Web Analytics Overview
Web Analytics Overview
Abstract
This chapter of Using Web Analytics in the Library provides an overview of Web Analytics, the types of services available, and the type of data that they can provide.
e live in an age of accountability. For libraries, that means it is no longer enough just to inform our stakeholders that the work we do is worthwhile, is good for the community, and is a responsible use of the taxpayers (or owners) money. Instead, we must justify our services, from both financial and logistical points of view. Librarians must operate with a return on investment mindset, learning to demonstrate value offered for both public and private dollars. At the same time, we have been shifting to a userfocused paradigm for the past decade. While our traditional way of conducting business has been one-directional, where we have made decisions for programs and services based on our own professional perspectives, we have recently become aware of the value of listening to patrons and of crafting programs and services based in large part on their input. With the growth of social networking tools being a major facilitator of societal change, users have become partners in numerous aspects of libraries daily operations. Nowhere is this more evident than in the librarys digital branch,1 or its Web presence. The library website has become vital as a community outreach tool and as an ongoing source of information to its users. However, rather than a one-directional, electronically posted version of a flyer or newsletter, the contemporary website is truly a place of community interaction among its users. The website can extend the services available at the brick and mortar library and
offer a diverse set of interactive tools such as book discussions, live chat, print resources for download, video instruction and support for research, and blogs that invite user participation. All of these initiatives heighten engagement among the community. Thus librarians are faced with the challenge of creating innovative tools in a changing society, while at the same documenting responsible use of our resources. In addition, we want to demonstrate within our own organizations that our website is constantly responding to trends and user needs. Finding tools to assist with these challenges is essential. Web analytics is just such a tool.
Web analytics is a process through which statistics about website use are gathered and compiled electronically. An analytics program can be used as a tool to help you get to know your userswho they are, where they are coming from, and how they use your site. Ultimately, having access to information about your users helps you to make appropriate decisions about your site, whether those decisions apply to major redesigns of your site or to ongoing tweaking and minor changes reflective of shifts in customer usage or in your own current programs and services. The origins of web analytics are from commercial website design, where tracking users behaviors and actions directly relates to consumers purchasing behavior. However, web analytics can be just as valuable for a nonprofit website as for an e-commerce site. One approach is to monetize your website goals, applying a dollar figure to certain activities such as user visits or online program registrations. Essentially,
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however, librarians should simply translate the theories of profit-based customer usage into the goals and situations that are specific to your organization. No matter the kind of organization, the website should seek to understand the visitors experience and be responsive to their needs.
feedback about their website visit. The answers to these questions will provide you with a wealth of information and will put your analytics data in context. For a more intensive user feedback project, consider a formal usability study. Two books by Steve Krug are wonderfully helpful in introducing both the purpose and the execution of user studies: Dont Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability and Rocket Surgery Made Easy.3 Another excellent tool is Usability Testing for Library Websites: A HandsOn Guide, by Norlin and Winters.4 Each of these tools can help you get familiar with a process whereby you observe actual users in real time trying to complete tasks on your website. The information you gather is invaluable in learning about user behavior, and the observations (often surprising) provide critical information for web designers.
Occams Razor
www.kaushik.net/avinash
Kaushiks enthusiasm for web analytics is contagious. Its difficult to read his books, read his blog, or watch any of his numerous web instruction videos without also becoming passionate about web analytics. But one of Kaushiks overriding philosophies about web analytics is that the raw data tells only a portion of the story: the what. To get at the why, and even the how, you must get into the mindset of the user. As Kaushik says, you must ask them (the users), using methods such as electronic surveys, focus groups, and user testing. One method of asking for users feedback is to automatically direct users to an online survey, using a tool such as SurveyMonkey or Zoomerang. Kaushik writes that three open-ended questions are enough: 1. What was the purpose of your visit to our website today? 2. Were you able to complete your task today? 3. If . . . not, why not?2
SurveyMonkey
www.surveymonkey.com
Zoomerang
www.zoomerang.com
If the visitors can compete your survey in just a few short minutes, they are much more likely to offer you
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example, finding out what your Polish language users are seeking). Slight discrepancies in the numbers are normal and should not be considered worrisome.
Unique visits and returning visits: The unique visits metric indicates the number of visits to your site by different users, while returning visits indicates users who return from at least one previous visit. Since return visits are measured by cookies, users who turn off cookies will be counted as unique rather than return visitors. This is an example of how the metrics numbers may not be 100 percent accurate. Obviously you want to have an increasing number of visitors over time, but in general website visits will trend upward, and this fact alone will not give you a lot of actionable insights. Partner this metric with other information, such as increasing numbers of return visits to the YA blog when the YA librarian makes more frequent entries, demonstrating increased engagement with the target community. Bounce rate: This metric counts visitors who left your site after visiting only one page. A high bounce rate is often considered undesirable, and you will see this assumption in the literature. However, bounce rate is another example of a metric that should be compared to the actual page. If visitors are finding exactly what they want when they land on a page in your site, either at the opening page or some other file within the site, they may indeed leave after viewing only that individual page. A high bounce rate for e-commerce would be considered bad since the customer did not continue to browse and eventually make a purchase. In information websites, analysis of bounce rate is more complex. Visitor information: Many metrics can give you insights about your users, including geographic location, browser used, operating system used, and what path they took through your site. The more you know about your visitors, the more you can adapt your site to meet their needs. For example, if you find that many people are using mobile devices to view your site, you will know that designing for mobile interfaces should be a priority for your web development team. When getting started, concentrate on a few effective metrics for your own site and follow those. As you build experience and confidence with those metrics, you will begin to add more dimension to your analysis. Start small, as the amount of data can be absolutely overwhelming unless approached with planning. Web analytics need not be an in-house example of information overload.
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analytics field in the last decade. Google launched its free tool, Google Analytics, in 2006, and the field has continued to boom since then. Many commercial tools exist, including Coremetrics, Adobes Omniture, and WebTrends.7 Open source tools are also available, including Piwik, which is billed as an open source alternative to Google Analytics. Google Analytics has become an extremely popular tool among libraries, due not only to its tremendous power, but also to its free availability, its ease of use, its flexibility, and its clear reporting mechanisms. This report will use Google Analytics as a model for library implementation. The various chapters of the report will look at details of the Google Analytics program, how to install and set up the program for your own library, and how to interpret the reports. Individual case studies from libraries will show real-world examples of Google Analytics in use, where librarians have used Google Analytics to help them better understand their users website behaviors and understand how they can continually improve their customers website experience.
Piwik
http://piwik.org
Harmon, discusses at length the issue of nonprofit organizations struggle with website end-users privacy. Ultimately Harmon concludes that clear communication with the sites users from the outset is the best approach. When TechSoups own website added Google Analytics, the leaders posted an entry to their blog explaining the role of analytics in their overall communication strategy, the potential implications of adding the analytics tool, and clear reasons for their decision. Harmon quotes library consultant Jessamyn West as saying, Have good reasons [for using web analytics]. If you dont have good reasons, that sends the message that you really havent thought about the implications of these tools.8 If you dont already have a privacy policy for your website, beginning to use an analytics program is an excellent time to move this to the top of your priority list. A privacy statement should include information for your visitors about what personal data they may be asked to provide, either as registered users or as guests, what information may be collected without their explicit knowledge (such as their geographic location), how you will store and use the information, and what third parties (such as the analytics program host) may have access to it.9 Finally, you will also want to offer your users clear instructions of how they might opt out of as much as the data collection as possible.
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will be gathering statistics. That code in turn communicates with the users page by sending it a cookie, or tracking code, when it visits your site. (See chapter 2 for more technical information about how GA works.) All data collected and then reported with GA, however, is in aggregate and anonymous form.10 In addition, as mentioned above, the company requires adherence to its own privacy policy for all clients of its analytics tool. The privacy statement is issued as part of its Terms of Service agreement and imposes strict limits on GA clients in regards to third-party access to collected data. GA clients must also agree to post and abide by a clear privacy policy of their own, informing their website visitors of the presence of the analytics tracing program and use of cookies.11 See the GA Terms of Service for more information. In addition, Clifton offers a sample Best Practice Privacy Statement When Using Google Analytics.12 Google itself offers a user opt-out tool for some browsers (see http://tools .google.com/dlpage/gaoptout). The link to this optout tool should be posted on your website or within your privacy statement.
Google Analytics Opt-Out Browser Add-On (Beta as of March 31, 2011). http://tools.google.com/dlpage/ gaoptout.
Google Analytics Terms of Service. www.google.com/ analytics/tos.html. Harmon, Elliot. Site Statistics and User Privacy for Nonprofit Websites: Learn the Facts Before You Install Analytics Tools. TechSoup, Oct. 26, 2009. Available online at www.techsoup.org/ learningcenter/webbuilding/page12238.cfm. Accessed March 31, 2011.
. Web Analytics: An Hour a Day. Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, 2007. . Web Analytics 2.0. Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, 2010. King, David Lee. Building the Digital Branch: Guidelines to Transform your Website. Library Technology Reports 45, no. 6 (Aug./Sept. 2009).
Morgan, Joe. Google Analytics for Libraries. Available online at http://josephsandersmorgan.com/home/ web-analytics. Accessed March 31, 2011.
Quinn, Laura S. A Few Good Web Analytics Tools. TechSoup, April 29, 2007. Available online at www .techsoup.org/learningcenter/internet/page6760.cfm. Accessed March 11, 2011. Web Analytics Association. www.webanalytics association.org.
Notes
Library Technology Reports alatechsource.org July 2011
Resources
Clifton, Brian. Advanced Web Metrics with Google Analytics, 2nd ed. Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, 2010. Electronic Frontier Foundation. www.eff.org.
1. David Lee King, Building the Digital Branch: Guidelines to Transform Your Website, Library Technology Reports 45, no. 6 (Aug./Sept. 2009). 2. Avinash Kaushik, The Three Greatest Survey Questions Ever. Occams Razor, April 10, 2007, www .kaushik.net/avinash/2007/04/the-three-greatest -survey-questions-ever.html (accessed March 25, 2011). 3. Steve Krug, Dont Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd ed. (Berkeley, CA: New Riders, 2006); Steve Krug, Rocket Surgery Made Easy (Berkeley, CA: New Riders. 2010). 4. Elaina Norlin and C. M. Winters, Usability Testing for Library Websites: A Hands-On Guide (Chicago: ALA, 2002). 5. Avinash Kaushik, Web Analytics: An Hour a Day (Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, 2007), 15. 6. Avinash Kaushik, Web Analytics 2.0 (Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, 2010), 4. 7. Kaushik, Web Analytics: An Hour a Day, 5.
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8. Elliot Harmon, Site Statistics and User Privacy for Nonprofit Websites, TechSoup, Oct. 29, 2009, www.techsoup.org/learningcenter/webbuilding/ page12238.cfm (accessed March 12, 2011). 9. Ibid.
10. Brian Clifton, Advanced Web Metrics with Google Analytics, 2nd ed. (Indianapolis, IN: Wiley Publishing, 2010), 61. 11. Clifton, Advanced Web Metrics, 6062. 12. Ibid., 63.
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