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Track or Perish
Copyright 2004, John Gergye
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Who me? Track?
Now I realize some turn a blind eye towards tracking results on
their site. Either preferring to look the other way or perhaps
asking Stevie Wonder to watch over it for them. Because
apparently their attitude is if they've got money coming in,
well, how bad can it be?
Dunno. And if you don't want to maximize the cash flow from
your site I suppose that's between you and Stevie.
But if you're not tracking what's working on your site, you're
flying blind. Maybe even leaving serious money on the table.
Because how can you improve if you have nothing to compare to?
Sorry for the heavy dose of reality. But remember this. You
can have more traffic than Google but if it doesn't convert what
good is it?
Take for example that hot site that streams a hilarious cartoon
poking fun at John Kerry and George W Bush. It was created
by two brothers who happened to be on Jay Leno the other night.
They revealed to Jay they had had 20 million hits to their site.
The brothers also confessed their plan to accept donations to
support their work generated all of, you ready for this, $1000!
You read that right. 20 million hits converted into all of
$1000 in cold…hard…cash.
How much traffic did they waste? My guess? Tons. So as you
can see traffic isn’t always the answer.
Now before I trip the Digression Alarm Buzzer, by tracking I
mean monitoring various conversion rates for key pages on your
site. In order of importance here's what you want to track.
=====> Sales Pages
Since sales letters are where the rubber meets the road for sure
you want stats for them. How many unique visitors hit such
pages every day? Of those how many convert? Divide the
second number by the first and you've got your conversion rate.
Pretty simple right? Depending on your price point, anything
less than 1% is probably unsatisfactory.
Watching the day to day conversion fluctuation isn't necessarily
the best use of your time. But monitoring that on a week to
week basis might be. As any downward trend might indicate
problems ahead.
=====> Affiliate Product Review Pages
Assuming you sell affiliate products, either as an add on or
your primary profit producer, again you want to see which ones
best convert to sales.
Those that are your best sellers, like your top 10 to be
completely uncreative, you might feature prominently on your
home page. Spend time optimizing their pages. Link to them
from other internal pages of your site to get each some PR and
link rep to help it rank higher.
Products that don't convert as well you can let ride, demote in
terms of emphasis on your site or eliminate altogether.
=====> Special Pages
That might be your ezine sign up page. Maybe the auto responder
course you offer in exchange for an email address page. Or any
sort of activity that can lead to sale - THAT you want to track.
For instance the page on my site that falls into this category
is the quiz page that shows in the sig file below.
I like to see how many unique visitors stop by. I know how many
took it. Again I calculate the percent of conversion. I
continually try to make it as inviting as possible so as many as
possible take it.
=====> Content Pages
No need for anything fancy here. You may just want to see which
are the most popular pages on your site.
Why? Perhaps you can get clues for future products. Or two,
you could always slip in a mention plus a link to your sales
letter from the popularity contest winners. Might as well bring
it up and suggest visitors stop by, no?
Now you can track a number of ways. There are some commercial
programs that are quite robust.
But I use a $45 cgi script - Prolinkz. <http://prolinkz.com> And
don't worry it's super simple to install.
So as not to be accused of flogging a product let me simply say
all you do is stick a 1 by 1 pixel on the page you want track,
set up a unique tracking code for that page and Prolinkz does
the rest. No muss. No fuss.
Anyway, continuous improvement is the way to better than average
success. Online or off. Tracking is how you get there. And if
you don't track? you risk perishing. Because how can you
improve what you don't measure?
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The article on this page is Copyright © 2004, John Gergye
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Article Marketing Tips:
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- Stand out from the crowds. Educate your prospects and they will turn to you for more knowledge. When they turn to you for more, they will visit your website. It is up to your website copy to sell your products, NOT your article. Provide great information and at your website, address how the prospect will benefit from what you are offering. Using these things in conjuction will help your cash register to ring.
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