to Google Webmaster Tools and Yahoo mobile site submission as you would a standard website.

Developing a stand alone mobile site isn’t always essential for your site content to be found on smartphones, however it is essential to consider mobile SEO best practices if you want your site content to be found and remain usable on mobile platforms.

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