How Do I Improve My Web Site Conversion Rate?
Part 2
Recently, I was a presenter in a teleconference for Sean D’Souza’s
16-week MasterClass. People who attended asked about specific problems
they were having and what I would do in their place. In part 1 of this
series I answered the first six questions posed.
In this article, we’ll be looking at measurement software tools,
the pros and cons of logs versus ASP vendors, average conversion rates,
why it helps to track visitor activity using the software which is available
and what you should test and tweak to improve conversion rates.
Question 1
Does it help to track visitor behavior on websites through software?
Yes is the simple answer. No debate is required but I’ll offer
a simple explanation. If you don’t measure, how do you expect to
know what to improve? You can guess and hope you get it right, but if
you have effective tracking software, then you simply have facts in front
of you.
Effective measurement is more than simply having good software though;
it’s analyzing why things happen. One thing we measure is bounce,
the number of people arriving at one page and then leaving without doing
anything. The lower the bounce rate the better, because it means people
are using the site more effectively.
One perfect example comes from a recent client. She had two pages with
different articles on her site with exactly the same navigation left and
centre. Most articles had a bounce rate of about 53%, but one had a better
bounce of about 50% and another had a much worse bounce of around 90%.
We looked at both and found that the one with the 50% bounce was much
more relevant to the reader arriving at the page. It had better and more
relevant links at the bottom of the article than the one with 90%. We
concluded that by being relevant on the poor page in the same way, the
bounce rate would be reduced. We would simply not have known that this
was occurring at all without tracking software. So yes, it most definitely
helps to track visitor behavior.
Question 2
What measurement software tools would you recommend?
We use IRIS Metrics. However apart from IRIS, I would also recommend
browser-based software such as HitBox, WebTrends Live, RedSheriff, and
Omniture. Generally, you get what you pay for. And while these systems
are not cheap, they do provide the level of detail required to run an
effective web campaign.
People have asked me if it’s possible to use webalizer (free log
software) to run an effective web measurement campaign. While it’s
possible to get a lot of useful information from free and cheap systems,
you don’t get path tracking, bounce rates, repeat visitor information,
accurate visitor counts, accurate page counts and loads more information
which is critical if you want to base business decisions on your measurements.
Question 3.
What is the difference between log-based and browser-based measurement?
Tracking tools that rely on server-based measurement are typically programs
that are installed on your web server (by your ISP if your site is hosted)
or installed locally on your PC using the log files taken from the server.
Server-based measurement programs measure activity based on the text files
held on the web server (referred to as log files).
The way that browser-based measurement (or ASP measurement) works is
that information from each browser that visits your website is recorded,
usually in a database, and then the data is manipulated into reports you
can read. Typically, these services ask you to paste some JavaScript code
into your web pages. A cookie is used to determine which user is accessing
the site. This is then tracked on a remote server and you log in to view
the reports.
I recommend the use of ASP measurement because it only measures how people
using a web browser use your website.
The log files record everything visiting your pages. They need a number
of added filters to stop email harvesters, search engines and a variety
of other software generated crawlers or bots from being counted as ‘visitors’;
without them, you can get seriously skewed results. Server access is often
required to get log file filtering right; otherwise, you’re relying
on your ISP to report your tracking correctly. The log files for one of
our clients had 10 times as many page counts and visits recorded than
shown by using an ASP. That’s a 1000% error!
Question 4.
What is an average conversion rate?
This is a very good question and is the topic of serious debate. In other
marketing industries they don’t guess. They have standards that
everyone follows. It’s what’s needed in online marketing before
any real answer can be given. Analytics companies, the big research companies,
and digital media associations are going to have to come together to define
these standards and then people are going to have to follow what is agreed
before accurate numbers can be delivered consistently.
Currently, we’re in the process of trying to establish a worldwide
benchmark with a number of other prominent people (The Web Analytics Association
and the IAB to mention two) in the industry who also want to know the
answer to this question. But meanwhile, here are some statistics we’ve
gathered from different sources published both recently and over the last
few years. I have figures for 3 types of websites: sales (e-commerce),
lead generation, and subscription-based websites.
Generally, sales sites seem to range between a 0.5% and 8% with the average
rate being 2.3% according to FireClick statistics published this year
and figures published in 2003 by e-consultancy.com. In 2000, the average
figure for sales conversion as published by shop.org was 1.8%. The high-end
figures, I hasten to add, are the top e-tailers according to all sources.
My own experience shows sites hitting between .5% and 5.3% so this seems
to correlate with the published figures. Of course since there is no defined
standard, these numbers have to be taken as a rule of thumb.
The only source we have for lead generation sites is e-consultancy.com.
They quote 2-3% of users completing an optional or free registration process,
with 5% being best in class. Our own experience again falls within the
same ballpark.
Subscriptions to sale conversion is typically between 1 and 7% again
the source is e-consultancy.com
We don’t have figures for visitor to subscription conversion, but
our own experience with clients has been between 1 and 8%. Our own site
has consistently hit 15% for 6 months though the traffic is pretty well
targeted and our methods very well tested.
Question 5.
How do you go about consistently improving conversion?
This is the million dollar question. What it really boils down to is
treating web marketing as a science. We do it by consistently measuring
how people use a website. Over time you will learn what works and what
doesn’t and stop wasting your time on the things that don’t
work.
First we look at the technical aspect of the website. It’s amazing
how many people overlook and ignore thousands of people who don’t
use Windows XP with Internet Explorer at a screen resolution of 1024x768.
First make sure that you develop something that works for everyone.
One of the next areas we look at is where the traffic comes from. It
allows you to concentrate your efforts on your best chance of generating
converting traffic. Then we get into reducing the average website bounce
rate. The lower the average bounce, the higher the number of people surfing
your website and seeing the value of your offer. The higher the number
who see your offer, the better the chance of a sale. Checking bounce rates
also usually brings up some juicy problems to be solved.
Then look at testing and improving copy and graphical content, running
split tests and measuring bounce rates on copy or simply testing the click-through
on links. We do much more, but the basic premise is this: test and measure,
follow up with experimentation, and then with more testing and more measuring.
Sounds like science class doesn’t it?
Summary
In part three of this series of articles we’ll be looking at where
traffic arrives from and how that effects conversion, specific search
engine queries, PPC issues and other general topics. To summarize, I am
suggesting that if you begin to scientifically measure and improve your
websites based on facts and findings, not guesswork and theory, you will
begin to improve your conversion rates.
Click here to read part
three >
Article by Steve Jackson, Aboavista.
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