Using Data To Plan Your Future, Not Look To The Past

Data is everywhere, we can pull numbers from a wide variety of resources – put them in spreadsheets, compare them to each other, draw conclusions based on data – there are a lot of things we can do with data. The thing we can do, but not many of us do – is use the […]

Chat with SearchBot

Data is everywhere, we can pull numbers from a wide variety of resources – put them in spreadsheets, compare them to each other, draw conclusions based on data – there are a lot of things we can do with data.

The thing we can do, but not many of us do – is use the data to develop a strategy to move our online marketing forward. We’re all guilty, we sometimes want the numbers to be enough, and sometimes they are.

Reporting numbers and numbly cutting and pasting graphics not only doesn’t move your company forward, it’s driving your marketing team crazy. Everyone up and down the chain is suffering from Data Analysis Paralysis at this point. You all realize that reporting the numbers is really not beneficial, but the permission and encouragement to do something more has to come from the top.

Data is the past, strategy is the future. To be successful, you need to empower your team to marry data with creativity and encourage them to go where nobody on the team has gone before.

Reporting is creating a document that conveys results. Creating a strategy is taking those results, making a plan, carrying out that plan and analyzing the outcome. Analyzing data without creating a plan of action is a waste of time.

Many upper-floor-types require their minions to create these mindless reports that reflect how many visitors and how long did they stay. They want numbers, and dollar signs. If you’re doing this, you’re underutilizing your employees. Challenge them, likely they’re so sick and tired of copying and pasting graphics they’ll leap on the chance to use their brains.

If you don’t have a set of goals or a mission statement for your online marketing department, it’s time to create one. If you have one and it is one sentence that says “make more money” – do it again.

An online marketing strategy is so much more than “did they buy or not” these days. Consider engagement, advocacy, reputation, competitive positioning and branding along with your dollar signs. Set realistic expectations and goals, empower your team to be creative and think outside the box, give them the tools they need to execute, learn and improve.

Setting Goals & Your Online Marketing Mission Statement

The goal of your team really has to be in line with the service or products you offer. Some general ideas for goals could be:

  • Engage with and cultivate more Fans of our Brand
    • Reward Fans that are Brand Advocates
    • Cultivate and encourage reviews from customers. Reviews are gifts, both positive and negative, use them to learn how to serve your clients in an efficient and helpful manner.
    • Create 4 campaign ideas a month
      • Execute 1 new campaign idea a month
      • Learn Every day
      • Increase Revenue by X

Notice I put the revenue goal last? I think if you’re doing the first 3 things at 120%, you’re going to achieve the latter as a result.

Turn Reporting Into Strategy Creation

Look at the current “traffic” report your team is creating. Print it out, and take a yellow highlighter and mark every recommendation for improvement, idea for growth or action item.

Each section or table should be accompanied by at least one idea for advancement. This is where you will see a great team shine. For a marketer, new ideas and the understanding that someone will use and value their ideas is ambrosia.

Many marketing reports include statistics like bounce rate, average time on site and pages per visit. This data is just data by itself, but pair that with suggestions about how to improve and you’re talking strategy.

Here’s an example of how I like to work strategy into simple reporting:

Strategyfinal

From this custom report, we can see that most visitors who spent 6+ minutes on the website spent the most money. Our average time on site for the entire site is currently 5minutes and 21 seconds. Increasing time on site can lead to an increase in revenues for this client.

Some recommendations for increasing time on site are:

  • Add a video that sells your product, provides testimonials and contains embedded links to products the viewer can click and buy easily. I recommend using Mixpo.com to create action items within your videos along with calls to action and branding messages.
  • Create a guide to using your products directly within your website. Many online shoppers hesitate to purchase because they’re worried about recourse should something go wrong. Provide them with a way to find resolution to their broken product or not-so-great service right within your site.
  • Compelling content that is very simple to read will send your visitor further into your site as each of their questions before buying are answered. Consider revising your content structure with a/b testing to improve readability, engagement and decrease exits.

I have seen a ridiculous number of reports come from an agency or marketing department with the graphic above followed by one sentence: “Most visitors who spend 6+ minutes on the website spent the most money.” Ridiculous! 

Instead, challenge the team to help you create a strategy. If you watch 4 different metrics in your current “traffic” report, and each of those metrics produced 2 or 3 action items, your month to month strategy is nearly complete – and you have ideas in the hopper if something doesn’t work out.

Every idea is just that, an idea, until it’s implemented and tried. Not every idea is a home run, but making attempts is better than sitting on the sidelines – looking at numbers and waiting for something to happen.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Carrie Hill
Contributor
Carrie Hill is the co-founder of Ignitor Digital, along with long-time colleague Mary Bowling. After years working for other agencies and learning the ins and outs of great customer service, Carrie and Mary opened Ignitor Digital to serve the small and very small business with top-quality Local Search, SEO and Social Media services. When not working, Carrie loves to cook for friends and family, hang out with her pretty awesome kids, and read books that have little-to-no educational value!

Get the must-read newsletter for search marketers.