Who I am…. for now at least
Not long after starting this blog and becoming engrossed with social media and all things analytics, I posted an article "Who are you...at this moment?". I looked at four social media profiling tools that gave you a rating or personality based on the information that you have posted, tweeted, shared, etc.
1) Persona
2) Twanalysis
3) Yahoo Mojo
4) Twitalyzer
As the end of the year is nearing, I wanted to go back and run these test again and compare the results from August to see how much my online profile/personality has changed since then.
Save the referrals!
I ran across an interesting question on the yahoo web analytics group.
Paraphrased: If you have a short easy to share/print/send email like www.mysite.com/cool and that redirects to the user to a long ungangly url like www.mysite.com/much/longer/url/to/get/customer/to/admit/that/ie6/is/thedevil.htm. What happens to the referrer data/info?
Short answer? Most likely it is lost and your redirect will strip out that precious referrer data. But, it does not have to depending on how you have your redirects set up.
For this example lets assume that you use a common redirect folder called "redir" . So when you print or create a short easy to share email for your new campaign you want to sent out or shared.
www.site.com/redir/ie6isthedevil
And when a user types this in, or clicks on the link from an email they get taken to
www.site.com/its/true/ie6/is/the/devil.ftw
However, as the question above highlights, the referrer data from page to the short url is lost. Fortunately, this fix to this is easy. On the page that contains the actual redirect code, place this JavaScript in place.
<script language="javascript"> document.url = document.referrer; </script> . ..... (redirect code in language of choice)
It merely copies the referrer data into the DOM URL object on the redirect page to pass it along to the long final url. Then all of your web analytic tracking code will function as expected. (I tested this in Omniture & Google Analytics)
That's it!
-Rudi
Form Abandonment
NOTE: The code samples below are merely a proof of concept. This solution is not actively in place in any production environmetn that I am involved with.
I was talking to a fellow ColdFusion developer about a web site he was working on, specifically a registration form, and what were some of the best practices with form length and such that would facilitate users filling out the form and submitting. This is a common issue with web sites that will not be going away anytime soon. In fact the questions he had are the same ones I have seen in dozens of blog posts trying to figure this out.
- How many questions to put on a form?
- What type of questions work the best?
- What question(s) scared off a user and kept them from completing the form?
I know that there are a few "Form Abandonment" plug-ins out there for Omniture and the likes, but from what I've seen the data you get is somewhat limited. If your form has 20 elements on it and the plug-in only lets you know what the last element with focus was, you have to really think about the validity of that data. How do you know for sure that the user filled out the elements in order? Did the developer of the form set the tab index correctly? Did the user glance at the form, click somewhere near the bottom and then bail? Did the user fill out half the form the shut down the browser?
Omniture Developer User Group
Hey folks,
I wanted to let folks know about the Omniture Developer User Group that has started on Meetup.com. (http://www.meetup.com/OmnitureDevelopers)
The purpose of the group is to provide a region agnostic user group for those involved on the developer / integration side of web analytics. Please join up and be on the lookout for regional meetings as well as virtual-web-ex style presentations as well.
Our goal is to bring together the most serious web analytics and marketing optimization developers and innovators. We'll focus on discussing ideas and disseminating knowledge of how to innovate on top of the Omniture suite of products. Whether you're an established software provider, garage-based innovator, or junky who develops innovations while working at your day job, we're looking for you to share your perspective and create the next great marketing optimization products.
-Rudi
Pathing: Internal Search Analysis. (not just for page views)
When I was at the Omniture training class a few weeks back, the instructor mentioned that an advantage of storing the internal search terms in a s.prop was that you could get pathing enabled on the s.prop and you would then be able to see not only what your visitors were searching on, but how they refined their search.
Note: After you choose which s.prop you are going to use to store/capture the data in, you will need to contact Omniture Client Care to get pathing enabled for that s.prop

Where does your path take you?


