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29 January 2008

Marketing Optimization Takes the Stage: Emetrics & WAA Breakfast Series, Feb. 5 in Toronto

Business first, tools second.

Web Analytics has matured and the Web Analytics industry is in transition. Marketing Optimization is the new focus. As it should be.

Business first, tools second.

Jim Sterne, Web Analytics Association founder and Chairman, will be in Toronto next Tuesday, February 5 for the first of 3 Breakfast Meetings, titled An Industry in Transition - Web Analytics to Marketing Optimization.

Jim has been intimately involved in the evolution of Web Analytics and was one of the first voices exhorting people to stop counting meaningless hits! I had the pleasure of meeting Jim and participating in his day long Web Metrics course at the Nielsen Norman Group Usability Week conference in New York City in 2003.

In his presentation next week on February 5 at Marriott Toronto Eaton Centre, Jim will share with us his insights into the current maturity of the web analytics industry.

  • What is the level of expertise among practitioners today?
  • What are the challenges and opportunities specifically available to Canadian businesses?
  • What role can web analytics practitioners, marketers and analysts play as companies adopt the continuous improvement method of marketing optimization?

Following Jim's session, Michael Whitehouse of iPerceptions will show you how you can enhance traditional transactional web analytics by gauging the actual perceptions and attitudes of your web site visitors. Listening to your visitors' "voice" about their online experience will allow you analyze the key drivers of customer satisfaction and loyalty. By tracking and analyzing these additional dimensions, you can responsively take action, develop predictive models and improve satisfaction and loyalty.

Not in Toronto? The Marketing Optimization Breakfast series continues on to Montreal on February 6 and Ottawa on February 7 (more details).

Register at the Web Analytics Association website.

Hope to see you at breakfast on February 5.

June Li
ClickInsight

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28 January 2008

Test Driving Social Media Marketing? Go Ahead. Experiment. 'Tis the Right Road to Ride.

eMarketer's recent report B2B Marketing Online : Business Meets Social Media shows there is neither broad adoption of social media nor one "silver bullet" social media tactic. Many companies are experimenting, and reporting different successes with different tactics. Some data nuggets comparing B2B and B2C findings:

  • 21% of B2B marketers report podcasts being effective versus 13% of B2C marketers
  • 17% B2B report blogs as effective versus 6% B2C
  • 8% B2B report Second Life as effective compared to unreported B2C number

The difference in B2B and B2C is not surprising. Social media marketing is such a broad category of tactics that one size will definitely not fit all. What is effective for one organization may very well not be effective for another, even in the same industry. It depends on how you're trying to engage your audience and what type of interaction you're targeting. And because engagement is all about interaction, if you're aiming for a one-shot perfect-the-first-time design, you're bound to be disappointed. It's interactive, so you'll have to try it out.

Indeed, eMarketer says ' the operative word for using social media is "experiment" ...[because]... they were unsure how emerging vehicles such as blogs, games, social networds, virtual worlds, widgets and wikis would actually influence potential customers '. Absolutely! Try it, evaluate, improve.

To evaluate effectiveness, it's necessary to have targets. However, it's also important not to constrain projects too tightly with too many targets. In the early experimentation phase, insistence on numerical ROI can kill learning & experimentation. Instead, employ a balanced scorecard (wikipedia definition) approach. Have a vision and a goal in mind but focus more on learning or process than financial ROI. Where marketing is "social", higher level metrics may be more relevant and useful. For example, some learnings from the recent Social Media Conference by the Canadian Institute :

  • The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada has a blog. Colin McKay, Director, Public Education and Communications, explained that one of their primary goals is outreach. They created and posted a video on the blog and on YouTube "A friend of a friend of a friend knows you're on vacation". This video has been viewed over 3,500 times on YouTube since it was posted in November 2007. But the numbers don't tell the full story. Isn't it valuable to receive feedback from a teacher that students should see this video and that she's going to show it to the Grade 7 students at her school?
  • Microsoft Canada hosts a series of blogs* to facilitate dialogues with professional developers in Canada, making technology more open and accessible. I asked Barnaby Jeans if they have metrics specifically for the blogs. No, but developer satisfaction and what they think of Microsoft is tracked. The blogs' impact, as well as the impact of other developer community events is tracked within that ongoing developer satisfaction measurement effort.
    *Blogs: Developers, IT Pros, IT Managers, User Experience
  • BMW Canada has launched its 3rd social media campaign, marketing the 1 Series. Previous campaigns involved xDrive and the M Series. The BMW 1 Series campaign currently underway integrates multiple social media tactics and is the first with evaluative metrics.

Some believe that lack of insistence of ROI metrics by tactic is a cop-out. Not so.

Too much of a focus on attribution of benefits can be value destroying. At a past CMA conference on accountability, there was much talk about how some folks were expected to report the ROI of a customer telephone call. That's going too far. I favour the approach put forward by Hewlett-Packard at that conference. Measure the ROI on your marketing mix. Experiment with different mixes. Measure the difference in ROI on different mixes. Repeat.

ROI marketing measurement will continue to be a minefield, especially where new tactics are involved. Organizations should waive ROI for emerging marketing tactics. Set specific learning goals but defer financial ROI during the learning phase. Run integrated campaign experiments with and without social media marketing support. Compare the integrated outcomes. Repeat.

Comments?


June Li
ClickInsight

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09 January 2008

We've been spoofed

Overnight, ClickInsight email IDs were used in an email spoofing attack (definition).

Spam emails in German have been sent using our IDs in the "From" field. Although I can't read German, I can guess what the topic is because of the use of a particular 6-character brand name that starts with "V".

We apologize to the recipients of this spam but can do nothing to stop it except deactivate our email IDs. We hope this will cause our IDs to be removed from the spammer's send list.

We have therefore indeed disabled some of our email IDs. Until we re-activate our email IDs, please use the form on our contact us page or comment in this post.

We apologize for this inconvenience. It's a consequence of Internet life and being publically accessible.

June Li
ClickInsight

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