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The Illusion of “Direct” Traffic

For any blogger that has taken a look at their traffic stats in their Google Analytics account, they will be familiar with the term ‘Direct Traffic’ which Google uses as a catch-all category of traffic that they simply cannot accurately measure the source of.

Sometimes Google Analytics cannot measure traffic sources for reasons like people typing the web address directly into their web browser’s address bar, or where they’re directed to a page from an offline source such as a link in a PDF document.

This simply isn’t good enough for you as you desire an understanding of your traffic sources, so you can figure out what sort of reader engagement you have, which traffic strategies to apply more focus to and which ones to dump like yesterday’s trash.

This is extremely important since this understanding determines the allocation of your time, focus and resources. This helps you to use your most precious resource – time – wisely and effectively.

You should always be looking to get better results (more output) from less work (less input). This is the essence of business leverage – it’s all about setting up smart traffic systems that reward you again and again for a one-time effort.

My Findings

OK, now I’ve discussed the mindset elements of successful traffic generation, let’s get to business.

Before I did any custom link tracking using the Google URL Builder, my traffic was divided into the 3 main default traffic sources which Google Analytics divides the traffic into to help website owners understand their traffic sources. They are:

  • Search Traffic
  • Referral Traffic
  • Direct Traffic

You can build customised links which look like this:

http://www.theprofitshare.com/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=IM%2BTools

As you can see, the link contains tracking properties which assign the click within a source, medium and campaign within your Google Analytics account.

Let’s quickly have a look at the ‘Before’ and ‘After’ results of my findings.
[Click any of the images to quickly expand them.]

Before v After

After setting up an additional campaign source which I called ‘social’, you can see that a lot of my ‘Direct Traffic’ and ‘Referral Traffic’ moved across into ‘Campaigns’ traffic. You will also notice that ‘Search Traffic’ increased over the period too which has little relevance to the findings I’m presenting in this article.

I predicted the shift of ‘Referral Traffic’ into the ‘Campaigns’ traffic segment before I even started the experiment since it was obvious that any Twitter traffic that previously fell into the ‘Referral Traffic’ category would now fall into the newly created ‘Campaigns’ category.

However, what I didn’t expect was for some of the traffic that was being recorded as ‘Direct Traffic’ to also move into the ‘Campaigns’ category. Since Twitter was the only place where I was using customised link tracking, I knew that the decrease in ‘Direct Traffic’ was due to Twitter traffic that was previously being recorded as ‘Direct Traffic’.

Of course, I still do not know why Twitter traffic was previously being recorded under direct traffic, however I suspect that the use of either custom URL’s such as ThePS.co (my own) or other widely used URL shorteners such as bit.ly or budurl.com are not tracked. Hits in your Analytics account that arrive from such URLs are usually from the site itself where your links are being published.

Allow me to show you this change another way. Check out the screen captures below showing ‘Direct Traffic’ from 1st July to 31 August, 2011.

The graphic includes a catastrophic loss of traffic due to a computer hard drive crash taking my laptop out of action for 6 days. This meant I could not drive traffic from Tweet Adder, which is my secret sauce for Twitter traffic. However, from the graphic below it is clearly visible that the ‘Direct Traffic’ went through the floor straight after I implemented custom URLs with link tracking using Google’s Link Builder tool.

Direct Traffic

Compare this with ‘Campaigns Traffic’ at the same time in the graphic below. Sure, some of the traffic below is due to the reallocation of ‘Referral Traffic’ and the remainder will be the ‘Direct Traffic’ that I’ve been demonstrating throughout this article.

Traffic from Twitter

OK, so what does this mean?

So I’ve taken you through my findings and demonstrated that what is meant to be ‘Direct Traffic’ is not always just ‘Direct’ traffic. It is simply a collection of visitors that arrive at your site which, for whatever reason, Google Analytics cannot track, so it puts it into the ‘Direct Traffic’ category.

This always made sense to me because it seemed to me that 2,000 – 3,000 people wasn’t coming to my site each month by typing “theprofitshare.com” into their web browser address bars. These kind of searches simply do not fit in with browser behaviour on the web. Whilst some people do this since they know Google Chrome or Mozilla Firefox auto-completes based upon their browsing history, I really do not expect over a third of my traffic to be doing this. It’s a nice thought for a blogger’s ego, but it’s simply not the truth.

One thing to bear in mind is that when you publish on Twitter, that content is most likely syndicated in other areas around the web which use Twitter feeds gaining you additional exposure where visitors can click but Google Analytics cannot track. This can especially be the case if you use something like Yahoo! Pipes to create a customised RSS mash-up feed and then an RSS submission tool/service to submit your feeds to. Whilst Analytics will capture most of the tweets from Twitter.com, they cannot capture all the syndicated tweets on other platforms.

Action Points

I hope you’ll create meaningful segments of traffic to help you understand your blog’s readership better. If you can set up custom segments using Google’s URL Builder in conjunction with Google Analytics’ Goal Conversions feature, then you’ll begin to build an accurate picture of what your most highly qualified traffic sources are. Of course this means better conversions from less traffic which has got to be a great thing.

What are your findings? Let us know in the comments below!

And don’t forget to Tweet, Like and +1 !

To Your Online Success,
Wayne Lambert Signature
The Profit Share

The mutt's nuts or the dog's drivel? I double dare you to leave a comment! :-)

How to Track Clickthrough Rates in Aweber

Let’s assume that you’ve created the email in Aweber already. You will have already created the email and set it up so your email open rates can be tracked.

If you’re unsure how to do this, then please visit the post below for a detailed guide:

==> How to Track Open Rates in Aweber

That assumed, let’s begin…

Step #1 – Ensure You Have Tracking Code In Your Site

This is necessary if you’re wanting to send the traffic from the email to one of your blog posts. Step #1 only needs to be completed once for your blog and then it is forever ready to track your emails.

Note that if you ever change/update your theme, you will need to repeat this step again.
 To do this, you must source the tracking code from your Aweber account and insert it into your footer.php file on your blog. This is much easier than it sounds. Allow me to explain.

Go to the settings area in your Aweber account:

Settings Area in Aweber List your website in the space it provides:

List Your Website

Simply click on the ‘Get javascript’ link. You will see a window come up like below.

Javascript Code

Click on the JavaScript code to select it all.

Theme Editor in WordPress

Log in to your WordPress blog and head on over to the appearance editor.

Select the footer.php file, then move your cursor just before the closing tag.

Insert the JavaScript code as shown below and save the file.

 

Tracking Javascript Code Inserted Into Footer.php

Step #2: Set Up Email Ready for Tracking

This is all about setting the hyperlink reference and the anchor text that you want to use for the link text in your email.

When you set the hyperlink reference, you enable Aweber to track your clickthroughs.

When you set some anchor text, you can increase the number of clickthroughs dependant upon the calls to action that you use.

If you prefer, you can simply paste the URL as the anchor text as well, so that is shows your subscribers the address they will go to when they click the link.

  • #1: Configure Hyperlink
Click the link shown in the diagram below to give you options to configure your hyperlink.
HTML Toolbar in Aweber
  • #2 – Set Hyperlink Reference
Enter the URL where you want the link to direct your subscriber to.
Assign Hyperlink Reference
  • #3 – Set Anchor Text
Type in a suitable call to action for the anchor text.
Assign Anchor Text
  • #4 – Set Click Tracking
Click the checkbox to instruct Aweber to track the clicks on the hyperlinks you use for the message.
Set Click Tracking

Step #3 – Send Out Email And Monitor Results

So there you have it, that’s how to track your clickthrough rates with Aweber.

It’s now over to you to write compelling call to actions for your hyperlinks to increase your clickthrough rates.

To Your Online Success,
Wayne Lambert Signature
The Profit Share

The mutt's nuts or the dog's drivel? I double dare you to leave a comment! :-)

How to Track Open Rates in Aweber

Tracking your open rates in your email autoresponder software is important to help you judge how engaged your readers are with the communications you send out.

After all, marketing is about your ability to communicate your value proposition to your prospects and customers. The question is how much are they listening?

Knowing your open rates is one of the ways you can determine this.

Step #1 – Log In To Aweber

Aweber

Step#2 – Create a Broadcast or Followup email

The method I usually choose here is to write the email in notepad since it doesn’t use formatting.

Step #3 – Format the Email

I use a website called FormatIt to format my emails so that the text isn’t too wide. I use a desired column width of 45.

You can get much greater reading from emails that have smaller margins. This is why newspapers have narrow columns because it gives less work for the eyes to do.

Narrow text also works well to increase readability on blogs.

Step #4 – Paste Formatted Email Into Aweber

Notice the column widths are narrower than the standard widths that Aweber uses when you use the ‘Wrap Long Lines’ feature.

Plain Text Email

Step #5 – Create an HTML Version of the Email

 This is the important part. Simply copy the text from the plain text editor and paste it into the HTML editor.

The fact that the text is present in the HTML editor makes open rates trackable irrespective of whether your readers open the email using plain text, rich text or fully featured HTML.

Step #6 – Simply Finish The Other Email Settings

Select whether you want to publish to you social media properties, which lists/segments to broadcast to, what email subject line is enticing for your prospects to open.

Step 7 – Queue the Email

Voila! All you need to do now is wait a reasonable period of time for your readership to read your emails and keep an eye on your open rates.

Before you do queue the email, you may also wish to track the clickthrough rates on your emails. If you do not know how to do this, please check out the tutorial below:

==> How to Track Clickthrough Rates in Aweber

To Your Online Success,
Wayne Lambert Signature
The Profit Share

The mutt's nuts or the dog's drivel? I double dare you to leave a comment! :-)

Increase Your Conversion Rate in Five Steps

Double Your Online Revenue In Nine Months

So you’ve mastered driving traffic to your site and you now have hundreds of unique users coming arriving on your landing page — congratulations! Now imagine those same users bringing in 100% more revenue.

While working in the lead generation business, I was constantly faced with the challenge of increasing revenue.

Through a process of testing and measuring, I was finally able to measure and determine exactly what the audience was looking for and turn more visitors into buyers. How can you get double the number of conversions you are right now, without bringing any new visitors to the site? Just follow the below steps to find out how to increase conversion rate 100% in nine months, investing only 30 minutes per day.

Measure the Conversion Funnel

Almost every commercial lead generation or e-commerce site has seven funnel steps: Suspects, Visitors, Leads, Subscribers, Prospects, Clients and Evangelists. Our conversion rate optimization tool empowers you to review each step and determine exactly what you need to do to maximize your efficiency in each step. The first step is to convert more of your visitors into leads. 

Website Conversion Rate Funnel

It is important to know your current conversion rate before you start making any changes. The conversion rate of a website is calculated by dividing the number of unique visitors by the number of customers earned through your site.  If you have 1000 visitors and 15 buy your ebook, then you conversion rate is 1.5%. Each individual step in the funnel image above has it own conversion rate. Fiind out what it is and write it down. Improve each of the five steps just 15% and you double your conversion rate and the revenue it produces.

Compound Improvements in Five Steps

You might think that 100% is an insurmountable challenge, but there actually only five ways to improve your website. Improve each one just 15% and the compounded effect results in a doubling of your conversion rate, since each step will have an impact on the next step.

Five Area’s of Improvement

  1. Use your content to turn your site visitors into leads
  2. Convert leads to readers that take the desired action
  3. Increase the number of legitimate sales prospects
  4. Close deals on prospects and turn them into clients
  5. Make your clients happy and turn them into referrals or even evangelists.

Step 1: Make Leads out of Visitors

For a blog or ecommerce site, it is sometimes hard to imagine the lead phase since there is not always a contact made. Leads can be defined as engaged users that are actively looking at your content. To measure the engagement in our testing tool, we look at a variety of different metrics: bounce-rate (people leaving before visiting any other page), activity (clicks on images, links and text) and pageviews. So if a user clicks on a page, stays longer then 10 seconds and visits two or more pages you can call him an engaged user. If you do not have access to this detail of your data, just focus on decreasing bounce-rate or increasing pageviews.

How to increase engagement?

  • Encourage feedback and respond to it quickly, using comments and forums
  • Use a lot of images on overview pages to stimulate click-troughs to deeper content
  • Use the search-box entries to create new content targeted to your users

When users engage, it is very likely they will come back, remember you or proceed to the next step –  the action you want them to take. Since they left their opinion, they start feeling like part of a community instead of an anonymous website.

Step 2: Call-to-Action

The next 15% must be coming from the lead taking action towards the revenue goal. This is done by creating a clear call to action and making changes in the layout to remove clutter and alternative actions. Ways to set a clear call-to-action:

  • Using a different background color for a subscription form
  • A clear and large button
  • Reducing the amount of options (remove social buttons, newsletter sign-ups to location when you want them to click on “Add to cart.”
  • Reducing the amount of colors used. Remember that the visitor will get distracted fast if you use lots of color.

Reducing the options

Reducing the amount of options is almost always a winning change. The example below is from Audio Edition that saw 67.4% improvement on the sign-up page by removing a lot of the options on the page. In this test the company removed all of the left and right side elements that were referring to discount plans, newsletters, contact methods, bookmarking and the ever-popular top 10 searches. 

A/B Test to increase conversion rate

Step 3: Increasing Prospects

In the above example, the call-to-action form that visitors fill out to request a catalog solicits enough information to qualify the person as a sales prospect. The next stage is using this information to to satisfy the user’s needs at every stage of the process to the sale. Now that you know the prospects name and email address, you can use an automated email system to follow up with the contact regularly and nurture the contact through the process.

Lead nurturing works by offering small pieces of actionable information to determine the stage of the person in the buying process. What that means is that you don’t want to overload the prospect with too much information. The best method is to send a simple message giving the prospect three options: 

  1. Read more about our company
  2. Compare products side by side
  3. Request a price-lists

Most marketing automation systems can monitor and report on the links clicked in the email. That way, you can move each person up or down in your lead nurturing funnel. Everyone that clicked link three and is interested in the price list, for instance, moves to the prospect phase and the rest will get more automated emails until they are ready for the pricing and sales information.

Step 4: Close the Deal

While closing the deal is not always easy, there might be competitors out there that have great offers and a good pricing scheme. But what if instead of competing against the competition, you started competing within your own product range. For example, you could offer three or four versions of your product to fit everyone’s budget and take the sale.

Reedge pricing page example for conversion rate optimization

I designed our own Reedge pricing page and used it as the basis for a blog-post about the anatomy of pricing pages. The basics of competing against yourself are:

  • Offer multiple plans starting with a very affordable plan and ending with a significantly higher one at the end. In our product set, the prices range from $29 USD for the basic plan all the way up to $499 USD for the agency plan, making the first plans look like a bargain.
  • Super-sizing is another well-know strategy. The user selects a plan and before checking out gets an additional offer. The extra large soda and french-fries for only 50 cents, wow! This up-selling works almost everywhere, but be careful to only do it once and before the checkout is complete.
  • Trust elements like referrals, security logos and credit card logo’s always help the conversion rate. Other trust elements can be your full address, a photo of the team behind the site or service, a phone-number, privacy policy and terms-of-use links on the checkout page.

Step 5: Turn Clients to Evangelists

This is the moment where we add social elements like the Twitter buttons and Facebook ‘Like’ options. This is the perfect phase for clients to give you love and praise, since they now know you, your product and when they are happy about the product or service you offer, they are more than happy to Tweet a little love about your company.

On all other locations though, except your blog, social buttons can actually harm you conversion rate. By proving your social links, you are offering an escape, a way out of the difficult decision of signing-up to this service. It’s not uncommon for pages linked to banners and ads (landing pages) to have no menu, no link to the main site and only a form to fill out. Visitors basically have only two options — completel the form or leave. It’s proven that removing choices can increase conversion significantly.

Most companies do not thank their clients in any meaningful way. A default note from our shopping cart is hardly noticed, but a hand written note (like this one from Grasshopper.com) can actually go viral when done standard with every new client.

100% Conversion Increase

When you read how easy it is to increase 15% in each phase, you almost wonder why this has not been promoted more. Site operators can follow these simple steps and make a considerable improvement, but for some reason, the “experts” don’t find it very interesting to write about, since they’d rather report on the latest technology trend or online tool.

If you’re interested in learning more, visit blogs like abtests.com and whichtestwon.com and you will learn something amazing every week. When you are ready to test what will work for your website Sign up for a free trial of Reedge.