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Judah Phillips is an experienced web analytics practitioner and Internet expert currently working as a Director at a large multichannel media company. His blog is full of useful, unbiased, actionable insights learned from the real-world practice of a process-oriented, integrated approach to strategic Web Analytics for improving business performance.

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Web Analytics Prognostications for 2008

What’s the future hold for Web Analytics in 2008?  Here are a few predictions:

  • Google Analytics releases a real API for getting (and perhaps setting) data.  As you know, I think GA is a fine tool for web analytics, but has severe limitations when you want to control over your data or to feed data into other systems.  Thus, I predict Google Analytics will go beyond the “Tracking API” and release a real API that allows you to at least get data out of the tool (if not set data as well).  Think of what Feedburner does with their REST-based Awareness API.  Wouldn’t that be nice to have with GA?!
  • HBX Analytics goes away.  I’d be more than a bit nervous if I were an HBX customer because Omniture is going to sunset HBX and migrate everyone to SiteCatalyst, then try to aggressively sell them the rest of the suite. 
  • Long live Visual Sciences.  VS is a powerful tool quite superior in some regards and very different than anything else Omniture offers.  It’s also real in-house software, not some blackbox.  VS’ extensible schema, flexibility in reporting, scalability, and performance is quite unparalleled in the industry.  I can’t envision Omniture killing it (unless they peel it apart in order to create Discover 3), like they will HBX. 
  • WebTrends rebrands.  I’m not sure if you agree, but imho WebTrends Marketing Lab was an attempt to rebrand WebTrends.  I expect that interim management will continue attempting to differentiate WebTrends by rebranding products and perhaps the entire company.
  • New and updated standards are released.  As a member of the IAB’s Measurement Council I can tell you that the IAB is getting ready to release the IAB Audience Measurement Reach Guidelines, which attempt to clarify and take a stand on various aspects of server/client-side analytics and audience measurement.  I also envision the WAA increasing the number of terms they define.  But standards are just dandy and quite meaningless unless they are adopted… thus…
  • Standards enforcement is attempted in order to propel adoption. Existing and forthcoming standards will be enforced in 2008.  Enforcement from the WAA will probably come in the form of a publication of a matrix or documentation citing which vendors adhere to the standards and to what degree, what’s missing, what’s different, and so on.  If decision-makers who control budgets believe in standards, this type of document will cause the question ”do you adhere?” to be asked.  If vendors start losing deals because the answer is “no, not at all,” vendors will adopt the standards. 
  • Internal data integration becomes more important for companies and problematic for ASP’s.  When we talk about “integration” I often think people can be a bit shortsighted.  They want to integrate data from other third-party services and tools (like Salesforce.com and their ad server).  While there is certainly real value in integrating external data with web analytics data, significant value comes from integrating web analytics with internal data, such as data residing in internally-hosted CRM systems, finance, subscription, and lead generation databases. Most vendors have barely figured out how to deal with detail-level external data integration in 2007, even though many customers are demanding it.  I expect that in 2008, internal data integration will be more commonly demanded and even more problematic for ASP’s. 
  • BI tools provide better support for and integration with Web Analytics tools.  The current allotment of “enterprise” level web analytics tools are inferior to the capabilities provided by business intelligence tools from companies like Business Objects or Cognos.  Expect these BI vendors to create features for dealing with web analytics data in 2008.  Either that, or these web analytics tools need to grow up and learn a few things from BI. 
  • Web Analytics as performance management.  KPI-based site optimization means using data to guide the modification of user experience to deliver on goals.   Since goals are measurable and can be plotted against performance, it’s totally logical to use web analytics as a performance management tool.  Expect to see that gestalt in tool usage come into vogue and be discussed more in 2008. 
  • Web Analytics as part of business process automation.  Having the marketing department fielding page tags with campaign codes may work for some (small) companies, but when you work for an enterprise with thousands of clients and simultaneous campaigns across multiple channels, endemic tagging and subsequent tool configuration becomes challeging.  As part of the web analytics process, I expect to see tools support some level of business process automation enabling web analytics.
  • Features for measuring the Mobile Web.  Right now, with a log file based tool, I can segment out Mobile traffic based on user agent.  If I want to use a page tag, I have to consider js limitations.  The mobile web is the next frontier, and I only know of one web analytics vendor who is doing a decent job measuring it right now, so I expect to see more features released this year for measuring Mobile.  

So that’s that.  Like a band named PIL once said in the song called Rise “I could be wrong, could be right!”  Am I off-base, misguided, accurate, do you disagree, agree, then let me know… I’d love to hear your thoughts and your predictions for Web Analytics 2008…

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Greg Harris added the following ...

Judah,

Great post. I wanted to let you know that we are releasing a mobile web specific analytics tool. It is a hosted platform. Web site owners just need to put the code on their site. We’ve dealt with the limitations of Javascript and cookies and created a way to uniquely identify visitors. We also have features that are specific to the mobile handset, carriers and features.

We’re launching in public beta soon. I’ll send you an invite.

Great blog! Keep it up.

Greg Harris

http://www.mobilytics.net

Deirdre added the following ...

We are interested in tracking mobile visitors to our website. You noted “The mobile web is the next frontier, and I only know of one web analytics vendor who is doing a decent job measuring it right now”. Would you mind sharing the name of this web analytics vendor? Additionally, is there a specific solution you are using to analyze log files to arrive at mobile visitors? MANY THANKS FOR A GREAT POST!

Judah added the following ...

Hi Greg: Sounds good. I’m looking forward to learning more about your forthcoming product for tracking mobile! I like the name of the company. Please do send an invite. And thanks for the nice words about the blog. I will keep it up!

Hi Deirdre: In the interest of remaining vendor-neutral, email me at judah (at) webanalyticsdemystified.com, and I’ll let you know the one. A specific solution I would suggest for analyzing log files for mobile visitors is Unica NetInsight. NetInsight likes logs. Additionally the hybrid nature of the solution has excellent applicability and promise for mobile. The potential exists to parse logs and/or instrument your pages with event tags (for tracking events) that capture additional, specific elements unique to the mobile experience. Many analytics vendors who deal with Mobile seem to emphasize page tagging (a nice data collection method of course) or packet sniffing. Thank you so much for the good words about my blogging! I appreciate it! :)

Alex Cohen added the following ...

Hey Judah,

Nobody has snapped up any of the qualitative vendors yet (ForeSee, etc.). Maybe Omnivoreture will make a move to shore up their suite of options…

-Alex
http://www.alexlcohen.com

Judah added the following ...

Good point Alex! We’ll see! One of the challenges I see to the whole “qualitative” vendor landscape is that many larger, more established companies already do their own VOC research and have for a long time. Current “qualitative” vendors seem to differentiate their offerings from internal company research by having a closer tie to real-time, on-site visitor surveying. Only the future can tell whether that value prop can make inroads against focus groups and net promoter scores in big companies. For smaller companies or companies that don’t already do VOC research internally (or for big companies with an appetite for investment into new cutting edge technologies for VOC), the value prop is more compelling.


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