Friday, April 27, 2012

Using Google Analytics and The Google AdWords Keyword Tool Together

As the largest search provider, Google is uniquely placed to help online marketers, content providers, entrepreneurs and business owners research their online market niches. They have even placed the tools to do so at our disposal, so why not make the most of their generosity?

The technical side of Analytics and using AdWords for SEO (search engine optimization) often challenges people who would rather be writing, selling, or out there doing business.

This short article should help to dispel some of those fears, and help the reader get to grips with using these powerful tools to propel online earnings to new heights.

Google Analytics Organic Search

The secret to online success is often said to be traffic. It's like footfall in the real world – a retail outlet on a busy high street is expected to do better than one in a less frequented side street.

However, as in the world of bricks and mortar retailing, online customers will also travel a bit further than the high street if you offer them something special. At the same time, mere visibility is no guarantee of success.

Google Analytics provides a lot of information, but for the purpose of keyword research, only one page is of special interest : the Organic Search page.

It's found on the left hand menu, under Traffic Sources->Sources->Search->Organic. Once a project has been selected, and the right page located, the user is presented with a spreadsheet style page containing several columns.

We're interested in the following:

  • Keyword
  • Visits
  • Pages/Visit
  • Average Visit Duration
  • Bounce Rate
In essence, we want to find those keywords for which visitors are viewing multiple pages, and spending time on the site, with a low bounce rate. This may only generate five keyword phrases that we can honestly mark down as being of interest, but they're the online equivalent of a warm lead.

That is, they are people who have raised their hand, and volunteered to go the extra mile to find your page. This implies that there may be others who just missed out, stuck to the high street, and found one of your competitors.

These people might have used slightly different keyword combinations which returned pages higher up the search engines indexes (Search Engine Result Pages, or SERPs) than yours; so, how do we find them?

The AdWords Keyword Tool

The AdWords Keywords Tool provides a way to estimate the potential comparative search volumes over a set of generated keywords.

For each keyword or phrase it is given, the tool will look through a database of actual online searches, and match relevant keywords to the initial phrase, and return both the competition for that phrase (in AdWords terms) and the potential search volume that it could capture.

There are a whole raft of filters, and some are useful in certain situations, but for now we just want to get a feel for the market, and so we look at:
  • keyword phrase
  • competition index
  • global search volumes
Analyzing each keyword phrase from the Analytics tool in turn, we want to select a reasonably limited number of phrases and so can afford to be quite selective. Different markets have different thresholds, but a good rule of thumb is to target 'Low' competition keywords with 10k – 100k global search volume figures.

Anything larger than this will be terribly hard to capture, and indicates that the keyword phrase might not be niche enough to be certain of providing a stream of qualified leads.

The keyword phrases can be written into your content as blog posts or article prompts and used to generate traffic towards your web properties. As long as you remember to keep applying the process to discover new keyword phrases, you'll never run short of inspiration or targeted traffic again.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Traffic Research With Google Analytics

Many online publishing platforms have either switched their statistics packages to Google Analytics, or have introduced ways for users to link their Analytics accounts to the publishing platform.


Suite101, for example, no longer retains any statistics or tracking (including keywords) on-site, having moved everyone to their own Analytics accounts some months ago. Squidoo, another large online publishing platform, have followed a similar path, but retain some basic on-site reporting.


Google Analytics itself has evolved (as has the Google AdSense Keyword Research Tool, another firm favorite) and in doing so has become more modern, more minimalist, and considerably more useful.


Google Analytics Reporting Tool


Anyone with a Google account can have access to Analytics. Anyone with a blog, Squidoo Lenses, a web page, or other online publishing platform needs to use Analytics to have any chance of leveraging their online presence.


It's misunderstood, however, by people who look only at the organic keywords as a way to gauge where they should be concentrating their publishing efforts.


Simply targeting the most searched-for keyword phrase that has delivered visitors is slightly missing the point. Yes, it's important, but so is tracking and measuring other statistics.


Using Google Analytics Organic Search Results


The aforementioned report can be found in the menu on the left hand side, under Search->Organic Search. It produces a list of the most frequently used keywords that have delivered visitors to the site, along with the number, and two other vital bits of data:

  • the time spent on the site;
  • the number of pages viewed (per visitor).
So, why are these important?

Firstly, the time spent is important for sites like Squidoo and Suite101, where advertising provides an important source of revenue.

The number of pages viewed is especially important for Suite101, as it shows which pages (articles) are keeping interest up, and, more importantly why.

Making the most of these two statistics requires that the whole list be exported to CSV, or a similar format, and then some clever sorting applied in a Google Docs spreadsheet.

There are a number of interesting formulae that can be used to weight these, but each reader is likely to want something different from the results, and so they should use their own experience to help filter out the best keyword phrases to target.

A final note - use the keywords to guide content, but don't write around them. Otherwise, you'll only ever have the same list coming back, and it's far better to introduce variety and try to capture fresh traffic.