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The
Need For A Website Emetrics Audit Before Major Design Changes
So
you have decided on a design makeover for the website. Or
perhaps it's the boss who thinks it needs refreshing and a
bit of a lift.
Carrying
out an emetrics audit before a redesign, or any major change
to a site, is essential if you are going to assess the benefits
of your investment. It will also enable you to make sure that
everything you change is for the better and that the things
that are really working well don't get swept away.
So
what do you look for?
Current
overall visitor levels - this might seem obvious but if you
don't know how many visitors are coming to your site before
the change how can you assess its impact?
Returning
visitors - how many of your current visitors have visited
the site before. Your returning visitors usually represent
your best prospects, after all they are interested enough
to bookmark your site and come back. Identifying returning
visitors requires the presence of cookies. If you are using
a hosted emetrics service (one using JavaScript) to monitor
traffic this will be done automatically. If you are analysing
log files then your site must set a persistent cookie in order
to recognise returning visitors.
Conversion
rates - how many purchases, enquiry forms, subscriptions or
whatever your site purpose is, are you getting both in absolute
terms and as a percentage of total traffic?
Search
engine referrals and rankings - the more sites that are sending
traffic to you the better. This will depend upon your rankings
and overall visibility, which in turn requires that the spiders
are crawling your site - assuming you are doing your seo job
properly. It is essential you prepare a rankings report on
your major keywords before you undertake any major site changes.
It is equally important to know how well your site is being
spidered before the changes are implemented. This will show
either that the current architecture is spider friendly or
that the design changes need to include better spiderablity
if that is a problem.
Site
stickiness - how many of your visitors leave the site immediately,
usually defined as being less than 5 seconds, without navigating
beyond the entry page. The figure of short visits needs to
be kept as low as possible, and how low is acceptable will
depend on how well you can, and want, to define your target
market. If you have a well established market, such as digital
cameras, then anyone not looking for digital cameras is of
no use to you. You may feel differently however if, on the
other hand, you are working in a new market, photobooks for
example. Here not everyone who is a potential customer is
familiar with the product and therefore looking for it, so
you may decide to try and capture anyone looking for anything
on photography. This is going to reduce your site stickiness
but may be a worthwhile price to pay in order to increase
awareness of a new product or service.
Lots
of factors affect site stickiness, for example the graphic
design of the site and the way in which the navigation is
structured in particular will affect how effective a site
is in retaining its visitors. Making sure you have a bench
mark before any site changes are made is vital if you are
to assess whether any change is a success and to what extent.
Entry
pages - which pages are visitors entering your site by? Web
designers often feel most comfortable with everyone entering
through the front door and following the path set for them.
However, if this is what is happening then your site is missing
a huge opportunity. Every content rich page on your site is
potential entry point, and has the potential to be optimised
for specific keywords. Further, conversion rates are likely
to be higher if a visitor enters the site on a page that offers
him the particular information he is looking for.
Navigation
paths - the idea that there is one unique route from home
page to order page is a fallacy. The number of ways of getting
from the entry page to the order page soon reaches infinity
for any site with more than a very small number of pages.
But you can look at how long it takes a customer to reach
the order page and this is a very useful metric. The sooner
the visitor places his order with the least number of clicks
the better.
So
how do we use all this information? There are two things it
can do for you.
Firstly
it will show you what is, and what is not, working before
any changes are undertaken and this provides an invaluable
starting point for the design team. For example, if you have
a high number of returning visitors, look to see why they
are coming back, and make sure whatever it is stays there
after the makeover. Conversely, if there are very few returners,
ensure that the redesign addresses this problem; perhaps a
tip of the month on the home page is the answer, or a special
offer will bring them back. It may simply be that the home
page needs to make it clearer what the reason to keep coming
back is!
Secondly,
it provides a benchmark so that you can measure the effectiveness
of the changes you introduce. If the very worst happens and
the new site performs less well than the original, your website
audit will be invaluable in providing with you the ability
to identify what went wrong. If the traffic increases but
more people leave, you will probably look first at graphic
design issues. If search engine referrals suddenly drop, then
the first place to look will probably be the spiderability
of the architecture.
Web
analytics and emetrics give the webmaster abilities to understand
their customers and potential customers to a degree unimaginable
in the offline world. Failing to capitalise on it is like
trying to find the bull's eye with your eyes shut.
Sally
Kavanagh is a trainer with Search
Engine Workshops Ltd who provide training courses in the
UK on search engine optimisation and marketing and on the
use of ClickTracks web analytics software in supporting both
paid and organic seo campaigns.
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