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Google Analytics, Facebook and WASP

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

More and more companies are building communities using social networking sites and there has been a lot of buzz lately about tracking Facebook Fan pages with Google Analytics. Integrating GA into Facebook can be a challenge since what you can actually do is limited and trying to see if your implementation of GA works on your Facebook Page can be an even bigger challenge.

That’s why WASP was created, and as you have probably guessed by now, you can use WASP to see if those “invisible” tags you placed on your Facebook page are triggered properly and are sending back the proper data.

Yesterday, I created a Facebook Fan page for WASP, and then followed the instructions here to insert the data I want to feed to my Google Analytics account. I passed in 3 values:  googledomain=facebook.com, pagelink=/FB/Landing and pagetitle=FBLanding.

And, now if I visit my Fan page with WASP enabled, this is what I see:

When I open up the side bar, I can also make sure I am sending the proper data back to my Google Analytics account:

And, even if I created my Fan page yesterday, people are already finding me and here are the result in my Google Analytics report:


Voila! I’ve just confirmed that it’s all working properly. This technique will not only work for Google Analytics but with over 200 analytics solutions detected by WASP, even if they are triggered on event as mention in my event post.

Tracking GA Onclick Events

Sunday, April 25th, 2010

I was just asked today if WASP 2.0 tracks Google Analytics events. Yes, it does!

So, take for example the following html code:

<a href=”#”color: red;”>pageTracker._trackEvent(‘Video’, ‘Play’, ‘Escape from New York’); alert( ‘Successfully called pageTracker._trackEvent()’ );”>Video, Play, Escape from New York</a>

In this example, a link to play a video, we want to pass specific information to GA to track a specific video being played.

Once you click on this link, if you look in the WASP sidebar you will see the Google Analytics call being made and all the data being transmitted. If you look carefully, the tag UTME will have the value you are looking for:

So, even if the event is not triggered on page load, WASP will still catch it at the moment it is fired. This also applies to other events such as flash animation and more.

Looking for Beta Testers for WASP 2.0

Monday, March 29th, 2010

We are almost ready to launch WASP 2.0, but we need to do another round of beta testing. We are looking for users to jump in and help.

We will give you a 30-day license to access and use all the functionalities of WASP 2.0.

Email us at support [at] webanalyticssolutionprofiler.com for more details.

Can’t wait to make the final announcement!

Who Runs Analytics? Top 500 Retail Websites Report

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010

In January 2010, iPerceptions ran an analysis of the top 500 retail websites to determine how many were using web analytics tools. Online retailers are recognized leaders when it comes to integrating new web applications. A fast-growing, conversion-driven group, their choices often foreshadow those of other industries. Using iPerceptions’ WASP Market Research, we fed the Internet Retailer Top 500 Retail Web Sites into the WASP crawler, and based our results on the 458 sites that were operational. Last January, Stéphane Hamel, founder of Immeria, wrote “An Immersion in Analytics” after conducting a similar study of the same sites. His results form our 2009 data.

WHO RUNS ANALYTICS

Use of Clickstream Analytics

In the last year, the use of clickstream analytics tools rose by 10% in the online retail space. External research confrmed a 9% growth in clickstream analytics technology in 2009, which suggests that technological growth is in line with market consumption.

Breakdown by Vendor

Breakdown by Vendor

When the results were broken down by vendor, the use of Google Analytics increased by 19% — more than twice as much as the next leading vendor. Google Analytics is a free product, unlike the ones from Omniture and Coremetrics, which surely accounted for at least some of its growth. Among paid products, Omniture gained the most ground through 2009, confrming that these tools have a great deal of value.

Is one tool enough?

Is One Tool Enough

% of the Top 500 Sites Running Clickstream Analytics by Number of Tools

In the last year, the share of retail websites running more than one clickstream analytics tool increased by 9%, begging the question— why is one tool not enough? Are retailers comparing results from multiple tools to ensure accuracy of the data? Or, does no existing product satisfy all retailing analytics needs?

% of the Top 500 Sites Running Clickstream Analytics by Number of Tools

In January 2010, online retailers who were using more than one tool were almost certainly using Google Analytics. Results suggest that Google Analytics is the easy (and fnancially justifable) choice among retailers, but it is not always the frst choice among customers who are looking for specifc functionality and can afford it.

Other website tools

The second most popular tool, after clickstream analytics, was an advertising network (Ad network), used by approximately one-third of online retailers to host ads. Testing tools, such as Google Website Optimizer and Omniture Test and Target, came in third, followed by Search Engine Marketing (SEM) tools, such as ChannelAdvisor and comScore. Voice of Customer (VOC) tools, such as iPerceptions’ webValidator and 4Q Survey, were used by 8% of retailers (incidentally, a signifcantly higher use compared to other industry sites). Targeting, such as Amadesa, and Recorder tools, such as ClickTale have low adoption rates in this market. Social sharing tools, such as RPX and AddThis, are also on the rise, with more sites wanting to integrate social media components, liaise with social media/networking sites, and generally create a sense of community.

Conclusion

Running clickstream analytics tools is becoming increasingly important for major online retailers. Google Analytics is the most popular tool, and has gained signifcant market share. Still, there is evidence that paid products still have a safe hold. Based on the premise that retail websites predict behavior in other industries, the use of additional analytics tools will continue to gain momentum. Finally, as clickstream tools reach market saturation and retailers reach the limit of insights gain through these tools, they will increasingly turn to other analytics solution such as Testing, SEM, VoC to enhance the effciency and quality of their online experience.

About WASP

WASP is a software that allows web analytics professionals to easily perform quality assurance and understand how their web analytics solution is implemented. The WASP Market Research edition includes a powerful crawler that can automate tool detections and detailed reporting for quality assurance or market research. For more information, please visit webanalyticssolutionprofler.com

About iPerceptions

iPerceptions is a leading web-focused Voice of Customer analytics provider. Its webValidator Continuous Listening solution, A&B Interactive Dashboard, WASP (Web Analytics Solution Profler), iPerceptions Satisfaction Index (iPSI) and free website survey solution (4Q) turn thousands of data points into easy-to- understand strategic and tactical decision support for website marketers. iPerceptions’ clients include such well-known brands as InterContinental Hotels, General Motors, Dell, Hyundai, LG Electronics, Choice Hotels International, BMW and Monster Worldwide.

WASP 1.31.2 Release

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

-Fixed an issue with the crawler in some conditions
-Fixed an issue with bad robot.txt and sitemap.xml
-Fixed an issue with illegal character in tag attribute

WASP 1.30.14 Released

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

We just released a new version of WASP. Please update from the main download link.

New features:

  • Detection: e-Visit
  • Detection: Survey Monkey
  • Detection: Survey Gizmo
  • Detection: Cobalt
  • Detection: Audience Science
  • Detection: LinkStorm
  • Detection: Blue Lithium
  • Better iPerceptions detections
  • Fixes an issue with the sidebar width
  • WASP Pro replaced by WASP Market Reasearch

    Monday, January 11th, 2010

    To better satisfy customer demands, we have decided to Merge WASP Pro and WASP Market Research. Additionally, the price of WASP Market Research is now at the level of Pro, $699 instead of $999.

    This is great news for our customers because they now get all the benefit of Market Research for the price of Pro, and the typical Pro user will now benefit from all the Market Research features.

    WASP 1.30.10 release

    Wednesday, January 6th, 2010

    Please update to version 1.30.10 as it fixes some minor issues:

    -Fixed an issue with the internal DB

    You can update from our download page at: http://webanalyticssolutionprofiler.c…

    Tracking tool diagnostics

    Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

    We received this email a while ago and recently received more information. I thought it would be appropriate to share some of the insight that came out of it

    —————————————————————————————-

    Greetings,
    I’m Matteo , developer in xxxxxx.com.
    I’m currently developing a tracking system for the site using WASP as main tool for checking and testing, and I’m facing a strange problem: (more…)

    WASP 1.30.8 release

    Monday, January 4th, 2010

    Please update to version 1.30.8 as it fixes some minor issues:

    -Fixes an issue with the license in relation to the date
    -Fixes some other minor issues

    You can do a manual update from our download page at: http://webanalyticssolutionprofiler.c…