As marketers, we all know that there is a fair amount of turnover throughout the dynamics of the client/agency relationship. This post series covers solutions to many common problems that may arise while inheriting a Google Analytics account.
One of the key objectives in value added Web Analytics is answering the question “what is the point of this website” and “what do we want visitors to do when they visit.” The metric we use to determine success is a conversion occurring during a site visit.
This is a pretty elementary aspect of web analytics, and a fundamental foundation for a solid analytics install… or is it? From my experience, this is often overlooked. The fact is that most web analytics installations do not have even the most basic fundamental configuration elements in place.
Continue Reading Google Analytics: Inferring Conversions with No Goals →
November 6th, 2009 | Posted by Jeff Sauer
Categories: Google AdWords,Google Analytics,Web Analytics
Tags: Conversion, Goals, Google Analytics, Google Analytics Implementation
In addition to reverse-engineering Google’s Local Search algorithm, we Three Deepers are always looking for more venues for expanding our reach for our local business clients, especially with Adwords. I have been particularly intrigued of late by Google’s iPhone search application and how it pertains to local search.
If you haven’t read about it yet, the basic premise is that you open the iPhone app, hold it up to your mouth and say your search term. Google recognizes what you say and automatically ties what you say to your geographic location (using either triangulation or GPS) and then returns search results based on where you are located.
While evaluating this application, I noticed that there were no advertisements on the search app results, or the Google search results on my phone. Not having ads on the results pages was great for advertisers with strong organic search rankings (and especially those who had top 3 listing in the onebox), but it was a negative for PPC advertisers who wanted to push their way up to the top of the results. I knew it was only a matter of time before Google would start allowing advertisers to place AdWords ads on these results pages (remember, it’s AdWords revenue that made the iPhone app FREE to users in the first place).
Continue Reading AdWords on Your Mobile Phone (Google’s G1/Android and the iPhone) →
December 8th, 2008 | Posted by Jeff Sauer
Categories: Google,Google AdWords,Paid Search
Tags: adwords, Android Advertising, Google G1, Google iPhone App, iPhone, Local Search Marketing, Mobile Advertising, Mobile AdWords, Onebox, SearchWiki
Google has consolidated several awesome new tracking features into a single view in AdWords over the last week (some features have been there a while, but are now receiving more exposure due to a recent interface update) and we at Three Deep are in the process of putting several of these into action. The first thing that we will talk about today is the call tracking feature that they have recently added.
Ever since Google acquired Grand Central in 2007, I knew it was only a matter of time before they would start adding call tracking into AdWords. For good reason, as phone calls to local or 1-800 numbers on a landing page can account for a large percentage of leads generated from a PPC landing page.  In fact, for some of our clients, phone calls have outnumbered free estimate request forms at a 2 to 1 clip. Even for those clients where request forms still dominate leads, adding a unique tracking number to a landing page has allowed us to truly track the number of leads that we generate for clients.
Continue Reading Google AdWords New Features – Call Tracking →
October 5th, 2008 | Posted by Jeff Sauer
Categories: Google,Google AdWords,Paid Search
Tags: adwords, call tracking, Google, new features