I got a bit of a wake-up call this week. An event which I thought was a long off is getting closer. The Emetrics summit in Washington DC in October is now only a matter of a few weeks away and the event organiser, Jim Sterne, has been marshalling his speakers.
Jim’s developed the approach for this Emetrics summit into a multi-track format. I’ve been given the job of moderating a track on “The Voice of the Customer” and there’s a great line up of speakers including my fellow ClickZ columnist Jason Burby from Zaaz.
I’m really pleased that there’s this track at the conference. If you have looked at any of my other contributions to this column, you will know that I believe that the “web analytics” world for too long has been too “site centric” and not “customer centric” enough. In other words people tend to focus on too much on the analysis of the site, rather than on the people who are trying to use the site.
The inclusion of this track in the Emetrics summit means that we are going to get exposure on some of the issues, challenges and opportunities of working with surveys and other customer data sources alongside the data collected from web analytics systems. I’m looking forward to it.
Jim’s email giving the speakers their instructions for the event made me start thinking about the whole area again and just what some of those challenges and opportunities are. The opportunities are plenty and pretty obvious. Augmenting your understanding of behaviour on the site by adding additional insights into who your visitors or customers are and what they think gives you both sides of the story. I often say to clients that web analytics data tells you what is going on on your website and survey data often tells you why.
However, despite the many benefits many organisations still think of their data in silos. So what are the challenges to getting a more holistic approach to thinking about how the effectiveness of your online marketing programmes?
I think they probably fall into three main areas:
- Technical challenges
- Competency challenges
- Organisational challenges
The technical challenges are around getting the different data sources to sit next to each other in a way that makes it easier to analyse. This is the data integration challenge and I’ve written about macro data integration and micro data integration in previous articles in this column. The web analytics systems vendors are making it easier for us to be able to integrate survey data in with the site data and this is a good trend. Most of the major vendors now say that they can integrate survey data into their sytems, but do look closely at exactly what they mean by “integration”. One Scandinavian web analytics company, Instadia, has gone as far as making customer surveys an integral part of their product with the ability to write, launch and analyse surveys from within the system. The survey data that is collected is stored in the same database as the visitor’s behavioural data. That’s what I call integration.
Competency and organisational challenges are probably two sides of the same coin. Analysis and reporting of continuous marketing data and the development and analysis of customer surveys are different skill sets. The web analytics industry is probably not mature enough yet for individuals to have had the opportunity to be exposed to survey work before getting involved in web analytics and vice-versa. Typically these may also be separate functions within an organisation. The web analytics data may be owned by the online marketing function and surveys may be owned by the marketing research or consumer insight function. Each function may not be familiar with the other sort of data and so it’s rare that they are brought together.
So lots of challenges and opportunities but things are definitely moving in the right direction. I’m looking forward to hearing the speakers at the Emetrics summit in Washington talking about how they have met those challenges, I’m sure it will be fascinating. I’d also be interested in hearing from you if you have some good examples of how you have successfully integrated web analytics and customer data.
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This entry was posted on 8 Sep 2006 by Neil Mason.
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