Search Engines

Google Analytics: A Closer Look

by Spencer on December 12, 2011

See how Google Analytics has changed and how it can affect eCommerce

The new version of Google Analytics isn’t exactly new; it’s been available for months. However, many have avoided it for the sake of efficiency, especially those in eCommerce. While the old version runs fine and has become comfortable for many people, the new features and available data make switching over a logical decision. The decision to make the move might soon be made for you, as Google has begun making it the default version and gives me the impression that the old version may not be around for much longer.

The most noticeable change is the new interface. A first glance, especially for those of you who have been using GA for a long time, will likely strike you with terror. You’ve probably thought, “I can’t find anything here,” as you move your cursor to click ‘Use Older Version.’ However, if you take some time to look around, you’ll find some things that might excite you. Everything has been streamlined and the interface is more intuitive. Google has crammed a ton of information into drop tabs that nicely organize into a few main categories. Here are some of the more noticeable changes:

  • Site overlay is now known as In-Page Analytics. It’s also now listed under the content tab. It’s been around for about a year now in Beta testing on the old version and is fully operational in the new one.
  • Mobile traffic tracking has been expanded to show manufacturer, model, interface type, OS and more while featuring all the same attributes as your standard traffic tracking. You can even see how many transactions came from these phones, which has great eCommerce potential.
  • A Visitor Flow graph has been added to show how people are navigating a site and can be sorted by a variety of filters.
  • Multi-channel funnels have been added, as well as assisted conversions, allowing you to see exactly how different channels are working together. Seeing how many conversions are coming from what campaigns is a powerful tool.
  • A Social Media component has been integrated, allowing you to use Analytics to track the effectiveness of your Twitter, Facebook and other Social Media campaigns in conjunction with the rest of your marketing strategy.

It’s important to note that these new features require no additional JavaScript or variables to be added to your site. They all come featured.

My favorite portion, aside from the new interface, is the change in the conversion attribution algorithm, which in turn also changes how GA defines a page visit. Before, a “visit” was defined as the user landing on the Web site. Regardless of how many times the user came back, one session was counted as one visit no matter how many referring sites there were and conversions were awarded to the last referring site before the purchase. The problem with this was that it was impossible to accurately track visits from mailing campaigns, organic traffic, etc. This has all changed.

Session and Visit Metric Changes

Now, a user’s session ends once they leave the website. So, if I use Google search to land on VerticalRail.com, click around a bit and leave the site to go to Facebook then that session ends. It is counted as a visit from Google and a new session begins once Facebook lands me on the page. Even if I use Facebook to turn around and come right back to the same site, it still registers as a visit from Google and now a visit from Facebook. Also, if I don’t leave the landing page and then go to Facebook, this counts as a bounce for Google, even if I use Facebook to take me right back to the site. This also ignores time spent on page. So, if I used Google to land on this blog page, read it, left it open for 15 minutes and then left for Bing, it would still be counted as a bounce. Basically, no matter what engine or link brings a user to a site, that referring site gets credited a visit and the session immediately ends once they leave. There is no longer a 29 minute inactivity period before a session is terminated.

Additionally, a user is only counted as a “new visitor” on their first session on the page. Once they leave the site and arrive again, a new session begins and they are considered a “returning visitor” from now on. Is this indefinite? Will someone be listed as a new visitor again if they clear their cookies? Is it based on a session ID? These are all questions that come to mind but remain unanswered. There is currently a feature that allows Analytics to track Time to Purchase, so I would assume there exists a way to indefinitely track a user’s history with a site, but I can’t be certain. We’ll be keeping an eye on it to see how it unfolds.

All of these things lead me to believe that Google is trying to address many of the accuracy issues that led people to using GA in conjunction with programs like Omniture and the like. It’s important to remember that with these changes, it’s essential to pick one analytics program and stick with it. Google Analytics is going to show different metrics than other programs and it leaves room for error if used in conjunction with other statistics programs. A more streamlined interface combined with increasingly robust data makes it an incredibly valuable and powerful resource, especially for those in eCommerce. Overall, I believe that the direction Google is taking GA is a great step in the direction of being able to use a singular analytics program instead of having to juggle multiple ones. I’m truly excited to see what 2012 will bring to bear.

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TheFind: Defined

TheFind.com started from humble beginnings like many successful businesses before it.  An entrepreneur with seven successful ventures behind him listened to his wife softly vent about how difficult it was to not only find products and prices but also adequate merchant details and policies while shopping online.

The entrepreneur, in an effort to help his wife obtain a more fulfilling shopping experience did what every good Silicon Valley entrepreneur and husband would do… he designed a shopping engine.

Siva Kumar’s “honey-do” project turned into an inventive step forward in the world of e-commerce by giving life to the Internet’s first discovery shopping engine. Different from traditional comparison shopping engines, a discovery engine places a higher importance on the “complete shopping experience” rather than just straight-line product and price comparisons.

Siva Kumar, CEO of TheFind

Siva Kumar, CEO & Founder, TheFind

“The idea was to create a Google-like experience, but in a shopping way,” explained Siva Kumar, Founder and CEO of TheFind. “We needed to show what consumers wanted to see – visual discovery – the key was making sure that everything was there, a complete variety of information is present… not just pricing.”

The origin of the name, “TheFind” explained Kumar, comes from the emotional satisfaction associated with the experience of shopping, the discovery of something truly special. “Helping shoppers find the right store is very important,” added Kumar, “it’s not about the click, but the transaction.”

Five years later, TheFind has held true to its name in that its focus continues to be on the experience of shopping delivered through patented technology and fortified with merchant details and credibility-building information designed to instill consumer confidence.

Current website usage and trending for TheFind illustrates that Kumar’s 2004 vision has found a home in today’s consumer-driven Internet. Channel Advisor reported at Internet Retailer 2010 in Chicago that TheFind’s website usage increased by 175% from April 2009 to April 2010, an impressive statistic when compared to Shopzilla’s 24% decline, Yahoo Shopping’s 22% decline, or Nextag’s 4% decline during the same year-over-year time period.  In a press release issued by TheFind on June 21st, comScore reports that TheFind with 27 million monthly visits is now the #2 ranked shopping engine second only to Google Product Search.

Innovation and distinction is pushing TheFind to the forefront of comparison shopping sites for more and more consumers each year, however for online merchants and e-tailers, it’s not necessarily the same case. While many e-commerce merchants recognize TheFind as an industry fixture, few e-commerce merchants understand how exactly to get more results from it. One possibility for this uneven brand awareness among e-commerce merchants may stem from the engine’s business model and methods of inclusion.

TheFind has so far utilized a combination of CPC (cost per click) and CPA (cost per action) relationships with shopping engines such as PriceGrabber and Shopzilla and affiliate networks such as Linkshare and Commission Junction to monetize, while leveraging a proprietary web crawler to propagate its product index. Search results in TheFind are a varied combination of many contributing factors including revenue. While search results are weighed towards CPC and CPA results that bring the engine important revenue, the company maintains that over 60% of the outbound traffic goes to what the company calls “free” clicks – not associated with revenue generating relationships. In May, for example, consumers clicking out from TheFind visited over 150,000 different store web sites while only around 10,000 had any sort of revenue relationship.

In March of this year TheFind took a huge step forward that promises to change the site’s validity and value to hungry e-commerce merchants – it unveiled a data feed upload option for its new merchant center. With the launch of the merchant center, e-commerce companies now have a way to submit a product data feed directly into TheFind’s back end – greatly increasing their chances at generating more site referrals and conversions from TheFind. The best part is that it is free of charge.

When it comes to the submission of a product data feed, TheFind uses a unique format for product mapping that builds on the popular Google Base format. There are five mandatory attributes (title, description, image link, page URL and price), 15 “highly recommended” attributes, and 65 additional attributes that can be used depending on the product type or category. TheFind’s custom format, like Google Product Search, enables and promotes data feed optimization – the creation of product relevancy.

“Merchants are encouraged to fill out as many of the data feed attributes as possible,” says Jordan Keffer, Director of Merchant Programs at TheFind. “Look at it as the more complete something is, the better it will do.” Keffer pointed out that while the data feeds can be submitted as infrequently as once-per-month, the system is built to acknowledge product and data feed “freshness”, an influential part of product optimization for TheFind.

To get involved, merchants must first register themselves and claim their site in order to activate the account. Merchants are then encouraged to join the UpFront Program, a credibility building program that makes merchant policies and information easily available from a badge that links from the merchant’s website footer.

UpFront Program information is also present in TheFind’s search results, triggered by mousing-over a product listing. The UpFront information provides the consumer with consolidated information about merchant shipping and return policies, security verifications, ratings, store locations, contact information, and coupons along with other applicable merchant resources.

“Sites that are just being crawled, that are not a part of the UpFront program, and have not registered their site with us, have less credible information and could be at a disadvantage in relevance when comparing apples to apples,” explained Usher Lieberman, Director of Corporate Communications at TheFind. “If someone does a search and you’ve got 100 stores that have equally relevant results, the un-registered sites that are just being crawled may not do as well. The remedy is free, registering to be an UpFront merchant is free, claiming your store with us which tells us how to crawl your site… is free and easy to do, at bare minimum without even submitting a feed, the crawl will know you better and prioritize your results better.”

The company states that the crawling of websites will continue to occur, yet the submission of a regular direct feed should increase a merchant’s chances at competitive product placement, all without cost-per-click fees.
TheFind may not be a household name just yet, but the company is working hard to change that. The website’s consumer-driven growth combined with the launch of the merchant center stand to make an ever-increasing environment for both consumer and merchant.

“In all fairness, the company has been around for 5 years, and for the first 2 ½ to 3 years we were really in stealth mode building out the search engine, building out the crawl, and building out the technology that’s been patented,” explained Lieberman.  “Then you have a couple of years getting the interface right, exposing it to users, then making refinements based on what we hear from consumers. I think that as we continue to execute on those priorities, the name recognition will grow quickly.”

Holding true to his mission, Kumar continues exploring new ways to make the shopping experience even better and more relevant to today’s consumer.  Innovations in Local, Mobile, and Social commerce fuel the future of TheFind – including a plan that enables local businesses to submit products and inventory without even having a website or shopping cart – a new and radical e-commerce fusion.

“Local, Mobile and Social are all just facets of the same experience,” concluded Kumar. “TheFind is about helping shoppers find the right store… and the right thing they are looking for.”

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Green Comparison Shopping Engine Offers Inexpensive & Easy Advertising with Emphasis on Shopping Experience

April 22, 2010

Pristine Planet Comparison Shopping Engine & CEO Profile

Pristine Planet is a comparison shopping engine that maintains a sustainable and green product focus. Launched in 2004, it was the first shopping site of its kind. Today, with the increasing appeal and momentum of green-commerce search, Pristine Planet is poised to help a new generation of socially-conscious merchants and consumers connect within comparison shopping. 

The very foundation of Pristine Planet was born of the 1999 movie “Office Space”. Founder and [...]
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