Author Archive

Free Google Webinar – Planning & Running Your First Website Optimizer Experiment

Tuesday, September 22nd, 2009 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Google and WebShare’s David Booth are teaming up to offer a free webinar on Thursday, September 24, 2009 at 10:00 am (PDT):
Planning and Running your First Website Optimizer Experiment.

Google webinar - Planning and running your first Website Optimizer experiment

Sign up for this webinar!

This 90 minute webinar is targeted at anyone who’s ready to get started with A/B and Multivariate testing using Google’s free Website Optimizer tool.  The topics we’ll cover are based on trainings we’ve delivered at Google offices across the country and as part of the live Google Seminars for Success training series that continues to hit cities across North America.  Join us for this live webinar and learn:

  • Landing page testing basics – what is it?
  • Identifying test pages and planning for your first experiment
  • How to set up and run A/B and Multivariate tests
  • Live demos of both A/B and MVT experiments
  • Reading the reports and understanding the test results

There will be 30 minutes of questions and answers with Google’s Trevor Claiborne and Andrew Gomez.

Hope to see you there!




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

Major Upgrade to Google Analytics Announced Today

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Analytics is all about insights, and the insights Google Analytics provides about your site just got a lot better and easier to find.  Google announced the release of several new functions to GA today.

The following features will be available on all accounts in the coming weeks:

1) Advanced Segmentation: You will definitely want to check this one out as soon as it is available in your account.  New predefined segments are easy to apply to both current and historical data.  And even better, the new segment builder tool lets you create, save and apply your own custom segments with incredible ease.

2) Custom Reports: Now you can have your GA reports your way.  This new feature allows you to create, save and edit reports that are completely customized to your needs.  With the new report creation interface being so simple to use you might not want to stop creating new ways to analyze the interactions your visitors have with your site.

3) Motion Charts: Put your reports into motion and sit back and watch your data change over time.  The new visualize button at the top of the reports allows you to analyze data over 5 dimensions (x-axis, y-axis, bubble size and color and over time) and pick up on relationships that may not be easily seen in traditional reports.

4) New Account Management Dashboard: Managing and monitoring your accounts just got easier with this new dashboard.  You will also get key performance metrics in green (for good) and red (for bad) upon logging in so you can see what areas might require a little extra attention right away.

These functions will require a little longer wait as they are in beta testing and will be released to all accounts more gradually. But if you are working with a Google Analytics Authorized Consultant ask them to set you up with early access.

1) Data Export API: This will allow developers to take Google Analytics to whole new levels.  Custom dashboards, offline analysis; the only limitation could be your imagination.

2) Integrated Reporting with AdSense:  If you are an AdSense publisher you will soon be able to track your revenue and impression data right along with your site data.

These are some great new functionalities that you will definately want to spend some time becoming acquainted with once they are available in your account.




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

Google Analytics Benchmarking and Opt-In Settings Released Today

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Today Google announced the release of some interesting additions to Google Analytics, the free website analytics offering from the search giant. Almost as many times as the topic of Google Analytics comes up, we’re asked whether or not Google is poring over your private data and sharing it among its secret circles in dark caverns. While the answer to this question has always been a resounding “no”, today’s beta releases provide a case for the positives of data-sharing within Google Analytics.

Ever wanted to know if other online stores selling the same products as you also saw a record February? What days of the week other sites like yours experience traffic spikes? How about knowing if people stay on your pages longer than they stay on your competitors’ sites? With the industry benchmarking feature, you can answer these questions and more.

Google Analytics announces benchmarking feature

Understanding how your website performs against other websites in your vertical can shed some bright light on your online marketing plans, and even looking at data across other verticals can provide valuable insights that you can turn into action items for your online success.

So how does Google Analytics get all this data on your vertical? Well, the bottom line is that for this to be an effective tool, we all have to share it. The second feature released today is the beta of the “data-sharing settings” page, where Google Analytics users can opt in to sharing their data. To dispel the paranoia that is sure to result from this option, Google is NOT making your individual data available to your market (and your competitors). When you opt-in to data sharing, your Analytics data is aggregated with everyone else in your industry vertical anonymously.

So why stop there? Google is also letting you opt into sharing your Analytics data across other Google services you may be using. Have you tried the Conversion Optimizer from Adwords yet? If so, you’re probably frustrated that you have to set up separate conversion tracking for this feature when all that data is right there in your Analytics account. Cross Google services data sharing is the first step to allowing us to solve problems like this, and we at WebShare are excited to see where this leads.

Google Analytics help Webshare is a Google Analytics Authorized consultancy and can help you make the most of this new feature and the wealth of data available to you via website analytics. From website analytics training to Google Analytics consulting, WebShare can help you with all your website analytics needs.



David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

Another Pay-per-click Option: Microsoft adCenter

Thursday, December 27th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

If you are looking for another way to expand your search marketing program, Microsoft’s adCenter may be good option. AdCenter is Microsoft’s Live Search pay-per-click (PPC) management application. As the fourth most trafficked search engine in the world, Live Search has the potential to be a high performing search marketing medium. Features of Microsoft’s adCenter include campaign importation templates, immediate editorial feedback on keywords and ads, specific ad targeting options and updated reporting capabilities. The implementation of these features brings adCenter closer to the caliber of Google Adwords and Yahoo! Search Marketing consoles. There are however, a few things to keep in mind when using Microsoft adCenter to manage your Live Search PPC campaigns.

The adCenter console operates very much the same way Google Adwords or Yahoo Search Marketing do, making it an easy transition to getting started in adCenter. If you already have PPC campaigns in Google Adwords or Yahoo! Search Marketing, you can easily import the campaigns and keywords into adCenter through the use of Microsoft Excel templates. The templates can be downloaded from adCenter, and used to help format all of your existing campaign information and keyword lists from other PPC vendors.

It has taken a while for Microsoft to catch up with Google and Yahoo!, but Microsoft finally introduced an immediate editorial feedback function in adCenter. The function makes it easier to create ads that meet the technical requirements for Microsoft’s editorial guidelines. AdCenter instantly validates ads or keywords by checking each ad to ensure it meets the following four conditions:

  1. All of the required fields are complete (e.g. ad title, ad text and destination URL).
  2. None of the fields exceed character limits.
  3. The destination URL is formatted correctly.
  4. The display URL is formatted correctly.

Passing the immediate editorial feedback validation, however, still does not guarantee that your ad will be displayed. Your ad must still meet the content requirements in Microsoft’s editorial guidelines. Content editorial guidlines cover ad characteristics such as the type of product or service being advertised and the use of trademarks in ads. Microsoft says that newly created ads that are approved usually become active within a few minutes, and that your ad was probably approved if you don’t receive a rejection email within two hours of your ad being submitted.

Microsoft hypes adCenter’s dynamic text ad and incremental bidding options, which are intended to help you further customize your ads and target them at specific times in order to increase click-through-rates (CTRs). Dynamic text ads use keyword variables to display a customized ad that is more likely to appeal to potential customers. Incremental bidding allows you to bid an additional amount beyond your keywords bid in order to increase the position of your ads and target customers by location, day of week, time of day, customer age, or customer gender. While Microsoft’s claim is true that dynamic text ads and incremental bidding can increase CTRs, it isn’t guarranteed. You should carefully examine your ad campaigns by evaluating keywords, keyword match type settings, ad position performance and budget before implementing either of these targeting options.

AdCenter’s reporting capabilities are typical of what Google Adwords and Yahoo! Search Marketing offer. Reports are categorized by report group. Each report group contains reports that are related to a specific aspect of an account. Campaign performance reports can be viewed for an entire account, campaign, ad group, ad, or a specific keyword. Custom report options include a drag and drop feature to reorder custom report columns and the ability to include totals and averages at the bottom of reports.

WebShare is a Microsoft adExcellence member.Recently, Microsoft unveiled their adExcellence program, which provides advertisers with the opportunity to hone their adCenter skills and become recognized as an adCenter industry expert. WebShare is one of the first companies in the world to become an adExcellence Member. Members of the adExcellence program must complete classroom training and demonstrate their knowledge by passing an exam.

WebShare is a Google Adwords Qualified Company and a Yahoo Search Marketing Ambassador.

In addition to being an adExcellence Member, WebShare is also an Adwords Qualified Company and Yahoo! Search Marketing Ambassador. We are recognized as a premier pay-per-click management company in the search marketing industry, and offer a wide range of PPC services that can help you increase the performance of your PPC campaigns.

 

 

 




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

New Comparison Feature Launched in Google Analytics

Thursday, December 13th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Google Analytics has just put in place a new feature that will be formally announced very soon – comparison graphing for your reports.

New date compare feature in Google Analytics

For those of you that have grown accustomed to the tireless examination of your key Analytics reports day after day, this new feature is a welcome addition to Google Analytics from a usability standpoint. Whereas we have been seeing key metrics compared to site averages for quite some time now (displayed in red or green, in parentheses next to key numbers), we now have the ability to graph two metrics or two date ranges.

Ever wanted to quickly see things like:

Has all of our work paid off and did we get more traffic this holiday season than last?
Just head to your favorite traffic report and drop down your date selection box and select the two date ranges you’d like to compare. Black Friday 2006 to 2007 or any period you’d care to see.
date compare dropdown screenshot for Google Analytics date compare feature
Are more visitors looking at our December Discounts page after we highlighted it on our major landing pages last week?
Find the page in question in your content reports, set your date ranges to compare and enjoy the view!

Did that string of newspaper ads in San Francisco and L.A. get us more traffic from the state of California? More e-commerce transactions? Better conversion rates?
Just navigate to the Map Overlay report for California, set your comparison date ranges and have a look, city by city. You can use the tabs at the top to compare traffic, conversion, and e-commerce numbers over your date range and any geographic location.

Are visitors from my banner ads staying on my site longer after I made my landing pages better a month ago? Are they converting better as a result?
Have a look at the time on site column of the campaign report where you track your banner ad visitors. Conversion and e-commerce numbers are just a click away!

Comparing two metrics graph in Google Analytics

Does my G1 conversion rate trend in the same way as my G2 goal over time? What does it look like for Chicago visitors that came from a geo-targeted Adwords campaign?
Head over to your All Traffic Sources report, drop down the graph options, select “Compare Two Metrics” and pick the goal conversion rates you’d like to compare. Get even more detailed by finding the cross segment of a specific Adwords (or any other) campaign while in the Map Overlay report. Now drop down the graph options and pick your two goal conversion rates!

The answers to all of these questions can be quickly graphed right in the Google Analytics console now, and there are myriad ways to use this new feature and quickly see a snapshot of date range comparisons.

Google Analytics help Webshare is a Google Analytics Authorized consultancy and can help you set up, configure, and analyze this invaluable data. We offer customized analytics training as well as Google Analytics consulting for any project.



David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

On the Spot: Google’s Brett Crosby

Tuesday, November 20th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Google's Brett CrosbyEveryone who has a website and a search marketing plan knows just how indispensable solid analytics data has become. While solid analytics packages were only available at a premium not long ago, the introduction of Google Analytics has given the power of information to any website owner for a very competitive price: free.

Google Analytics has continued to mature since its release, undergoing a large scale change to the enhanced version 2 earlier this year, and the Google Analytics team didn’t stop there. Recently a number of new features have been announced, and we caught up with Brett Crosby, Senior Manager at Google Analytics to talk about the latest and greatest:

WebShare: What are these new GA features and what were the main drivers behind including them in GA? How do you select which features to include in future releases?
BC: Here were the most recent announcements:

  1. Site Search reporting
  2. Event Tracking
  3. Tagless Exit Tracking
  4. New javascript: ga.js
  5. and of course Urchin Software from Google is now in beta

All of these are pretty exciting advancements, but I am particularly excited Site Search reporting and Event Tracking. We wanted to announce the Tagless Exit Tracking feature now even though it will come out a bit later because we didn’t want people to have to adjust tags on their site twice.

As for which features we prioritize, a lot of it comes from talking to our customers. But we also look at areas where we see big opportunities to advance our product, customer sophistication, product functionality or the industry as a whole.

WebShare: How could a business use the new site search reports to make strategic decisions around their website and their business in general?
BC: Site Search reports are an absolute gold mine of data about how people use search to navigate your site once they are on it. Aside from surveys that interrupt users, Site Search is one of the only ways to get qualitative data rather than just quantitative data about what your users want. The search box on your site is a voting booth for your visitors to tell you exactly what they want out of your site. Our reports tell you if you are delivering.All the internal reports we have looked at with this have gained incredible insights already from this feature, so I am very happy that it has launched. Site Search reporting is something I am personally very passionate about, so I am very happy our engineering team did such a great job with it. To be clear, this has already launched so it is available for everyone now.
WebShare: Businesses with Flash-based websites are lining up to roll out the Event Tracking features – can you give some insight into the excitement & demand surrounding this feature?
BC: Event Tracking is basically Web 2.0 reporting. It tracks AJAX and Flash interactions that aren’t really pageviews, but are interactions with your page. This is a very important release and will help push Google Analytics and the analytics industry as a whole forward.
WebShare: We have always been able to track keywords from a search with GA, what additional information does the internal site search feature bring and how can a site owner use it to their advantage?
BC: There is a lot to be said here. First it is important to distinguish the difference between searches that get people to visit your site vs searches that happen once people are on your site. If you don’t have a search box on your site, you should really get one. You can get one for free with the new Google Custom Search Engine.I am adding one to the Google Analytics site right now actually. Why do you need one? Search engines have made people lazy… err… I mean… efficient, and they expect to be able to search for exactly what they are looking for; no more hunting and gathering with out-of-date navigation. Site Search is how people want to tell you what they want. And if you aren’t giving it to them, guess what? They go somewhere else. If you look around, all the smart sites know this and already have search boxes. The rest of us need to get on board.

So if you are reading this and own a site, go get a search box on your site asap. The reports you get from GA on Site Search are amazing. Rather than go through the details, I think I’ll just point to my friend Avinash Kauishik’s appropriately titled blog post, “Kicking Butt With Internal Site Search.”

WebShare: You’ve been involved with web analytics for a long time–what are some of the changes you’ve observed in the industry as of late? What do you see as the next big step to close the gap between raw metrics & actionable information for business owners?
BC: I love this type of question because that’s what I think about for the bulk of my time… not what is already released, but what can we do to take it further, make it more actionable? As you’d imagine, I have a lot to say about this, but I think you’ll just have to wait and see. We’ve got a lot of features in the works and we hope our users love them when they launch.
Google Analytics help Webshare is a Google Analytics Authorized consultancy, and can help you get the most out of your analytics. We offer a wide range of services, from Google Analytics training to Google Analytics consulting, and can work with projects of virtually any size.



David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

Microsoft’s Web Analytics (Project Gatineau) in Beta

Monday, November 19th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Microsoft’s Project Gatineau is now in beta and being tested by the public. On October 29th they began inviting certain users to sign up for the beta, although you do need to be an adCenter user to be granted an invitation. At this time it is not known when Microsoft will release it for all customers to use.

Gatineau is Microsoft’s “answer” to Google’s Analytics, and they state that it won’t be exactly the same as Analytics (and of course they say it will be better). Ian Thomas of Microsoft’s Digital Advertising Solutions group has a blog specifically discussing Gatineau, and in it he states, “We think there’s room in the market for another service of this nature; plus, we have some stuff up our sleeves that we hope you’ll like and which will differentiate us from Google’s and others’ offerings.” He went on to note that “we have more resources than DeepMetrix did (development team has more than quadrupled since the acquisition, for example), so hopefully we won’t disappoint you.” Microsoft’s attainment of DeepMetrix tipped off the internet community that the software giant was looking to get into web analytics. Gatineau is the name of the Canadian city where DeepMetrix was based for a number of years.

Ian goes on in his more recent blogs to give us just a taste of something we may see from Gatineau, and I’ve tried to capture some differences between this and Google Analytics. Perhaps the most exciting aspect of Gatineau is that it has the ability to track some demographic data (such as usage statistics between men and women) for users that have a Microsoft Live ID and are logged in as they browse the web. Another feature is the ability to map the document hierarchy from your content management system into the tool and see this in Gatineau’s reports. The tool also includes similar things that Google Analytics already does but in a different way, including funnel reports, outbound link tracking, inbound referrals, ROI reports, goal analysis, and client system reports.

At this time, Gatineau is not getting much attention, but we’ll be watching to see how Microsoft’s entry into the Analytics game unfolds. It is also likely that the features introduced with Gatineau could be incorporated into the market’s current offering of web analytics tools, but we’ll let time tell. We at WebShare are evaluating Gatineau and its capabilities to understand where it shines and where it lacks, and will continue to communicate on this new service from Microsoft and let you know how it might (or might not) benefit you.

WebShare, LLC is a full service Internet Marketing firm specializing in Search and Conversion Marketing. We offer a variety of services to help you make the most of your search marketing efforts, and get an edge on your competitors.




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

Search Activity Posts Big Numbers

Thursday, November 15th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

It appears that the search market is alive and well. ComScore released the findings from their report showing the worldwide search activity in August of 2007. Google is still the worldwide leader with over 60% of the market share. It is interesting to note that Youtube searches (5 billion) account for a little over 13% of all Google searches. Yahoo comes in at a distant second while Chinese search engine, Baidu comes in third place. Microsoft continues to hold a minor presence in the search market in fourth place.

Top 10 Search Properties Worldwide

We should note that this data does not include searches conducted on public computers or mobile devices. This would indicate that there are actually even more people performing searches on the internet. As mobile device and wireless technologies continue to become more prevalent, the number of searches performed will continue to grow. A couple of interesting notes include the fact that the Asia-Pacific market has the highest search volume of all regions, while the Latin America region having the smallest internet population has the most searches per searcher. If these markets continue to grow at their current rates, they could open some great international search marketing opportunities.

Search Volume by Region

To put this all in perspective, let’s take a look at the average number of searches in a little shorter time period. Breaking down the number of worldwide searches conducted in August of 2007, you can see that the average number of searches performed worldwide on a daily basis is nearly 2 billion! That’s over 22,000 searches conducted per second, which presents a whole lot of marketing opportunity!

Search Volume by Time Period

With an audience that size the question isn’t, “Why would I start a search marketing campaign?” It’s “Why wouldn’t I start a search marketing campaign?” WebShare is a Google Website Optimizer and Analytics Authorized Consultancy as well as a Google Adwords Qualified Company. We offer a variety of services including search engine optimization and search and conversion marketing to help you make the most of your search marketing efforts, and get an edge on your competitors.




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

Three Search and Conversion Marketing Tools You Can’t Live Without

Wednesday, October 24th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

Are you using the best tools for your search marketing and conversion marketing programs, and are you using them to the best of your advantage? There are a variety of applications offered by various vendors, however Google leads the pack with three applications in particular: Analytics, Adwords and Website Optimizer. It may not be perfectly clear as to how the Google applications work together and what the function of each one is. So let’s demystify the situation. Below we highlight a few Google applications, and each one can be used to help you create, manage and implement your search and conversion marketing program. Best of all, these applications are free or are available at very reasonable costs. As an added bonus, these applications are web-based, which means you don’t have to host them on your server.

Information is power, and from that perspective Google Analytics, Google Adwords and Google Website Optimizer together are a nuclear power plant! Together, these three applications can help you answer more than just how many visitors were on you site yesterday. They can help you answer as specific of a question as, “How many visitors from Chicago who speak Spanish clicked on my pay-per-click advertisement and actually converted?” And “Which version of the specific advertisement I showed them was more effective?” Furthermore, the tools can help you use the information from those questions to identify and create tests with your site to further improve your conversion rates. Now, that’s powerful stuff!

Google Analytics Consultant - Webshare is an authorized Google Analytics consultantGoogle Analytics houses all of the information collected about your site’s visitors, and allows you to view it in hundreds of different reports. It costs nothing (other than your time) to open a Google Analytics account for your website. Think of Google Analytics as a giant database that allows you to collect loads of data about your site’s visitors, and perform highly specific queries to slice and dice visitor data in just about any way you desire. Google Analytics can be even more powerful when used in conjunction with another Google application (Adwords or Website Optimizer) to help you manage your search and conversion marketing programs. If you’re serious about increasing your site’s traffic and conversion rate, you should be incorporating Google Analytics into just about everything you do.

Google Adwords consultant - Webshare is an authorized Google Analytics consultantGoogle Adwords is Google’s Pay-Per-Click (PPC) program, and its interface allows users to manage the campaigns that drive traffic to Web sites on a cost per click basis. Opening an Adwords account is easy, and only requires $5 and a few minutes. In Adwords, users can implement new PPC campaigns, edit keyword lists, change ads, and manage their PPC budget. Additionally, Adwords gives you access to a number of tools than can give you insights into everything from seasonal trends across industries to keyword research. Adwords also provides a number of reports to view your PPC campaign statistics and progress, and your Adwords account can be linked to Google Analytics to give you even more data about your ads and paid traffic. The data available in Adwords are certainly extremely useful, but any organization serious about improving their search and conversion marketing program should be exploiting the wealth of information that a solid analytics package (like Google Analytics) provides in addition to the Adwords reports.

Webshare is a authorized Google Analytics consultantGoogle Website Optimizer allows users to conduct statistical tests on their site’s pages to determine which variables will improve the probability that a visitor will convert on the website’s goals. Website Optimizer is free, but as it is accessed through the Adwords interface, it is only available to users who have an Adwords account. So technically Website Optimizer costs you the $5 you need to open an Adwords account. The variables you can test are virtually unlimited – they can range from changing the page background color, testing different ad copy, different images, different headlines, different positioning, and different layouts and designs to the combination of size and location buttons, trust logos, affiliation links, and anything in between. Website Optimizer offers two statistical analysis methods (A/B split testing and full factorial multivariate testing) to help you design and implement tests that will determine what changes on your site affect the probability of visitors converting on your site’s goals. Website Optimizer uses Analytics-like tracking code to run the tests, and you can use Google Analytics to see the long term trends that result from your Website Optimizer testing. If you’re not converting 100% of your visitors, then you should be testing your website right now.

Still not sure where to begin? WebShare offers consulting and training services to help you make the most of your search and conversion marketing programs. Webshare is one of a handful of companies in the world that is an authorized consultant for Google Analytics, Adwords and Website Optimizer as well as a certified consultant for a number of other tools including Yahoo! Search Marketing. Without a doubt, Google Analytics, Adwords and Website Optimizer can be intimidating, and they do take time to master. However, if used to their fullest potential these three applications can help you improve your search and conversion marketing programs by leaps and bounds.




David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

See more posts by David Booth

On the Spot: HackerSafe’s Cresta Pillsbury

Tuesday, October 16th, 2007 by David Booth
Google Buzz

by David Booth
Founding Partner at WebShare, LLC
Cresta Pillsbury - Hackersafe Senior Director

If you’re doing conversion marketing and statistical testing on your website and you haven’t explored trust logos yet, then you’re missing out. It’s no accident that you see the same logos appearing on more sites day after day – it’s because they’re working.

These little trustmarks have the ability to get more people to push the button, sign up for the newsletter, enter their credit card information, or even pick up the phone and call the number. We do quite a bit of testing with trust logos, and one of the most successful ones we’ve come across is the HACKERSAFE logo, an image that by now you surely recognize:

WebShare - HackerSafe premier partner Want to try Hackersafe for yourself?
Get started now at a discount!

We asked HackerSafe Senior Director of Business Development Cresta Pillsbury to talk about what’s new at HackerSafe and why this logo and program have been so successful in increasing website conversion rates:

WebShare: What has ScanAlert been up to lately? Can you tell us about the headway that’s been made in comparison shopping?
CP: PriceGrabber.com, Pronto.com and Yahoo! Shopping have each integrated HACKER SAFE into their comparison shopping listings. It is the first time since the invention of comparison shopping that consumers can evaluate merchants on more than just pricing and merchant ratings. We’re the only trustmark company doing this, and market this syndication opportunity as the HACKER SAFE Feed.ScanAlert customers can subscribe to the FEED for an additional charge above their regular HACKER SAFE subscription cost. The FEED is sold as an annual, unlimited clicks package, with rates varying according to the retailer’s site traffic and the engines they want the seal to show up in. Enrollment, which takes about five minutes, is an easy, self-directed process via our portal. We provide a pricing matrix that looks just like an advertising rate card. Every day, we send a whitelist to our shopping partners so the product searcher sees real-time security information. This is how the HACKER SAFE seal integrates with PriceGrabber.com’s listings, for example.So far, the results have been great and the FEED is making retailers lots of money.

For example, PlumberSurplus.com saw the number of orders from PriceGrabber.com rise 35%, and sales in dollars more than double (112% to be exact). PlumberSurplus.com’s Online Marketing Team Leader Ryan Douglas is not surprisingly very happy. He told us this week that while he had been getting steady sales growth in 2007 using other search tactics, he hadn’t seen anything like the results he got when he added HACKER SAFE to his PriceGrabber.com listings. (Readers will be able to read more about this in the November issue of Internet Retailer magazine).

Our comparison shopping program is very exciting. We’re continuing to add new shopping partners, the holiday retailing season is picking up speed, and retailers have a great way to stand out and close even more business.

WebShare: How can a website owner go about getting the HACKER SAFE trustmark on their sites, and what kind of testing can they do to see if it’s really helping?
CP: It’s easy. They can go through a HACKERSAFE partner such as WebShare, visit HACKERSAFE.com or call us toll-free at 866-872-3011. As far as determining an ROI, there are several testing options. While some of our customers use testing and optimization services like Offermatica or Verster, the vast majority work directly with us to implement a very simple A/B split test. More than 800 retailers have run these highly transparent, statistically valid tests with us. During the test period, visitors either see (research group) or don’t see (control group) the HACKER SAFE image. Conversion rates between the two groups are then compared.On average, the number of orders from the research group has been 14% higher than the control. The difference between one site and another usually tracks to issues like brand equity; large chain stores typically see a 4.0-9.5% difference, while smaller, less well-known sites can see up to 30% higher conversion. In other words, if you’re a smaller retailer with a 2% conversion rate, you’ll likely see a 2.3-2.5% rate by having the site HACKER SAFE certified. Multiply this against weekly, monthly and annual sales figures and you can see that the ROI is considerable.
WebShare: Of all the trust logos out there, why do you believe the HACKER SAFE logo in particular has had such a profound positive impact on website visitors?
CP: The impact really is profound; almost every media outlet covering the online marketing world has published something in which our customers rave about the experience and ROI. Some of the media coverage (and the profiled customers) include:BtoB Magazine (Stuller), DM News (Stacks and Stacks), DIRECT, Ecommerce Times (JL Hufford Coffee), InformationWeek (CDConnection.com), Internet.com, Internet Marketing Report (4WD Hardware), Internet Retailer (American Musical Supply), Internet Retailer (Yankee Candle Co.), Internet Retailer (Shari’s Berries), Marketing Sherpa (PETCO), Multichannel Merchant (Stylin’ Concepts), SearchEngineWatch, SmallBusinessComputing.com , and STORES (Frederick’s of Hollywood).

There are several reasons why HACKER SAFE works best. Thanks to a decade of unceasing media coverage about hackers, consumers are extremely conscious about security and hackers so the words “HACKER SAFE” really resonate with shoppers. The HACKER SAFE standard has been adopted by so many name brand companies (from AIG, Ace Hardware, and Cabela’s, to FootLocker, GNC, and Prudential) that consumers are much more aware than ever about what companies need to do to meet the standard. HACKER SAFE builds the trust that builds online businesses.

Google Website Optimizer help
WebShare - HackerSafe premier partner
One way to test out if the HACKERSAFE logo works for you is to get it at a discount through WebShare, and then use Google’s new Website Optimizer tool to set up and run a conversion marketing test. Whether you’re looking to increase leads, sales, downloads, signups, or clicks, it’s very likely that this little logo can help you make better use of the visitors you have on your site.Statistical experimentation can tell you if you gain anything (and how much) by making small changes to your website, and can be the most powerful tool in your search marketing arsenal.



David Booth
David is a co-founder and principal consultant at WebShare. You can find out more about David here.

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