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Help improve your adCenter campaign performance with adCenter reports

Now that we’ve covered some of the reporting basics , let’s discuss some useful reports and things to look for in those reports to help point out trends and find areas for account growth. Ad performance report CTR - The ad performance report is a valuable report to run on a regular basis because it can help you to point out which ads are not performing. Having underperforming ads in your account can pull down the quality and CTR of your campaigns and cause them to cost more. So, if we run an ad performance...(read more)

Introduction to adCenter reporting

Have you ever gotten in your car and started driving without a destination in mind? If so, it probably wasn’t the most efficient use of your time. The same can be said of running search campaigns without using reporting. Reports are like the road map of the search highway. They can show you where you’ve been, and also where you are going, if you know how to spot the trends. This post is designed to give you some good tips on how to get the most out of that little "Reports" tab in adCenter...(read more)

Measuring Media & Downloads From Your Site Using adCenter Analytics

 

Yesterday I wrote a post on the adCenter Blog for Advertisers which included some presentations and documents about Search & Display Research and adChamps Europe 2008.

Now we believe it's crucial to provide our customers with as much information, data and insight as possible, so uploading it to the blog makes the most sense as it's easily accessible and widely available.

Many businesses, large and small, provide their customers and prospects with brochures, white papers, reports and presentations is this way too.

But how do you know if users are actually taking advantage of all the hard work you've put into uploading it in the first place?

Well adCenter Analytics can help by providing you with a report to help you measure what, how many, and when files have been downloaded from your site.

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Under the Pages & Content tab in the reports menu you'll find the Media & Downloads report.

You do need to insert and extra bit of code into your tracking script in order for us to start measuring downloads though.

By adding this code to your current tag you'll be all set up:

msAnalytics.EnableLinkTracking();

Your analytics script would then look something like this:

<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript" src="http://analytics.live.com/Analytics/msAnalytics.js">
</script>
<script language="javascript" type="text/javascript">
msAnalytics.ProfileId = 'ABCD1234';
msAnalytics.EnableLinkTracking();
msAnalytics.TrackPage();
</script>

In a few hours you'll be able to track downloads from the report and get a much better idea of how your users are engaging with media you are offering to them to download.

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There are many reasons why this is a good idea. Besides the simple measurement of the number of downloads, it helps you plan your future bandwidth and server requirements, serves to let you know what is popular on your site so you can do more of it, and if you get a sudden drop off of activity, it could indicate a broken link or that something is awry and needs investigation.

Do check out our adCenter Analytics Help resource which has more information - including how to set up adCenter to track individual files you want to track if you want to be a bit more selective.

How Loyal Are Your Visitors? - Assessing Website Engagement Using Web Analytics

One success metric to judge a good website by is whether visitors come back for more. Assuming that your offering is designed for repeat traffic, then knowing how many users return and how often is useful in understanding how well your content is engaging them.

What I mean by “designed for repeat traffic” is: Are you expecting users to visit your site more than once in any given week or a month? If you sell white goods (fridges & freezers) you might expect to see a little repeat traffic while visitors decide on a make and model. If you sell cruises, for many they’re a “once in a lifetime holiday” so you wouldn’t expect the same user to be pinging your site day after day. If, however, you’re a blogger that posts every day and attracts quite a number of visitors, you’ll want to know if people are coming back a few times a week to read your thoughts and how long they take to return.

Understanding visitor loyalty is crucial to understanding whether you need to make changes to your content or user experience in order to keep users coming back.

How many times have you recommended a website to a friend or they to you? Can you remember why it was recommended? It may well have been because it was easy to use or the content was compelling.

I’ve been buying products from the same CD/DVD/Book site for years.

Why?

Because it has everything I need. Great content, competitive prices (notice I didn’t say cheapest prices), and quick, secure navigation. I might buy from them once a month and they know they’re doing something right because they’ll be tracking how many repeat visits on average they get and how often.

Once they know that number they can set themselves a GOAL. They can say, “for the next 3 months we’re going to try and increase our repeat visits by 10% per month.” They could create a special offer, maybe a discount on their customer’s next purchase. They could more cleverly target an email campaign to get people back in the door before each month was over. They could improve their ordering system to ensure nothing is ever sold out, or they could waive postage and packing for a certain period to encourage people to keep buying.

Repeat visits is one thing, but knowing how long people spend on your site and how many pages they look at is another. Some customers may come a few times a month and buy the same thing. They come in, they spend a few minutes doing whatever they came to do, and then they’re off again. If you track the metrics of length and depth of visit you’ll be able to set yourself some goals to engage your visitors more and get them to spend increasing amounts of time on your site and checking out more pages.

Think of it like a shop front. These guys are nipping inside your store doorway by just a few feet, checking out the merchandise and then taking off. If you know this is happening on certain pages or sections of your site you can create strategies to welcome and entice them deeper into the store. Try to get them to navigate to the back of the shop to see what else you have to offer.

adCenter Analytics lets you assess the level of user engagement and harvest valuable data from the Visitor Loyalty drop-down menu in the reports tab:

 

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Visitor Loyalty Reports

Here are a few screenshots of what the reports might look like:

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Depth of Visit Report by Pages

 

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New & Repeat Visit Report

 

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Recency of Visit Report

The next time you log into adCenter Analytics, run a couple of these reports to gain some actionable insight, and set yourself some goals!

adCenter spring upgrade: reporting updates

This past weekend the adCenter team upgraded the user interface to add some features to make it easier for customers to manage their adCenter campaigns. In our last post, we covered campaign management changes; today I wanted to share changes to the reporting section of adCenter.

When you visit the Report Center, you'll see a list of your most recent 20 reports along with an auto-updated status column so you can keep tabs as reports are created and know as soon as they're ready.

We've simplified the report creation process to make it easier to create and customize reports to help you keep a close eye on your performance and adjust your campaigns as needed. We've also made changes to available date range changes to include:

  • New options, including "today", as requested by customers.
  • The date range now defaults to "last month", or choose a different time period from the drop-down.

reportrange2

The report display page includes 2 enhancements to help you when viewing your data:

  • Mouse over column headings in your report tables to view additional information.
  • Longer bits of text—such as destination URLs—are now abbreviated in the display to allow for easier scanning. To view the full text, mouse over the text.

reportdisplay2

For more information, please see What's New with adCenter on advertising.microsoft.com and be sure to let us know what you think of these changes over in the discussion forum for advertisers.

 
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