Google Analytics – MOJO Marketplace Blog https://blog.mojomarketplace.com DIY Website Guides and Tips Wed, 10 Jan 2018 17:18:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.3 https://blog.mojomarketplace.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/03/cropped-blog_profile_480-1-32x32.png Google Analytics – MOJO Marketplace Blog https://blog.mojomarketplace.com 32 32 How to Analyze Marketing Campaigns with WordPress https://blog.mojomarketplace.com/analyze-marketing-campaigns-wordpress/ https://blog.mojomarketplace.com/analyze-marketing-campaigns-wordpress/#comments Wed, 20 Dec 2017 16:00:00 +0000 https://blog.mojomarketplace.com/?p=5000
Are you trying to figure out exactly what’s working and what’s not with your WordPress website audience? Analyzing your marketing campaigns is an important part of maximizing your ROI and understanding exactly what your visitors are looking for.

The Benefits of Analyzing Your Digital Marketing Campaigns

The biggest benefit you get from marketing analysis is gaining actionable insights from your data. If you have a reliable way to extract value from your marketing information, then you can use it to improve over time.

Another advantage, especially if you have near-real-time reporting, is that you can quickly measure the impact of changes. If you alter a campaign while it’s running, you can see whether you’re attracting more prospects or fewer with your improvements. This rapid cycle is essential for dialing in on what your audience wants.

What Are Goals in Google Analytics?

Google Analytics, a powerful website analytics platform, can easily be integrated with your WordPress site. You can use the features from Analytics to collect and track important metrics, such as goal conversions.

When using Google Analytics, a goal is an action that you want the user to take. For example, your goal may be for someone to provide their email address for your newsletter, or to purchase a product. When you set a goal in Google Analytics, you make it possible to track user behavior that leads to this goal. The more you know about that behavior, the more you can increase that goal conversion.

Set and Track Goals

The Analytics platform makes it easy to set up goals. When you’re in the Admin section, you can select any type of view and click on the Goals header. A button appears with the label “+New Goal.”

From your admin panel in Google Analytics, you can create a new goal by clicking the add new goal button

You can use a provided template, leverage the smart goals feature, or specify the user behavior that is associated with that goal. Once you set up the goal, Google Analytics knows what to track in website traffic reporting.

After creating a goal in Analytics, you may select a common goal template to get started or define a completely custom goal

When your goal is associated with a certain URL, such as a link from an email or a purchase page, you can add UTM parameters to that link to get more insight into your traffic’s behavior.

The Google Analytics Campaign URL Builder allows you to quickly add these parameters to your links. The only required parameter is the campaign source, which is the referrer. You can add the medium, name, term and content for unique URLs that provide deep insights into your traffic.

You can track any link associated with your campaign in Google Analytics by using the Universal Tracking Metrics URL builder

You can dive into this data by going to the Campaign section underneath Acquisition in your Google Analytics report.

By accessing Acquisition, then Campaigns, and All Campaigns, you can view and search for your UTM link data

Using Goals and UTM Parameters

One way you can use goals and UTM parameters is to track how many people end up purchasing your product after they engage with your email newsletter content. Your goal looks for users who go through the checkout process and reach the Thank You page, which appears after a successful transaction.

To do this, you would configure your UTM parameters for all of the links leading out from the emails sent to your newsletter list. The source would be a newsletter, the medium would be email, the campaign name should indicate when the email was sent and whether it went to a segmented list, and the campaign content should note the theme of that email or series.

For example, if you want to track purchases from a newsletter sent out to customers who abandoned their cart during a holiday sale, you can build a UTM url to track that with all the information you need.

Here’s how to set up a UTM URL just like in the image above:

  • Enter the URL you’re sending to (such as a product or specific page on your site).
  • Enter newsletter for the source.
  • Email for the medium.
  • And for the campaign name, make it as specific as you need to know what purpose this link served (see above).
  • You can also add a term if you’re bidding on or targeting a specific keyword used in search.
  • And you can even specify different delivery methods for A/B testing, such as a button vs. a text link.
Google specifies some examples for UTM Parameters: For example, google for source, cpc for medium, spring_sale for campaign name, running+shoes for campaign term, and logolink or textlink for campaign content

When you look at your goals, you can see how many customers you acquired from your email newsletter, as well as the specific email that triggered the final conversion.

This information is invaluable for optimizing your marketing efforts and discovering areas where you can improve. Once you can quickly and conveniently access Google Analytics from WordPress, you have all the information you need right in front of you.

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