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How are you
currently tracking where your customers come from?
Do you know what your Return on investment was for your
last advertising campaign or advertisement you ran?
If you answered NO to either question it is time for a
change!
You are throwing your money out the window if you are not
tracking your advertising.
You need systems in place that can tell you
how your advertising is or isn't working for you, this alone
can save you thousand and thousands of dollars on wasted
advertising! Here is
a recent article written by
Julie Friedman Bacchini
Read it over and get an idea of WHY it is crucial to have
tracking systems. Let EPIK Marketing implement the tracking
systems you need today so you can start cutting that fat and
start $aving money while increasing your revenue!
The
Importance of Tracking Your Web Site Traffic
You have a web site. You have web site visitors. You even have web site sales. Everything seems
to be working: why should you go through the effort to track
and analyze your web site traffic?
The fact is, the importance of tracking your site traffic is
not stressed nearly enough. At most, people say, "Sure, I
track my site traffic. We had 5,000 hits last month!" But
that, quite frankly, isn't "tracking your site traffic."
That is a simple datum, and it doesn't tell you anything
about your site or your site traffic.
The importance of tracking your site traffic lies in the
fact that proper web traffic analytics will help you answer
these key questions:
Am I reaching my target market?
If you went about developing your web site systematically,
you probably spent time researching and defining your target
market. You then designed your site to reach those specific
people.
But all your research was still - at its base - a
hypothesis. You made assumptions about how to reach your
customer base. Tracking your site traffic will verify what
is actually happening on your site (who is coming and what
they are doing), compared to what you expected to happen.
How are people interacting with my site?
Sure, people are coming to your web site. But what are they
doing there? Do they hit the home page and leave? Do they go
immediately to your free section and never browse your sale
items? Do 90% of the people who click on your online payment
form subsequently abandon it?
Tracking your site traffic will allow you to see how people
proceed through your site, where they spend their time, what
they do, and any problems they may be encountering. And that
information can help you significantly improve their user
experience - and your sales.
Where is my site traffic coming from?
To drive traffic to your site, you are likely engaged in
multiple marketing efforts. You may have search engine
optimized your content, engaged in article marketing, and
developed reciprocal links from key partners. You may be
involved in a pay-per-click campaign. Perhaps you also
explored email marketing or print advertising.
Web traffic analytics will tell you exactly how successful
each and every one of those marketing efforts is. You will
then be able to cut the fat from your marketing plan and
focus on the most strategic and productive campaigns.
What trends do I see?
The web is a constantly changing place. What worked last
year may not work this year. You can't rely on the mantra
"we've always done it this way" and expect to see
consistently positive results for years on end.
By tracking your site traffic, you will be able to see
trends as they unfold: trends in who is coming to your site,
how they are interacting with it, what they want, how they
buy, etc. You will be able to respond proactively to
changing patterns, rather than reactively scrambling to fix
a situation after it has become a major problem.
If you are serious about using your web site as a tool for
business, tracking your site traffic is an absolute
essential. The questions above just scratch the surface of
what web traffic analytics can do for you. But the bottom
line is this: tracking your site traffic provides you with
quantifiable data to allow you to make wise decisions for
your business. |