Showing posts with label google analytics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label google analytics. Show all posts

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Google Cast gets an analytics tool for developers


The enhanced Google Cast SDK Developer Console.

Above: The enhanced Google Cast SDK Developer Console.
Image Credit: Screenshot

Google today announced a significant enhancement to the developer tools for its Google Cast software, which lets people stream media from their PCs and mobile devices to TVs and speakers. The Google Cast software development kit (SDK) Developer Console now includes dedicated pages for analytics for apps that work with Google Cast.


The tool is a bit reminiscent of Google Analytics, which lets people see check website performance and usage. Developers can access it by clicking the View link under the Statistics column for a given app.
“The devices tab shows the number of Cast devices that have launched your application, the sessions tab shows the number of Cast sessions of your application, and the average playback tab shows the average length of media playback time per session for your application,” Google Cast software engineer Chris Dolan wrote in a blog post. Developers can break things down by geography and operating system and change the time range.
Today’s update could be a big step forward to those developers who have supported Google Cast from the beginning despite the lack of first-party tools for measuring usage of it. Cast first showed up in 2013, with an SDK geared toward integrations on iOS, Android, and Chrome.
Google Cast works with the Chromecast, which Google updated last year, as well as Android TV and Cast-enabled speakers. Google has enriched Cast for developers with new application programming interfaces (APIs) and a plugin for the Unity game engine.
Yahoo’s Flurry analytics tool added support for Apple TV last month, and in January Twitter’s Answers analytics tool got Apple TV support. Now companies like Spotify have a good way to see how their apps are doing on Cast devices like Chromecast.

Wednesday, April 22, 2015

Back to Basics: What Content Marketers Need to Know About Google Analytics

Columnist Jonathan Blank outlines the three elements of Google Analytics that every content marketing team should understand.





For months you’ve debated the framework for measuring the return on investment of your content programs. Based on external research and internal business objectives, you’ve set your priorities and understand at a high level how your content strategy should contribute to your brand health, marketing optimization and revenue generation goals. Now it’s time to set up your measurement tools to report against your goals.

Content marketers on your team should have a basic understanding of Google Analytics prior to implementing an overarching content strategy or discrete content programs. Even if your team uses another Web analytics platform, such as Omniture, a primer on Google Analytics will help facilitate conversations on what to track and how to report on those metrics.

If your team understands the following three elements of Google Analytics, you should have a good foundation for your content dashboard.

Establishing Visitor Goals

Let’s start with what your goals should not focus on. They should not focus on overall traffic to your content hub.

Please do monitor site traffic. However, you should recognize that only a small portion of your traffic is going to take the conversion action you want. Depending on your industry, the average Web conversion rate is somewhere between 1 percent and 3 percent, according to WordStream.

By clearly defining your conversion goals in Google Analytics, you’ll gain a better understanding of what attributes are associated with your visitors that convert.

First, outline both your macro conversions (i.e., complete a transaction, fill out a form, etc.) and micro conversions (i.e., click on a pricing page, watch a video, stay on a site for a specific period of time).

Second, go into your Google Analytics account and set up these conversions as formal Goals that will be recorded. Sign in, go to the Admin Panel, and click on Goals under the View section. Google Analytics has templates for common goals and, alternatively, allows you to set up custom goals.

Defining Quality Segments

Through the use of Advanced Segments in Google Analytics, you can break out your high-quality traffic from your low-quality traffic. You should begin by coming to an agreement within your organization on what level of goal completion would match up with one of four levels of engagement.

Here’s an example of segments that you could define in Google Analytics:

Unengaged – Visitor bounced from site

Interested – Visitor doesn’t bounce, but views few pages

Engaged – Completes micro conversions

Converted – Completes macro conversions

In addition to defining quality traffic by behavior, we can layer on demographic and device attributes. You may want to look at how engaged users are who are between the ages of 25-34, for instance. Or you may want to look at how engaged your female users are.

Apply this segmentation to your reports and you’ll start to see what content aligns with spikes in high-quality traffic and, conversely, low-quality traffic. Hopefully, at this point, you are getting excited by the potential of getting out of the trap of continually having to grow overall traffic.

Reviewing Assisted Conversions

When you review what channels, pages and content are performing best for you, you need to make an active decision about your attribution model.

You have three choices for your attribution model. Last-click attribution gives full credit to the channel or content that immediately precedes a conversion. First-click attribution gives full credit to the channel or content that a visitor interacted with before any other channels in the conversion path. Finally, multi-touch attribution gives equal credit to all channels that visitors touched in their particular conversion path.

If you decide to go with multi-touch attribution, you’ll need to get familiar with Assisted Conversions in Google Analytics. If a channel is interacted with anywhere in the conversion path, except immediately preceding the conversion, the channel is considered an Assisted Interaction.

Let’s look at how a visitor might convert through to a sale based on our content marketing program.

“Jane” is interested in sprucing up her dining room for spring. She performs a Google search for “how to brighten up a dining room.” She clicks on an article we published on our blog about using paintings to brighten up rooms. From there, she downloads a guide we developed on evaluating paintings.

After a discussion with her family, Jane starts to look for specific paintings. She sees one of our re-marketing display ads for a modern and affordable painting. She clicks on over to our e-commerce page and converts.

Based on this scenario, we’ll attribute equal credit to organic search, our blog and display for the conversion. Organic search and our blog content will show up as Assisted Conversions in our Google Analytics report.

Use the data from Assisted Conversions to better understand your funnel and to optimize the performance of your campaigns that are feeding into your content hub.

As content marketers, we aim to grow quality traffic. As such, we need to take the time to define goals, conversions and our view of the funnel. If we take the time to do that, our audiences will spend more time with us.

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Monday, April 20, 2015

Google’s Mobile Search Results On Android Now Prompt Users To Install Apps With Relevant Content


Google’s mobile search results on Android will now prompt you to install mobile apps that feature content relevant to your search query. This essentially turns Google’s mobile search results page into an app discovery service and will likely be a major boon for mobile developers.


Given the overall shift to mobile, good content now often lives inside of apps, where search engines can’t typically find it. To fix this, Google introduced App indexing in late 2013, which let the search engine index content from a select number of apps and link to it from its search results pages. In this first version, users had to have the apps already installed on their phones, though. Over time, Google will open this program to all developers; earlier this year, it started highlighting content from apps in its Google Now Cards.

Today’s update takes the concept of App indexing to its next logical step by helping users find relevant content in apps they don’t already have on their phones.

The App Indexing project now features more than 30 billion deep links — a number Google shared for the first time today, though the company wouldn’t disclose how many developers have implemented this feature in their apps.

Here is what all of this will look like in practice: say you are searching for a recipe and Google’s algorithms determine that there is an app that has just the right recipe for black forest cake for you. You will now see a carousel with relevant apps and a prominent install button right next to them. From there, you’re taken to the Google Play store to install the app. Once the app is installed, you simply click “continue” and the app will open with the content you were looking for.


This is going to be a huge deal for mobile app developers. App discovery, after all, is still very much an unsolved problem and anything that gets an install button for a relevant app in front of more people (especially if there’s no need to pay for it) is a good thing.

“The goal is for developers to continue to create great content in apps and create deep links into that content so users who have particular questions can directly access that content,” Rajan Patel, a Google principal engineer on the team responsible for this project, told me.

Patel also told me that the team is looking at how it can grow this project beyond Android, but he couldn’t share any specifics at this point.

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How to solve Silicon Valley's diversity challenges? Google has ideas



Google says it knows Silicon Valley needs to do a better job of employing women and minorities. One company program hopes to solve the problem by looking to historically black colleges.




Google knows it's got problems with diversity among its ranks, and it was one of the first in Silicon Valley to say so.

The search giant first released statistics last May about women and minorities in its workforce, and by its own admission they were bad. So, it's tried to find fixes, and it's talked about some of those programs publicly. One of them focuses on what it calls "unconscious bias," or cases of discrimination that aren't overt or even intentional, and it now has a program devoted to the problem.

But fixing Silicon Valley's preference for white males won't happen immediately.

"We have a lot more work to do," said Laszlo Bock, Google's head of people operations (Google parlance for human resources). "For a long time we'll have a lot more work to do."

But now the question is how, and he mentions part of it in a book on management he released this month called "Work Rules!" In it, he talks about the nuances of working and management at Google, including how the company nudges women to nominate themselves for promotions, as it is done in the engineering world. In an interview, another program he also talked about was a "Googler in Residence" initiative started with historically black colleges.

All this, Bock said, helps to solve the problem. But is it enough?

Silicon Valley has faced tough questions as the treatment of women and minorities in tech has become top of mind for the past several months. High-profile lawsuits and sexual-discrimination complaints have attracted additional scrutiny. But all this also speaks to how influential the sector has become, especially as it becomes a driving factor of the global economy and a model for employee benefits and health programs.

The conversation has been punctuated by high-profile incidents involving tech's largest companies. Female engineers from both Facebook and Twitter have filed lawsuits about the allegedly unfair work environments at those places. The technorati also paid close attention to a trial involving Ellen Pao, a former partner at the venerable venture firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, who argued gender discrimination prevented her from getting promotions. She eventually lost the case.

The spotlight has even hit Google. At the South By Southwest conference in Austin, Texas, last month, Google's executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, was called out for repeatedly interrupting his co-panelist, United States CTO and former Googler Megan Smith.

Bock sees the problem in Silicon Valley, but said fixing it involves more than just trying to clean up the numbers. According to the diversity report, women make up only 17 percent of the technical workforce. Minorities make up 40 percent. Most of that figure is made up of Asian workers, while black and Hispanic workers only make up 1 percent and 2 percent, respectively.

"Couldn't we just fix it by hiring everyone who is a female computer scientist from every other company?" said Bock. Sure, it would make the numbers look better, "but it wouldn't solve the underlying problem."


To do that, tech companies need to make sure there are more up-and-coming minority and female computer scientists "in the pipeline."

So, Google has another program called "Googler in Residence." It started when one black computer scientist at Google approached the head of Howard University and asked if he could spend the year there in residence, said Bock. This year, the program has expanded to five historically black colleges. The company went from having no black interns to about 30 from the different schools, said Bock.

For women and minorities, not being able to interact with other women and minorities in those technical roles is a big part of the problem. Whitney Telle, who co-founded the Grace Hopper Celebration, a conference that recognizes women in computing, remembers first arriving in the Bay Area and working in the semiconductor industry. "I was desperate to meet other women," she said. That's part of what spurred her to start the conference.

Google is trying to help create that kind of exposure. And Bock says other companies are following suit and talking about instituting similar programs.

"That's how you solve the greater industry problem at that level," he said.

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Friday, April 17, 2015

See Your Site as Googlebot Mobile Does



With the Google’s Mobile Update coming in hot, are you sure you’re auditing the mobile content Googlebot is seeing? Not just content, but directives and annotations can change depending on the user-agent or device being used to request a page of a website. This article walks through one quick way to leverage free browser tools to ensure you’re looking at sites through the eyes of Googlebot Mobile.


Web Developer Extension for Chrome - to temporarily disable cookies.
Chrome Web Browser DevTools - Also known as Inspect Element in Chrome to disable cache, emulate iPhone, switch user-agent, and to view complete webpage (post JavaScript execution).

Download Web Developer Extension and Disable Cookies

Googlebot does not accept cookies, so in order to ensure we’re seeing the same thing we’ll need to disable them in our browser. One way to do this is to download the Web Developer Extension for Chrome. Once installed, a gear icon will appear to the right of the address bar. As seen below, click the gear icon (1), then click the Cookies tab (2), then finally Disable Cookies (3). Note: This will sign you out of any logged-in accounts, so be sure to re-enable cookies when done. Consider downloading and using Chrome Canary for troubleshooting to avoid this issue.



Use Chrome DevTools to Disable Cache, Set User-Agent, and Emulate iPhone
Find and Copy Googlebot Smartphone User-Agent

Next navigate to the documentation Google maintains (click this link or Google search [googlebot smartphone user-agent]) for the most up-to-date Googlebot Smartphone user-agent string. Also find below. Highlight and copy, we’ll need this later in the tutorial.

Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 6_0 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/536.26 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/6.0 Mobile/10A5376e Safari/8536.25 (compatible; Googlebot/2.1; +http://www.google.com/bot.html)

Open Developer Tools in Chrome

Now open Developer Tools in Chrome by clicking View -> Developer -> Developer Tools.



Disable Cache in Developer Tools in Chrome

Once Developer Tools is open disable cache by clicking the clicking the gear icon (1), and checking the box Disable cache (while DevTools is open) (2), as shown below.



Emulate iPhone Using Developer Tools in Chrome

Finally, click the little iPhone icon in DevTools (1), set Device to Apple iPhone 5 UA box (3), and refresh the page (4).



Congratulations you’re now seeing the page Googlebot is seeing for Mobile devices!! To review, the main points to consider here are:

Disable cache and cookies.
Set latest Googlebot Smartphone user-agent string.
Emulate iPhone.

Take This and Run!

Now that Google is crawling JavaScript, be sure to look for and audit content, directives, and annotations within DevTools. Again, website can now be configured to change content based on many factors. To see what Bing sees, simply right click the page and View Source. This incomplete view, is also what most SEO crawlers, like Screaming Frog are currently looking at.

A couple other fun advanced options to consider:

For international sites, use an Web proxy to request pages from the IPs of different countries and/or set browser to a different language to see if a site is configured to render different content, directives, or annotations.
Use various SEO extensions to analyze the content rendered from various configurations.

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