You'd like to be more rational and data-driven in your decision making. You know that your museum has been collecting web traffic metrics using Google Analytics, but you've never fully understood what those reports mean for you or your department. How can you use this popular software to find actionable data that helps you do your job better? In this session you will get a practical tutorial, led by two Google Analytics veterans at the Smithsonian, who will provide an overview of the current Google Analytics, including some of its newest, most powerful features. The presenters will also discuss the step-by-step process for moving beyond measurement just for measurement's sake, using real-life museum case studies as examples.
Presenters: Sara Snyder, Smithsonian American Art Museum; Brian Alpert, Smithsonian Institution.
Presented at the American Alliance of Museums 2016 Annual Meeting & MuseumExpo, 5/27/2016.
2. #musedata
Agenda
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Brian – Google Analytics 101
Analytics Process
GA Basics
Metrics and Dimensions
How GA is organized
How can Google Analytics HELP?
New(ish) Game-Changing Features
Universal Analytics mandatory upgrade
A Few Best Practices
Sara – Real Life Examples
Don’t start with the all the data, start with real life questions
“Is anyone finding this new educational resource that we made?”
“What parts of our website are local visitors viewing mostly on their phones?”
“Do we really need to keep maintaining this old microsite?”
Q&A
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Your goal: use data to tell a story
What was happening.
What it meant.
What you did.
What’s happening
now.
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forbes.com
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There is a systematic, step-by-step process
Articulate your program’s goals.
Decide strategies to achieve
those goals.
Decide tactics to pursue the
strategies.
Decide what and how to measure
to validate the tactics.
Benchmark to get a sense of
what’s normal.
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homedit.com
8. #musedata
Articulate specific goals
Express what you’re trying to
accomplish.
Make high-level goals more
specific:
“Increase influence” - too broad.
“Become the definitive source on
Smithsonian history” - more specific.
Specificity makes it easier to
identify strategies and tactics.
Not too many!
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It’s a Wonderful Life
Start the conversation! Articulate
goals & next steps on your own;
work with management to finalize.
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Determine strategies & tactics
Strategies – the plans you make to achieve the goals.
Employing social media is a strategy.
Tactics – the things you do to advance the strategy.
Producing a specific type of content is a tactic.
Individual channels (facebook, twitter) are tactics.
Per the example:
Goal: “Become the definitive source on Smithsonian history.”
Strategy: Increase engagement with history of the Smithsonian
content.
Tactic: Make SI-history content more findable and measureable.
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Decide how to measure your tactics
Choose measurements to learn
if your tactics are succeeding.
Choose a few measurements.
Trend them over time.
Per the example:
Strategy: increase engagement with
SI history website content.
Tactic: make website history
content more findable /
measureable.
Make a “history-content” segment
and measure for engagement:
Visit frequency
Visit depth
Bounce rate
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History-
related visits
All
visits
“Deep history visits” were 94% higher!
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You can’t set targets w/o benchmarks
You need at least six months of
data.
Data is seasonal.
Depends on your traffic.
Balance targets with factors
beyond your control:
Are the improvements you’re
seeking difficult to achieve?
How much resources will you have
to implement tactics?
Drinks Enthusiast
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Keep it simple!
Don’t do too much!
Minimize the number of
measurements.
If they turn-out to be
inconclusive, change up.
It’s an ongoing process!
arvinddevalia.com
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GA Basics
The most basic thing
Navigating Google Analytics
GA in your world
Army Times
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Dimensions describe the
data, or an attribute of the
user (“what”):
Traffic source
City
Page
Metrics measure the data
(“how many”, “how long”):
Sessions
Bounce rate
Time on page
Lunametrics
Optimizesmart
Dimensions & Metrics Explorer
(Google)
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Optimizesmart
Dimensions Metrics
GA’s familiar
color-coding
helps you
keep track of
Dimensions
and Metrics.
The most basic thing
Dimensions and Metrics
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Navigating Google Analytics
How GA is organized
Home
Searchable list of
all GA accounts
associated with
your Google
Account.
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Navigating Google Analytics
How GA is organized
Admin
Settings for your:
1. Account
2. Property (individual
websites)
3. View (you can setup
different “views” –
with custom filters,
etc.)
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LunaMetrics
Navigating Google Analytics
How GA is organized
These four
sections under
“Reporting”
house most of
the reports.
Audience
Acquisition
Behavior
Conversions
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Improve your program?
Yes! Good for you!
Satisfy your boss with monthly
Big Numbers?
Sure. It is what it is.
Validate (or not) something
you’ve already done.
Um, maybe.
Wikipedia
GA in your world
How can Google Analytics HELP?
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Improve your program!
Segmentation: GA’s most powerful feature?
Analyze subsets of
traffic.
Search engine traffic
Social media traffic
Demographics
Import expert-made
segments from the
Solutions Gallery!
Google Blog
Kissmetrics Overview
Examples (Cutroni)
Examples (Kaushik)
Segments are accessed
by clicking “Add
Segment”. “Organic
Traffic” is shown.
All Users
Organic (Search
Engine) Traffic
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All Visits data tells a nice story...
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Minimal
frequency group
(purple)
downward trend
indicates
improving content
engagement
High frequency
group (blue)
upward trend
indicates same
Impact of this Data on the Site or Program
• This good-looking chart may indicate high content engagement and/or perceived value
• This data may correlate to increasing conversion behaviors
Acting on this Data
• Identify moderate and high loyalty pages as a means of duplicating, or improving others
• Examining conversion behaviors of these segments may yield add'l insights
• Correlating high bounce rate pages to one-time visits may yield add'l insights
• Test different content types in an attempt to move 'minimal' visitors into 'moderate' group
Key Trends
and Insights
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This Impact of this Data on the Site or Program
• Organic search listings are driving poorly-targeted traffic
• Will result in decreased organic search performance over time
Acting on this Data
• Refocus title tags, meta-description tags and page content for important pages
• Perform link analysis to see where other SEO improvements can be made
Minimal
frequency group
upward trend
indicates organic
listings are not
appropriately
targeted
Moderate
frequency group
downward trend
indicates same
High frequency
group trending
slightly downward,
in contrast to
previous chart’s
upward slope
Key Trends
and Insights
…But applying segmentation tells a different story
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Under Audience >> Behavior
Frequency
Recency
Page Depth (“Engagement”)
“New vs. Returning” (e-nor post)
Use with segments:
Traffic from search
Traffic from mobile
Etc.
‘Time on site’ is great, but do not rely
solely on it.
Due to technical issues
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Improve your program!
Metrics as proxies for user engagement
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Create your own reports.
Import custom reports
from the Solutions
Gallery.
Create and manage Custom
Reports (Google)
12 Awesome Custom Reports
Created by the Experts
(Kissmetrics)
3 Awesome, Downloadable,
Custom Web Analytics Reports
(Kaushik)
5 Google Analytics Custom Reports
FTW! (Kaushik)
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Create and access
Custom Reports from
the ‘Customization’ tab.
Improve your program!
Custom Reports can save you time & effort
Custom Reports can be
scheduled for delivery via
email in a variety of
formats.
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A conversion is any measureable behavior
with an implicitly (or explicitly) higher value.
Conversion rates are more informative than
merely counting the number of times
something has happened.
Typical conversion goals:
Destination (ex: thanks.html)
Duration (ex: 5 minutes or more)
Pages/Screens per session (ex: 3 pages)
Event (download PDF, play video)
REQUIRES CODE
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Improve your program!
Deeper understanding with Conversion Goals
Studying conversion rates
levels the playing field,
versus merely counting!
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More sophisticated Goals typically involve creating “Events”:
External links
Sign-ups, form submissions
Downloads
Many types of conversion goals
To use Events:
Define and categorize events.
Configure and add the javascript code, usually right in the link (not always).
Many social-share widgets automatically add Events.
Google Analytics Event Organizer (Smithsonian’s Michelle Herman)
The Complete Google Analytics Event Tracking Guide Plus 10 Amazing
Examples (old code, good examples)
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Improve your program!
‘Event Tracking’ is super-important
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No actionable data
Sessions (previously Visits)
Users (previously Visitors)
Pages (a.k.a. Pageviews)
Establish scope / context.
Measure growth / acquisition.
You can’t improve your site by
measuring these.
Reporting them out of context can be
misleading.
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Satisfy your boss!
The inevitability of “Quantity of Stuff”
Occam's Razor
“All data in
aggregate is crap.”
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Display multiple reports
at once.
“My Dashboard”
(default) included.
Import from the
Solutions Gallery.
Share as PDFs.
Schedule for
distribution by email.
About Dashboards (Google)
10 useful Google Analytics
custom dashboards
(Econsultancy)
How Google Analytics
Dashboards Can Make Your Life
Easier (Kissmetrics)
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Satisfy your boss!
Dashboards are useful, and easy to make
Customize Dashboards by adding / deleting /
manipulating widgets (up to 12 per dashboard)
Google
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AAA wanted to make their
content more accessible to
younger students.
They worked with Wikipedia
to expand their offerings.
We compared segments of
Wikipedia visitors to other
visitors.
Wiki-referred visitors were
increasingly less likely to
(need to) visit the AAA site
many times.
This contrasts with the stable
trend of all visits.
All visits, high
frequency
Wikipedia visits,
high frequency
Validation!
Archives ofAmericanArt Wikipedia Case Study
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Here is the bottom line!
Your measurements validate your
tactics (or not).
To work the process and improve
your site, you need meaningful data:
Engagement metrics
Segments
Goal completion / Conversion rates
A-B tests
Qualitative data (surveys)
If your goal is purely audience
acquisition, you can use “quantity-of-
stuff” metrics to tell your story.
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NY Daily News
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Demographics and Interests Reports
Demographics
Age (traffic by age ranges)
Gender (traffic by gender)
Interests – behavior by
Affinity Categories
In-Market Categories
Other Categories
No PII is tracked!
You have to add a line of code to your pages
You have to modify your privacy policy
https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/2799357
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Insights from Demographics and Interests Reports
Cyclic Defrost is an online magazine that covers independent electronic music,
avant-rock, experimental sound art, leftfield hip hop and everything in between.
The largest visitor segment is 25-34 year-olds.
But… older visitors (45-54) engage the content at a higher rate.
Avg. Visit DurationVisits
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Benchmarking Reports!
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Compare your site to others in the same
category (or across categories).
Compare by:
Channels (traffic sources)
Location
Devices
How to find it:
Search box, or:
Audience Benchmarking
Use top left pull-down; click ‘Reference’
Scroll down to ‘Libraries & Museums’
Benchmarking Reports (Google)
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Universal Analytics means all new code
We are (still…) in phase three of a four-
phased, multi-year rollout.
All GA accounts have been migrated to
Universal, but many website pages still
carry the old code.
Phase 4: legacy code will be deprecated
(date TBD – “in the near future”).
“Data received from deprecated libraries
will... be processed for a minimum of two
years…”
You should upgrade your code SOON!
You also need to upgrade custom code,
e.g., events, virtual pageviews, etc.
Universal Analytics Upgrade Center Vampyre Fangs
39. #mwmetrics
Create a view that has no
filtering of any kind.
Leave it alone – it is protection
against unintended
consequences.
GA filters are powerful, but
irrevocable – if your data is
hosed by a bad or misapplied
filter you are out of luck.
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Marquette Educator
An add’l ‘playground’ view is
a good idea too, to test those
new filters (and anything else)
You need an unfiltered backup view
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Use Annotations
Super easy – a great way to know at-a-glance what
happened historically, launches, promos, etc.
Create new annotationPull-down all annotations
Reveal annotation
42. #musedata
Google’s “Analytics Academy”
Free video-based courses
Digital Analytics
Fundamentals
Google Analytics Platform
Principles
Ecommerce Analytics: From
Data to Decisions
Mobile App Analytics
Fundamentals
Google Tag Manager
Fundamentals
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analyticsacademy.withgoogle.com
43. A few real world questions,
and how I might start trying to
answer them.
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47. New custom segment! Let’s benchmark all of those
visitor sessions which include viewing at least one
of the “guide” pages
48. To work on:
1) making the guides more visible in navigation,
2) getting more inbound links
3) optimizing our page metadata for search engine
findability (SEO)
Acquisition > Overview
52. Behavior > Site Content > All Pages (con’t)
1. Homepage
2. WONDER exhibition page
3. Hours & Directions
4. Exhibitions Overview
5. WONDER online gallery/slideshow
6. Collections Search*
7. Irving Penn exhibition page
8. Highlights from the Collection
9. FAQs
10.Researching your art*
*Not likely to be in-person visitors. Are people really doing research
on their phones?
Raises more questions that need further investigation!
53. Question: “How about those QR
codes we put in the gallery last
year? Did anybody scan them?”
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56. Acquisition > Campaigns > All Campaigns > Castle Gallery/QR Code
2,100+ is more QR Code sessions than we would have thought! Likely due to 1) appealing content (hidden drawings on
the versos), and 2) a very straightforward call to action (“Scan this code to see the other side of this drawing.”)