If you just turned it on, you did it all wrong.
I work with dozens of retailers and consumer brands, including mass market, global, and small start-ups, and data analytics is always a key function of daily business. Every smart leader is constantly looking at their numbers, sometimes obsessively. And with an ever-changing shopping landscape, making the right decisions using this vital information can make or break performance. We all know this.
What many business leaders don't know, however, is exactly how much data they are still missing. Many look at a standard set of ecommerce metrics, but never fully customize their reporting, and as a result they have a huge blind spot in their information.
Here are 10 questions to ask yourself or your team to test depth of knowledge and data availability:
If you know the answer to fewer than 7 out of 10 of these questions, then you are missing vital pieces of data about your business. And, chances are, that means your analytics system was not customized or fully implemented.
Deep analysis and site experience auditing
Most of the time, executives want to increase their performance, and have broad goals like "increasing mobile sales" or "improving conversion rates," but there is a lack of objective knowledge regarding exactly how to get there. Teams will have opinions about site features or functionality that could use improvement, but before putting budget behind hunches, there must be data support to prioritize which enhancements will actually affect the bottom line.
This is where depth of tracking is crucially important - and these are the moments when businesses wish they had been collecting custom data all along. There are many reasons data collection is often shallow, but - the main reason, of course, is limited resources. Additionally, the lack of internal knowledge of the tools themselves can be limited, since there are hundreds of pages of development guides on tools like Google Analytics and Omniture. Investing the time from the start - or during the next redesign - will provide invaluable information that can't be retrieved any other way.
Three tips for Google Analytics customization
One of the most popular tools for analytics is, of course, Google Analytics. The features and depth of reporting have increased dramatically over the last few years, and as a result the opportunity for customization has become much more complex.
Here are three under-utilized features of Google Analytics that will immediately provide you with valuable data:
If you employ the above tracking and can answer how people navigate your site, how they use the homepage, and whether they can successfully check out, you will have data on several potential pain points of customer experience.
There are many more Google Analytics features that I would recommend leveraging including product impression/click reporting, User ID/cross-device tracking, custom dimensions for login status, payment option, etc. Generally, these tracking enhancements can be implemented as back-end or template-based changes, meaning straightforward code updates for engineers. Of course, beyond data collection, it's equally important to have a smart team of data strategists.
Business data can be your most powerful tool, so make sure you have the whole story.