Archive for the ‘Data Portability’ Category

Now available: Webtrends Marketing Warehouse On Premise

Tuesday, June 30th, 2009

wmw-onpremise-1 There are so many reasons to celebrate Webtrends Marketing Warehouse availability On Premise.  We’ve had a lot of success with our On Demand version over the last couple of years and wanted to better serve some unmet market needs with an On Premise version.  Here are just a few of the market needs that this product addresses.

  • You choose: data mart or data warehouse – Our Marketing Warehouse product can be used in several ways to meet your organization’s needs.  You can use Marketing Warehouse as a data mart of online data to feed your enterprise data warehouse to benefit your organization as a whole.  You can also use it as your data warehouse for all you online data for your marketers.  Best of all, you can use it both ways!
  • Deep integration – On Premise offers organizations ultimate flexibility in how they use their online data.  Having direct access to enriched online data means that the sky is the limit in how you want to integrate that data with other data and other marketing applications.  The goal is to drive insight to fuel actions with your customers and prospects.
  • Ultimate control of the data – Whether its for privacy purposes, regulatory compliance, or  simply direct access to the data, having this level of control of this data behind your firewall is a huge benefit to many businesses.

Along with Marketing Warehouse, Webtrends Score is now available in On Premise as well.

Caution…proud Product Manager ramblings below.

I wanted to recognize the achievements of the Webtrends team who worked tirelessly to bring this product to market.  From developers writing code, to QA folks testing it, to Services folks ready to implement and support it, to Marketing promoting it, to Sales folks selling it.  A personal thanks to all of you who worked so hard to bring this product to market because you’re passionate about helping businesses strive for excellence.

Windows 7 Tracking Available in WebTrends Analytics

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

At the 2009 International Consumer Electronics Show (CES) early this month, Microsoft announced the beta availability of the Windows 7 operating system. Consumers wanting to test-drive the beta were able to download it beginning January 9th.

We know how important it is for our customers to understand platform usage so they can ensure an optimal experience for visitors to their site.  As of yesterday WebTrends  On Demand customers have the ability to report on Windows 7 as a platform. This will show you the percentage of traffic coming to your site from visitors using this new platform.

Software customers can add this capability to their installations by modifying their browsers.ini file as follows:

1. Add an entry at the end of the [Platforms] section.  For example:

Platform56=WIN_7

2.  Add the following, also in the [Platforms] section:

[WIN_7]
log1=WINDOWS NT 6.1
text=Windows 7

More information on Windows 7 can be found on Microsoft’s web site.

Platform View Screenshot

Whether you are a software or On Demand customer, we’re always working hard to improve your experience with WebTrends.  Let us know how we’re doing – provide feedback from within the products, comment here on the blog, user forums, Twitter or contact any of us directly.

Scorecards – Moving from 80% Reporting to 80% Analysis

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

Hi folks.  My name is Jason Widup and I recently rejoined WebTrends with a colleague of mine (Brandon Ralls) to start a Digital Marketing Optimization practice within the WebTrends Client Services organization.  Some of you may remember both of us – I used to manage the Strategic Business Consulting practice at WebTrends from mid-2005 through mid-2006 and Brandon worked on my team during that time.  My first post is more like an article than a blog post.  I promise not all of my posts will be this long, but this topic is something that is near and dear to my heart.

Throughout my career in web analytics I have had the opportunity to work on web projects for some of the largest and most well-known websites in the world, and I’ve been able to do this from many different perspectives, including client-side, vendor-side, and advertising agency-side.  While I expected many of the websites to be slow in adopting some of the more advanced web analytics topics such as behavioral targeting, multivariate testing, and tagging, I didn’t expect for most of them to have the challenges with ongoing performance reporting and representation of data that they did.

These companies all struggled with most of the aspects related to putting together a dynamic and effective monthly report: extracting accurate data from their measurement tools, data organization and visualization, report formatting (including delivery vehicle), and analysis/insights/recommendations.  Most of them were decent with analysis; however, because everything else took so much longer than it should they didn’t have the proper amount of time to spend on analysis, so even that suffered.  Fortunately, the solution to this is relatively simple in explanation and not much more complex in execution: data quality, automation, and a consistent, accessible report format – what we call an Integrated Digital Marketing Scorecard.

webtrends_intergrated_scorecard2

At this point you’re probably making a decision as to whether or not you should read the rest of this article – so I’d like to give you a few reasons to continue reading.  While this topic has been written about and discussed quite a bit, I feel that it still has yet to sink in because I’m not seeing it take hold in the work that I do.  And while I don’t profess to be a true EXPERT at anything, I am an intelligent, logical, and creative thinker and like to think that I just get it (and I been practicing Web Analytics for 6 years).  And as previously noted, I’ve had the opportunity to do this type of work for lots of different websites from a multitude of perspectives – the most helpful being my time at a very large and well-known digital advertising agency.  Many of the lessons I learned I did while managing Measurement Operations at that agency.

To formally define the problem, analysts are spending a much larger % of their available time extracting and formatting report data and not enough time on the analysis, insights, and recommendations – where the true utility of the data comes into play as it is converted to decision-making information.  In my rough estimation analysts are spending about 75-80% of their time on the tactical reporting work and only about 25% of their time on the real analysis work.  In a perfect world this would be reversed – spending just 25% of their time on tactical work and 75% on analysis.

As mentioned, the solution that we have come up with to address these problems is what we call an Integrated Digital Marketing Scorecard (or IDMS).  “Integrated” because it is a single report that includes data from multiple data sources, “Digital Marketing” because it contains data from all online marketing and website measurement systems, and “Scorecard” because it is a visual display of key performance indicators on a single screen, providing user-driven comparison and progress metrics and used to make management decisions.

Let’s look at each of the problems individually, as well as how they are addressed with the IDMS…

Extracting accurate data from their measurement tools

At one point not too long ago in my Web Analytics career I was managing the monthly reporting for nearly 15 separate websites, all of which wanted their report as close to the beginning of the month as possible.  Each of the sites had their own set of complexities and issues: tagging problems, custom report issues, communication breakdowns with clients, etc.  There always seemed to be some issue with some data point each month that meant I could not fully automate my data extracts because I had to scrub the data in some way.  This is where Data Quality comes in.  At the core of any good, automated reporting solution is high quality data.  It can sometimes take a good amount of money and/or resources and certainly process changes to achieve the quality of data needed to support this style of reporting, but from experience I can say that it will pay for itself in time saving and decision making support.

In this role I was so incredibly busy during the first few weeks of the month that I chose to only partially automate my data extractions and pull the remainder of the data manually.  I justified this by telling myself that it would actually take longer to automate the query for a data point than to pull it manually.  I also failed to consistently document how I would manually derive a certain data point and would need to reconstruct it and compare it to the previous month’s number to make sure I did it correctly.  This was incredibly time consuming.  This speaks to the second component of the solution, automation.  The bottom line is that if the calculation of a data point can be done fully automated, always do it.  It will save time and reduce the occurrences of errors compared to pulling the data manually.  When we build an IDMS for a client our goal is for there to be as few steps as possible each month to update the data and populate all charts and graphs.  In many cases we’re able to get this down to 4 steps: select a new month, click button to run queries, validate new data, click button to update tables/charts/graphs.

Data organization and visualization

Analysts struggle to find the best way to organize, visualize, and present the information in their reports.  It is very rare that I’m impressed when an analyst shows me a report they authored that they feel is one of their best pieces of work (by the way, don’t bring an example report to an interview unless it looks like something you would see on TV – you know who you are).  It amazes me the lack of attention to detail that is pervasive across the industry.  Presentation of the report can, in some cases, determine its success or failure.  If you have bad data to report, at least make sure it is presented professionally.

There are a few guidelines we follow when organizing and visualizing the data in an IDMS:

  • Organize the data in a tabular or navigational format so that the user can page through different sets of data while remaining on the same screen.
  • Group similar data points together into the different tabs and have them follow some type of logical progression (i.e. Acquire-Convert-Retain)
  • Show a minimal amount of data on a screen, but allow the viewer to interact with the report to show historical data and compare it against more recent data.
  • Only show one or two data points on a graph that are related – don’t overcomplicate it with 3 dimensions and multiple metrics, etc.

Report formatting (including delivery vehicle)

It can take a very long time to manually update all of the charts and graphs and screenshots necessary for a given report, we get around this by extending the automation to include updating the charts and graphs in the IDMS, not just run the queries.  Most people don’t fully understand the formatting capabilities of Excel but there are a lot of fancy things that can be done with formatting and interactivity – especially in Excel 2007.  Have you ever heard of the camera function?  If not, Google it and I’m sure you’ll find a great use for it.

Speaking of Excel 2007, that is our preferred vehicle for delivering monthly reports.  It supports the tabular navigation previously discussed, all historical data can be included within the file in hidden sheets, the Scorecard can be made to look like a polished web application, and most importantly, it’s in Excel – something that everyone has access to. Alternatively, tools like Excelcius can be used to build this same type of functionality but publish it as an interactive Flash object embedded within a PDF file.  I also love the idea of delivering these via the web, but that would require some web development because as of yet there is still not an available tool that I know of that can WYSIWYG a Scorecard.

There are quite a few other report formatting topics that I could discuss, but to keep this relatively readable I’ll add just one more that truly sets the IDMS apart from other solutions – specific real estate is set aside in the Scorecard for the analysts’ insights, observations, and recommendations.  This section updates when the viewer pages through the different tabs in the Scorecard so that it corresponds with the data they are viewing.  This is where data is turned into information that can drive decisions – without this analysis a report is not incredibly useful for obvious reasons.

The best way to approach writing the commentary is to first understand the business questions that need to be answered every month.  The questions shouldn’t simply be worded versions of KPIs like “How many visitors came to the site this month compared to next month?” – they should be business questions like “Which media tactics drove the highest engagement with product content?”  These are the questions that will be answered in the analysis section every month, supported by the KPIs and data in the Scorecard.

If you made it through this article, THANKS FOR READING.  I sincerely hope that it was worth the time you spent reading it.  If you’d like to chat further about this topic or see some screenshots of our Integrated Digital Marketing Scorecard, please feel free to reach out to me via email at Jason.Widup@WebTrends.com.  Happy Analyzing!

*originally posted on IQ Workforce

Connecting with WebTrends Analytics 8.6

Friday, December 19th, 2008

Last month, we updated WebTrends On Demand with a new version:  Analytics 8.6.  We improved the ways you can access and use your data in the applications you use everyday.  Hopefully you’ve experienced our new “Connect” feature.  If you haven’t seen it in action yet, you can find it on the left-hand toolbar when you log into your On Demand account.  Connect provides centralized access to the many methods of data exchange within WebTrends Analytics, including SmartReports for Microsoft Excel, the ODBC driver, Lookup tables, the WebServices API, and the Analytics Report Exporter. There is a What’s New document that provides more details for you and can be attached to an email for your data hungry colleagues as well.

During this update we also made a terminology change to our licensing agreement and terms of service.  We are now using the term “Server Calls”  to refer to the unit of measurement for billing purposes.  The change to “server calls” was made to more accurately reflect tracking of visitor actions in formats like Flash, Ajax, and other web technologies.  As we continue to expand our functionality in these areas and as new web format become widely adopted the change from “Page Views” has become industry standard. 

On Demand customers can find Terms of Service by  logging into WebTrends On Demand and clicking on “Accounts” in the upper-right part of the browser screen. The “Terms of Service” link on the top-right of the Accounts screen.

And now…. news for our software customers: While Analytics 8.6 is an On Demand release, we provided something for you too! Now available for download is a Browsers and Keywords updater.  This installer program can update the browsers.ini and keywords.ini files in your WebTrends Analytics software installation.  These files are used to generate data as it relates to browsers, platforms, mobile devices, and spiders.  Ensuring these files are up to date is important as traffic from mobile devices increases on your site.  Please note that no licensing changes were made for software, the above terminology information is only subject to On Demand.

Whether you are a software or On Demand customer, we’re working hard to improve your experience with WebTrends.  Let us know how we’re doing – provide feedback from within the product, comment on our blog, user forums, or contact any of us directly. We’re listening.

WebTrends Connect Seminar Series: It's a Wrap!

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Thanks to the more than 500 of you who came to one of the WebTrends Connect seminars during our 7-city US tour over the past three weeks.  Aaron, Barry, and I had a great time representing WebTrends and connecting with you.  Many thanks as well to our partners Teradata, Stratigent, and Rosetta for speaking along with us at the events.  All three are leaders in their respective fields and it was our pleasure working with them. We know they share our sincere appreciation for all of you who took time out of your busy schedules to spend with us. 

We enjoyed sharing our approach of integrating web analytics throughout your organization and examples of how you can accomplish this today with your WebTrends products using our ODBC driver, web services, and the new data scheduler in On Demand.  We hope that you not only learned from the presentations and discussions during the morning sessions, but were able to get some one-on-one time with members of your WebTrends account team that day.  More importantly, hopefully you made some connections with other attendees – some who share the same business challenges that you regularly face.  As I say to anybody who will listen, if you get the chance meet up with others - do it! Whether that meet up is in an online forum, user group sessions, Web Analytics Wednesdays, or other events in your area, you’ll be amazed at what you can learn.

Speaking of learning and meet ups, please join us in April at our WebTrends Customer Conference at the Red Rock Hotel in Las Vegas.  We’re going to focus on providing the insight and instruction you need to get maximum value out from your web analytics.  And we’ll have some fun too – after all, it is Las Vegas.

WebTrends Connect Seminar Series: It's a Wrap!

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Thanks to the more than 500 of you who came to one of the WebTrends Connect seminars during our 7-city US tour over the past three weeks.  Aaron, Barry, and I had a great time representing WebTrends and connecting with you.  Many thanks as well to our partners Teradata, Stratigent, and Rosetta for speaking along with us at the events.  All three are leaders in their respective fields and it was our pleasure working with them. We know they share our sincere appreciation for all of you who took time out of your busy schedules to spend with us. 

We enjoyed sharing our approach of integrating web analytics throughout your organization and examples of how you can accomplish this today with your WebTrends products using our ODBC driver, web services, and the new data scheduler in On Demand.  We hope that you not only learned from the presentations and discussions during the morning sessions, but were able to get some one-on-one time with members of your WebTrends account team that day.  More importantly, hopefully you made some connections with other attendees – some who share the same business challenges that you regularly face.  As I say to anybody who will listen, if you get the chance meet up with others - do it! Whether that meet up is in an online forum, user group sessions, Web Analytics Wednesdays, or other events in your area, you’ll be amazed at what you can learn.

Speaking of learning and meet ups, please join us in April at our WebTrends Customer Conference at the Red Rock Hotel in Las Vegas.  We’re going to focus on providing the insight and instruction you need to get maximum value out from your web analytics.  And we’ll have some fun too – after all, it is Las Vegas.

WebTrends Connect Seminar Series: It's a Wrap!

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

Thanks to the more than 500 of you who came to one of the WebTrends Connect seminars during our 7-city US tour over the past three weeks.  Aaron, Barry, and I had a great time representing WebTrends and connecting with you.  Many thanks as well to our partners Teradata, Stratigent, and Rosetta for speaking along with us at the events.  All three are leaders in their respective fields and it was our pleasure working with them. We know they share our sincere appreciation for all of you who took time out of your busy schedules to spend with us. 

We enjoyed sharing our approach of integrating web analytics throughout your organization and examples of how you can accomplish this today with your WebTrends products using our ODBC driver, web services, and the new data scheduler in On Demand.  We hope that you not only learned from the presentations and discussions during the morning sessions, but were able to get some one-on-one time with members of your WebTrends account team that day.  More importantly, hopefully you made some connections with other attendees – some who share the same business challenges that you regularly face.  As I say to anybody who will listen, if you get the chance meet up with others - do it! Whether that meet up is in an online forum, user group sessions, Web Analytics Wednesdays, or other events in your area, you’ll be amazed at what you can learn.

Speaking of learning and meet ups, please join us in April at our WebTrends Customer Conference at the Red Rock Hotel in Las Vegas.  We’re going to focus on providing the insight and instruction you need to get maximum value out from your web analytics.  And we’ll have some fun too – after all, it is Las Vegas.

Scorecarding:Data At Your Fingertips

Thursday, October 30th, 2008

Scorecarding has been an analytic passion of mine for a few years now.  In my last position before I started working here at WebTrends I developed an extensive scorecard that stretched across multiple channels and was so rich in data that it was in fact intimidating to nearly everyone but a data freak like me.  What I forgot to do then and what I am working on now as I move forward with scorecarding is to condense the wealth of data down into an easily digestible format and customize it to the specific business users.

Who is your audience? When it comes to dashboards and scorecards one size does not fit all.  Learn from my experience, before you go about developing one first figure out who your audience is and what it is they want to know. The information an executive team is interested in is far different than that of the marketing team and ecommerce certainly has different needs than IT.  Everyone one wants (or should but that is another blog) the data.  The key point for each business user is this data you are presenting to them will help them make decisions.

What questions do they want answered? When I was deciding today between writing either about gathering business requirements or scorecarding I had one of those ah ha moments realizing you really can’t be successful with your scorecard if you don’t first gather your business requirements so let’s take a look at what that looks like. (more…)

Teradata Coming on the Road with WebTrends

Friday, October 17th, 2008

It’s a very exciting time right now at WebTrends as we continue to demonstrate the value of “freeing your data.”  We’re making it simple and easy to get data out of WebTrends products and into the enterprise in ways that are meaningful to your business.

For some of our customers, that means easy connection to the data for use in external desktop applications.  For others, it means pulling our data into business intelligence systems to drive forecasting for non-web portions of the business.  For still other customers, this means pulling visitor-level data from our Warehouse into their enterprise data warehouse to create one view of the customer enabling them to drive true, cross-channel customer marketing. This is connecting web analytics to business intelligence in the real world.

WebTrends, Teradata, Stratigent and Brulant are going on the road to share stories of how this is being done right now with current customers.  I’ll be speaking in at least two of the cities, maybe more.  I’d love to see you there. Details are here at the Connect site.

In the mean time, if you’ve got a story about using web data in the enterprise (outside the analytics solution) I’d love to hear it.  Tell us what’s working and what isn’t working.  What processes are you enabling?  What business decisions are you making?  What do you wish you could do? Post your stories and questions here, and come to Connect ready to talk about making your vision a reality.

I’ll see you on the road at Connect 08!