Archive for the ‘Google Analytics Help’ Category

2 Undervalued X-Cart Mods for Boosting X-Cart Profits

Monday, December 7th, 2009

As an X-Cart store owner you know there are a wide range of third party mods available to help improve your business performance.  Today we will cover two profit-boosting X-Cart Mods that you might not be familiar with. I will cover each mod individually:

X-Cart Mod #1: Follow-up Autoresponder for X-Cart by Magnetic One

Did you know it cost 6 times as much to sell something to a new customer than a current one?   Did you also know that 68% of all business lost is lost from apathy after the sale?

The follow-up autoresponder prevents you from becoming victim of those statistics and helps boost your profits in several ways.

WHAT IT DOES:

The follow-up autoresponder allows you to send pre-written e-mails, automatically, to your customers “X” number of days after they place a sale, fill out a contact form, or completes a custom action you define.

There are all types of macros available at your disposal including the item(s) they ordered, customer information (name, address, etc) and even recommendations based on what the customer already ordered.

HOW THIS BENEFITS YOU:

In addition to increased sales there can be other key benefits: testimonials & customer feedback.

Many times customers will respond to your e-mails because if designed correctly, they should look and feel like a personal e-mail written directly by you.

These responses are invaluable in their use as testimonials (ask permission first), better customer inisight, and the opportunity to amend a problem that they might have never contacted you about (or used your business again!).

Example:

Let’s say you are selling laptops.  With the follow-up responder you can create a campaign (this should tie into your Marketing Plan) along the lines of:

Email 1: Thank You
Email 2: Checking in & Software Recommendation
Email 3: 10 Laptop Tips & Ram Upgrade Recommendation

Here you have a three touch follow-up.  The first e-mail you send goes out 15 days after their order is shipped and expresses your genuine thanks for their business and ordering “laptop” (which the follow-up responder will enter the exact laptop they ordered).  You can also state that you hope their expectations were met and if they need anything not to hesitate in contacting you.  Finally you will want to add a note that you will check in on them in two weeks (or three, etc).  For bigger impact the signature should be from the president if possible.

The second e-mail is where you again thank them for their business and check in on their satisfaction.  In this e-mail you can lightly suggest that other customers who bought “laptop” also enjoyed the following software items to greatly increase their productivity so I thought I’d share them with you.

Your final e-mail should include some relevant, HELPFUL content about their new laptop and then possibly recommend a RAM upgrade if they are looking for more performance (or maybe a new mouse, etc).

As you can see the ability to highly target and speak directly to your customers opens the revolving door of profitable, repeat business.  Some planning coupled with the power of technology goes a long way.

X-Cart Mod#2: Multiple Product Templates Package for X-Cart

Testing, testing, testing.  I’m sure you have heard of the value of testing important elements throughout your site with something like Google Website Optimizer. The Multiple Product Templates package for X-Cart is a great mod for making integration much easier.  It also allows you display your product(s) in their best possible vantage point.

WHAT IT DOES:

The Muliple Product Templates Packages for X-Cart lets you create different layouts for each of your products and categories.  This is done by allowing multiple “product.tpl”‘ files for each product you want a custom template for.  Same thing with categories.

HOW THIS BENEFITS YOU:

As mentioned above this mod is the trick to using Google Website Optimizer successfully.  In addition you get to present your product(s) in the best way possible instead of having them all squeeze into one “template” for a more personal experience with your customers.

Example:

Let’s continue with the computer store from above.  Perhaps they have a ‘Desktops’ category and a ‘Laptop’ Category.  For the desktops they want to display products in a 3 column format and for laptops, their site specialty, they want the single column format with the short description.  Multiple Product Templates Package makes this possible.  They could also use different size thumbnails on the desktops category and laptop category.

As you can see the range is quite broad at both the category level and product level.  This customization allows you to answer the individual questions your customers have about each product group and category, without over-cluttering your product pages by having them on the same “product.tpl” file.

I think the reason many people may not have this mod is its difficulty to explain properly – especially if you are not doing the web designing aspect of X-Cart yourself.  WebsiteCm has a 14 day return policy so you can try it out first hand to get a better picture if needed.

Raise Profits By Utilizing Google Analytics Tagging

Thursday, October 1st, 2009

Are you one of the thousands of e-commerce store owners losing valuable marketing insights because you aren’t tagging links in Google Analytics?? Not even sure what tagging links is? This is especially important for you, read on:

What You Can Learn from John

I’m going to tell you a story about e-commerce store owner John and e-commerce store owner Chris. Both John and Chris decided to invest heavily in online marketing for their stores through several channels: comparison shopping engines (Shopping.com, Shopzilla, etc), Pay-per-click engines (AdWords, MSN, Yahoo) and some in-house e-mail specials to voluntary subscribers.

John is interested in measuring the performance of each channel while Chris simply hopes these campaign generate sales. Because John wants to be successful he is tagging all of his links so he can more closely monitor the campaigns performances in Google Analytics.

Tagging Links Pays Dividends to your Campaigns

Because he tagged all his links John discovers after the first month that Shopzilla generated heavy traffic but no sales and AdWords, Shopping.com and MSN all lead to several orders. Yahoo didn’t generate any sales but did lead to several e-mail opt-ins which he is tracking under Goal 2. Armed with this information John decided to stop using Shopzilla, and instead allocated those marketing funds towards AdWords, Shopping.com and MSN.

Chris is not tagging his links so he is unable to evaluate each channels performance like John was and spends the same amount each month on every channel. He doesn’t know that his money to Shopzilla is going down the toilet!

Don’t want to be like Chris? I didn’t think so!

What is Link Tagging in Google Analytics?

In short link tagging is adding special characters to the end of your URLs that will allows you to identify the traffic that uses it. You can easily tag your links with Google’s URL Toolbuilder. Google will ask you to specify the following things for tagging (three are required):

Campaign Source (referrer: google, msn, shopping.com)
Campaign Medium
(marketing medium: cpc, ppc, email, banner)
Campaign Term (identify paid keywords here for Yahoo and MSN) optional
Campaign Content (used to differentiate between two competing ads) optional
Campaign Name (product, slogan, date)

To continue with our example John is preparing to tag his links for a Shopping.com feed he will be using. He decides to enter the following:

Campaign Source: shopping
Campaign Medium: ppc (since he is paying her click he is labeling it as ppc)
Campaign Term: not used
Campaign Content: not used
Campaign Name: q42009fx (this is his internal campaign tracking code).

Entering these variables in the Google URL builder with the page www.johnswebsite.com/product1.html he would end up with:

http://www.johnswebsite.com/product1.html ?utm_source=shopping&utm_medium=ppc&utm_campaign=q42009fx

All set! In Excel for his shopping feed he could quickly append ?utm_source=shopping&utm_medium=ppc&utm_campaign=q42009fx to all the product urls and have everything tagged.

What Does Link Tagging Actually Do?

When a link is tagged that means it will show up in Google Analytics under the variables you specified. So John would see the following if he looked at his Traffic Sources -> All Traffic Sources report after receiving traffic from these links:

Link Tagging Google Analytics Example

This gives John the ability to monitor his traffic quality from Shopping.com: bounce rates, time on site, revenue, conversion rate, etc. Since everything is tagged he can easily view all channels performance to compare and contrast as illustrated from the earlier example.

What Should You Tag?

Almost everything! Here is a list to get you started (by no means exhaustive)

Shopping Engines
Google Base
Yahoo Paid Search
Bing Paid Search
E-mails (newsletters, blasts, signature links, etc)
Forum banners
Direct Mail Campaigns (using a vanity url with .htaccess redirect)

Tag, track and review your campaigns at least quarterly – if not monthly, for optimal profits. Good luck!

Play 1: Discover What is Working and What Isn’t

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

In order to have a successful holiday season online you need to first review what has worked (and what didn’t) up to this point. That means we need to take a good hard look at your analytics data.

Why Analytics?

Analytics is an integral key to online success – without it you might as well close up shop now. Yes, it is that important. Let me make it clear: IT IS THAT IMPORTANT.
What exactly is analytics? Well, it has many definitions depending on who you ask but for this post we will define it simply as:

The proper collection, reporting and review of visitor interactions throughout your website to improve performance & satisfaction.

What does analytics tell you?

From a top level view:
1. What is working in your business, website & message
2. What isn’t working in your business, website & message

When you ask the right questions and use the right analytics tools you quickly discover:

1. Why your AdWords or PPC campaigns are having trouble
2. Where your most valuable customers are coming from (and how to get more)
3. What online advertising channels are wasting your money
4. How your e-mail campaigns measure up and what to improve
5. What landing pages are working and the ones that need immediate help

And much more.

What analytics tools should you be using?

Well there are quite a few out there but I will touch briefly on several that I have used and work well:

Google Analytics – Well known as the best free in-depth analytics tool with many powerful features including AdWords linking, motion charts and custom reports just to name a few! X-cart has an option for enabling this so be sure that is turned on. Unfortunately that doesn’t really cover it – if you want to ensure your coverage just request your Free 7-Point Analytics Audit Report.

Web Logs – Your web logs provide a great source of data but you need to use a good log analyzer to really uncover the important stuff. Web log storming is a great tool and I’m sure there are some good free ones out there.

Statcounter.com – Great ‘hit counter’ resource. Statcounter shows you (in somewhat real time) each visitor and what they clicked on. Helps you quickly uncover any error pages or problems with your site. They have a free and paid version. (You can’t track HTTPS pages with the free version).

ClickTale.com – Lets you see your visitors’ mouse movements like you were at their computer! Their javascript tag captures visitor interaction on your site and plays it back as a movie so you can see how they moved around your site. Great for evaluating landing pages and overall usability. They offer both a free version and paid.

Crazyegg.com – Crazy egg is a ‘lighter’ version of clicktale in that it shows you where users clicked (even if it is not a link – great for discovering things visitors mistake as clickable) and generates heatmaps based on this data.

That covers collecting & reporting but those two alone won’t improve your website. You need to review your data. This can be difficult at first and you can definitely fall prey to information overload – but we will try to sidestep that.

Reviewing Your Analytics Data

The most important concept to grasp with analytics is to ask questions. You need to become a master detective that would put Sherlock Holmes to shame if you wish to generate more sales. Use the data to try and answer those questions. The more specific your question – the more actionable you can be on that data. Let’s do an example:

Question: What is my conversion rate?
Answer: .75%. This doesn’t help us much yet. It is safe to say that whatever this number is you want to improve it, so let’s ask a more specific question.

Question: What is my organic traffic conversion rate?
Answer: .50%. Now we are getting somewhere – this tells us right away that something needs to be investigated with your organic traffic because the conversion rate is 50% lower than your sites average.

This will lead us to another question

Question: What are the individual search engine conversion rates?
Answer:
Google: .10%
Bing: .70%
Yahoo: .70%

Holy cow what is going on with my Google traffic? What keywords are generating the most traffic from Google? What are the top landing pages from Google? Do they match well? – These questions would hone in directly to an actionable problem that you can now address.

Key Takeaway From Play 1

Ask specific questions to uncover what has worked (and what hasn’t) so far in order to build your marketing strategy around this information. At the very least – even if you can’t make use of it or don’t understand your data now you should still be collecting it. That way when you can (or hire someone else who can) analyze your data you have plenty of history to review.

X-Cart Conversion Tracking: 2 Common Misconceptions

Sunday, June 21st, 2009

Tracking X-Cart sales is vital for continued growth of your e-commerce store. In consultations with clients I noticed there are two common misconceptions in regards to tracking sales (hereon referred to as conversions) when using Google AdWords or Google Analytics. Let’s go over these briefly:

Misconception#1: Google AdWords tracking and Google Analytics tracking are the same thing.

Both Google AdWords and Google Analytics use two DIFFERENT methods of capturing and reporting conversions – each which require their own special tracking script installed on your receipt / thank you page.

The Google AdWords Conversion Script (installation instructions available here) is used for reporting conversions in your AdWords Dashboard. The information your AdWords Conversion Script can report is simply:

a.) If there was a sale
b.) Amount of the sale (viewable in your AdWords Reports)

This is important when evaluating your AdWords account performance and will help you build on campaigns that are successful while optimizing or trimming down those that are not.

Google Analytics e-commerce tracking is a powerful reporting script that captures more relevant data – product name(s), shipping revenue, category, product revenue & integrates it throughout your reports. This information is the backbone of your analytics reporting and should be used when evaluating any website or online marketing decisions.

Misconception#2: Successful conversion tracking depends on the X-Cart order status

Google AdWords and Analytics tracking are completely independent of x-carts order processing system. Changing your order status from ‘Processed’ to ‘Complete’ does not update or modify the conversion information for Google AdWords or Analytics.

In order for a conversion to be successfully recorded your visitor MUST visit the ‘Receipt / Thank You’ page since that is where the tracking scripts are stored on your site. If a visitor leaves your site (say to a 3rd party payment processor like PayPal), completes the order – but DOES NOT return to the receipt page of your store after paying that sale will not be counted as a conversion.

For Paypal there is a way to automatically send your customers to the receipt page after completing a transaction. This will help you capture more transactions via Google Analytics (assuming it is properly configured – which it is not out of the box).

To enable this do the following:

1. Login to PayPal and click My Account -> Profile

2. In the right hand column click ‘Website Payment Preferences’

3. Turn on the first option ‘Auto Return’ and in the Return URL place

http://www.YOURDOMAINHERE.com/cart.php?mode=order_message&orderids=

That’s it. Place a test order to verify.

Capture Site Search Terms in X-Cart w/ Google Analytics

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

Tracking your internal site search engine is a great way to optimize your e-commerce store. The standard X-Cart reporting of site search does very little in helping you better analyze your visitor patterns.

You can uncover more actionable data by including Site Search in your Google Analytics reports. For more help on actionable data checkout the Top 5 Actionable Analytics Reports For X-Cart post.

To accurately track internal site search for X-cart (using X-Cart’s standard search engine) you must follow two steps.

NOTE: If you are using Altered Carts Smart Search module you can skip to step 2.

Installation

1. First we must modify the code.

Navigate to skin1/modules/Google_Analytics/ga_code.tpl and replace those contents with the following tpl:

X-Cart ga_code.tpl for Google Analytics Site Search

Be sure to replace UA-XXXXXX-X with your actual Analytics account number.

Save the new file and upload it over the old (after backing up).

 

2. Now login to your Google Analytics account

  • Click the ‘Edit’ link next to your profile and on the next page in the first box click the upper right corner that says ‘Edit’

Edit Instructions

Adjust your Site Search settings so they match below

Site Search Settings for X-CartAll set! To view your new Site Search data navigate to Content->Site Search inside your profile

Navigate to Site Search

Top 5 Actionable Analytics Reports for X-Cart Users

Sunday, June 14th, 2009

Web analytics are an important tool for you to monitor and better understand the performance of your e-commerce store in all aspects – not just sales. It can help increase your bottom line by providing you reports detailing what is working and what isn’t in relation to your marketing efforts.

As an X-Cart store owner you should have a properly functioning Analytics system (X-cart statistics do not count). Not having one is like not having financial reports for your company. You have no way of knowing if your business is successful or in need of dire help!

Because Google Analytics offers more reports than you could possibly need it is easy to become lost and thus end up ‘avoiding’ your reports. To help combat this I have created a list of 5 reports that you can use to improve your website today.

Listed below are the top 5 reports I have used with other clients to help them increase the performance of their stores. This is by no means an exhaustive or ‘best of’ list, but it is meant to help you get started in turning your Google Analytics reports in actionable data for improving your visitor experience.

It is important to note that these reports assume you already have Google Analytics set-up properly and are recording both your visitors & e-commerce transactions as well as proper segmentation & filtering. By default X-cart (up to version 4.2) does not have the correct set-up for the Google Analytics code. If your profile name is ‘www.yourdomainname.com’ then chances are your Google Analytics settings are not optimized either.

Using Google Analytics that is not set-up correctly is like reading a map upside down…you’ll end up somewhere, but nowhere near where you should be! For more information on proper Analytics set-up check out
The Complete Analytics Package for X-cart.

Ok time to start crunching reports, let’s begin!

Top 5 Most Popular Landing Pages1. Top Landing Pages Assessment

To access this report click Content->Top Landing Pages in the left hand column. We are interested in the first 5 results. Take a look at these pages as they’re your websites most popular point of entry. Is it what you expected?

Look at your bounce rates for these pages…are they higher than 50%? If so that is generally an indicator that something is amiss: either in your visitor acquisition strategy or your landing page design – or both.

You should then proceed to click on the link to find more information as to what issues it might be facing. In the example above page 3 might need some attention as its bounce rate is 62.23%. Clicking on that page will take us to more detailed view:

More Details on Top Landing Pages

Now we are getting more information, but don’t quite have anything actionable yet. What we need to do is look at the entrance keywords for this page. That will tell us what keywords brought your visitors to this particular page. Click on the ‘Entrance Keywords’ link in the lower right portion of the page under ‘Landing Page Optimization’.

That will bring up something like this:

Top Keywords for Your Landing Pages

Here we have the list of keywords, both paid and non-paid (you can adjust this by clicking on either link to view on or the other) that visitors typed in and were brought to your page.

Are these keywords all closely related? Do they reflect the content on your landing page in its headline, images and body copy? If not that could explain the high bounce rates and means you should work on optimizing the page to better meet the “scent” your visitors are hunting.

From the report above it looks like the first term – which brings the most traffic – also has the highest bounce rate: 83.33%. In this case it was a result of two issues: first, the client was targeting a very broad keyword which typically will lead to higher bounces and second their headline was not very clear and did not contain this particular keyword.

Using this report from Google Analytics will help you improve the performance of your top high traffic landing pages. Since these are your ‘first impression’ pages it is essential they are operating at their best!

2. Top Traffic Sources Assessment

Top Traffic Sources ReportTo access this report click ‘Traffic Sources -> All Traffic Sources’ in the left hand column – once there be sure to click the ‘E-Commerce’ tab like you see above. This report is telling you the top sources / mediums that sent traffic to your website AND how much revenue each source has generated as well as its e-commerce conversion rate.

Look at your top 5 sources / mediums, is it what you expected? Which of these 5 are generating the highest revenue? Can you expand traffic generated from this source? Why is one greatly outperforming the other?

These are just a few questions you’ll want to start asking about your results. Just like the a Top Landing Pages report you’ll want to click on a link to see more information about that source / medium at which point you can drill down to the keywords those visitors used and landing pages visited to help uncover performance issues.

3. Top Keywords Assessment

Top Keywords Assessment E-Commerce RateTop Keywords Assessment - RevenueYou can view this report by clicking ‘Traffic Sources -> Keywords’ in the left hand menu. You will then need to click the ‘E-commerce tab’ followed by the ‘Comparison’ button on the upper right. Here we see two reports for our top 10 keywords, their e-commerce conversion rate (compared to the site average) and their revenue generated (compared to the site average).

Looking at your reports are your top keywords performing as expected? Using the example above we can see that the number 1 keyword generates a good portion of revenue…but it’s conversion rate is low. We would want to click on that keyword to find out more information as to why that could be. Again we’d look at the same things: top landing pages and sources for this keyword.

Perhaps the highest landing page for this keyword has a high bounce rate – you would want to examine the content and presentation of that page, possibly explore testing new variations to try and lower the bounce rate and increase conversions.

Also, we want to ‘mine’ this list for new converting keywords you might not know about. Clicking on the ‘Table’ view in the upper right corner and then clicking on the ‘Revenue’ column will sort the keywords in order from most revenue generated to none. Carefully eyeball this list (top 50 or so) and see if there are any keywords you are surprised by.

E-Commerce Keywords ReportAre you targeting the successful keywords in your PPC campaigns and SEO efforts? If not it’s something to consider given they’ve already proved they can make the sale!

4. Checkout Process Assessment

Checkout Goal Funnel Google Analytics

You can view this reports by clicking on ‘Goals -> Funnel Visualization’ in the left hand menu. This is a great report because it shows you visually how your checkout process is doing. The only tricky thing about this funnel is that it is very easy to set-up improperly and not know it because it will still show some results. Proper set-up is key!

You will quickly be able to spot errors or problems in your checkout process. Is it too long? If visitors are dropping off at a particular page be sure to examine that page for any problems with assurances, anxiety, length and even technical issues.

From the example above it appears this client has some issues to workout on both the cart and checkout pages. The client was having a sale in which customers had to ‘add to cart’ to see the price which would help explain for some of the drop-offs. They also had their shipping calculator on the cart page so perhaps shipping rates are too high? Maybe the call to action isn’t large or clear enough on the cart page?

These are just a few questions you can start to ask as you examine your checkout process. You may then want to start testing variations of your checkout pages to help fix poorly performing aspects.

5. Site Search AssessmentSite Search Report

You can view this report by clicking ‘Content -> Site Search -> Search Terms’ in the left hand column. This report shows us the top search terms used on your stores internal search engine. This is your visitors TALKING TO YOU! They’re telling you exactly what they want or are looking for on your site so its important you pay close attention to it.

Keep an eye out for non-widget terms such a help, support, instructions, contact, price, etc. which indicate your visitors are having trouble finding information on your site. Looking at the ‘% Search Exits’ column tells you who is leaving immediately after their search (meaning they didn’t see any relevant results). If these search terms are for widgets you don’t offer that may not be cause for alarm (but maybe an opportunity to expand into a new market), but if they are searching for widget you carry and leaving you will want to drill down on the search terms to uncover what is going on.

From the example above it doesn’t appear the site search engine is used a lot, this could be due to poor location or excellent site structure. In this clients case it was the latter. Clicking on the ‘Ecommerce’ tab will show you what (if any keyword) searches resulted in a conversion and is a great way to find new keywords to describe your widget(s) that you might not have thought of!

I hope you found this helpful! For desk reference you can Download the Printable PDF Guide Here