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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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Archive for 'Targeting'

Let’s Use Web Analytics Data for Targeting

I’ve been thinking a bit about targeting, and how we in the web analytics industry have just a ton of visitor or segment-level data that can be used for targeting ads or content, but most tools don’t let you use the data or easily feed it to other systems to do any targeting.  It’s rather odd, don’t you think?   Even Omniture Test and Target isn’t using, as far as I’ve learned, a single data model or the data collected from their behavioral tools, like HBX or SiteCatalyst, for targeting.  All their data models and thus, their data, are unique to the products in their platform.   So I decided to resussitate/revise a blogviation and offer it as food for thought on MediaPost.  When I reread this post, it’s more of an informational post for product managers on how I’d begin thinking about targeting with analytics data and what types of targeting are possible, so here it goes.   

Targeting refers to the process of delivering content or ads to segments or visitors based on their known attributes.  The goal of targeting is simple to understand: maximizing the performance of content or an ad by serving it to visitors at a time when they are most open to the receiving the message. 

For example, you may visit a site, and see some type of ad unit calling out at you to “meet singles in <insert_your_city>.”  When browsing a real estate site, you may see ad units for realtors and mortgage companies.  After entering a keyword such as “car insurance” and clicking through the search results, you may land on a site and see an ad for a car insurance company or land on a page that persuades you to begin the process for creating an insurance price quote.  That’s targeting in a nutshell.  It’s simple for a site owner to understand:

  1. Visitor X has these attributes.  
  2. We have content or an ad that we think will appeal to Visitor X’s attributes. 
  3. Let’s show the relevant content or ad. 

In online media, targeting is associated with paid search campaigning, ad serving, and content optimization based on recognizing and responding to the following attributes:

  • Category and sub-category.  Conceptual constructs like “categories” of topics on a media web site or products on an ecommerce site can be targeted to include certain types of ads or messages.   The idea is that if visitors are browsing your category for “hardware floors,” you could offer them an ad or content specific to “flooring installation services.” 
  • Geography.  Country, region, city, state, DMA are all targetable constructs.  You may run a sports site and choose to target people surfing in from 02116 (Boston) an ad for Red Sox tickets or content about Manny Ramirez’s recent trade to the Dodgers.
  • Browsing environment such as the connection speed, type of browser, operating system, user software, domain, and ISP.  An ad network could serve an ad for DSL to a modem-based surfer by detecting the visitor’s browsing environment.
  • Time.  The idea of only showing content during specific periods of time is called “parting.”  Common types include day-parting and season-parting.  For example, a B2B site only choosing to show ads for a particular manufacturer’s product during business hours — the site’s busiest time of day — would be an example of day-parting.
  • Keyword.  There are many different types of keyword targeting.  Search engines target ads based on keywords in queries.  Content Management Systems target content based on site search keywords or referring keywords.  “Keywords” may be associated as metadata with site sections or pages, similar to zone or category targeting on an ad server.  Once a page is associated with keyword metadata in an ad tag, you can tell your ad server to target ads to that keyword on whatever page or pages the tag was placed. 
  • Language.  When a language can be detected or known in advance, you can target ads to visitors in their language.
  • Demographics. If the ad server is aware of a segment’s demographics, such as age, gender, income, title, purchasing power, and so on, an ad can be targeted on that basis. 
  • Context.  Think of AdSense and how it matches text ads based on the semantics in site content.  Or when, after adding a product to your cart, a site offers you “free shipping” if your total purchase exceeds a certain price.  This is content targeting based on context.
  • Profile.  Targeting is possible based on conclusions drawn and rules created from attributes about an individual or segment (such as purchasing propensity or job title).
  • Rules.  Serve an interstitial ad only to visitors who don’t have a cookie set for the site.
  • Events.  Someone deposits a large sum of money into his bank account, so the online banking site offers him a CD product on his next login.

We’ve all heard, of course, about a very specific type of often-discussed targeting in online advertising: “behavioral targeting.”  Behavioral targeting refers to the technology and process in which an ad or content is shown to a visitor based on their past actions and reactions.

Behavioral targeting involves:

  1. Collecting behavioral data about visitors.
  2. Identifying when those visitors visit a site.
  3. Determining the current context of visitors on the site.  
  4. Detecting the visitor’s current behavior.
  5. Serving relevant ads (or content) matched to the behavior.

The goal being to use past behavioral data to influence the customer buying cycle or marketing lifecycle, in order to more effectively and more quickly deliver on advertiser and site goals.

So where does Web analytics come in?  You would think Web analytics data from “Web analytics” technology would be used to enabling “targeting.”  After all the best Web analytics systems store detailed visitor level data about past behavior.  Web analytics data certainly can be used, but in most cases, targeting is a function provided by the ad server or network, perhaps the ISP, or another technology called the “behavioral targeting platform,” not from data collected by the Web analytics tool.

In order to make Web analytics data useful for targeting, you will need to use your data to:

  1. Define segments to target or identify visitors to target.
  2. Feed past behavioral data about segments or visitors to the targeting technology.
  3. Analyze segment and visitor performance against site or advertiser goals after targeting.

Targeting has a proven ability and amazing potential to generate tremendous returns, especially when combined with the rich, detailed behavioral data available in Web analytics.  As a method for optimizing site content and advertising, targeting technologies that integrate with Web analytics data will only become more important and a necessary “must have” for innovative companies that want to maximize business opportunities on the Internet. 

Web Analytics and Targeting: A Quick Blogviation

Targeting refers to the process of identifying characteristics of a segment so that relevant content may be matched to it and delivered at a time when the segment is most open to the message. The idea is the right content to the right visitor at the right time (optimally in real time). 

For example, you may visit a site, and see some type of ad unit calling out at you to “meet singles in <insert_your_city>.” When browsing real estate you may see ad units for realtors and mortgage companies.  After entering a keyword such as “car prices” and clickingthrough the SERP, you may see an ad for a local car dealer.   That’s targeting in a nutshell.  It’s simple: 

  1. Visitor X has these attributes. 
  2. We have content that we think will appeal to Vistor X’s attributes. 
  3. Let’s show that content. 

While targeting has helped to increase ad clickthrough rates, it’s far from an ideal science.  Current methods for targeting have inefficiencies.  What if Visitor X just bought a new car after his recent marriage?  Unless the targeting engine is made aware of the visitor’s current state, the targeting may be off and not yield desired results. 

Even with limitations around “current awareness” targeting is perceived in the Internet industry as a crucial activity for maximizing the effectiveness of advertising and content.  Targeting is the next stage after A/B and multivariate testing.  Once you determine the preference of segments based on testing, you identify content to target. 

In new media, targeting is something associated with paid search campaigning, ad serving, and content optimization.  It’s not uncommon for targeting activities to be based on:

  • Category and sub-category.  Conceptual constructs like “categories” of topics on a media web site or products on an ecommerce site can be targeted to include certain types of ads or messages.  The notion of a “zone” fits in here as well.  The idea is that if visitors are browsing in your category for “hardware floors” you could offer them an ad or content specific to “flooring installation services.” 
  • Geography.  Country, region, city, state, DMA are all targetable constructs.  You may choose target people surfing from 02141 (Cambridge, MA) an ad for pre-sale Red Sox tix or content about Mike Lowell’s recent contract.
  • Browsing environment such as the connection speed, type of browser, operating system, user software, domain, and ISP.  An ad network serves an ad for Verizon DSL to a modem-based surfer by detecting the visitor’s browsing environment.
  • Time.  The idea of only showing content during specific periods of time is called “parting.”  Common types include day-parting and season-parting.  For example, a B2B site only choosing to show ads for a particular manufacturers product during business hours – the site’s busiest time of day – would be an example of day parting.
  • Keyword.  There are many different types of keyword targeting.  Google does fantastic things with targeting ads based on the keywords in queries.  Content Management Systems can target content based on on-site search keywords or referring keywords.  “Keywords” may be associated as metadata with site sections or pages, similar to a zone or a category targeting on an ad server.  Once a page is associated with “keyword” metadata, you can tell your server to target that keyword (and all pages where it exists as metadata).  If two categories each with different content share a targetable keyword, I can target ads across both categories to pages tagged with that specific keyword.
  • Language.  When a language is set, you can target ads to visitors with that setting. Think Google.  Keep in mind that when you target by language, the creative copy is not translated. 
  • Demographics. If the ad server is aware of a segment’s demographics, such as age, gender, income, title, purchasing power, and so on, an ad can be targeted on that basis.  Sometimes this is called “profile targeting.”
  • Context.  Think of Google AdSense and how it matches ads based on the semantics in site content.  Now you understand content targeting based on context.
  • Profile.  Targeting is possible based on conclusions drawn and rules created from the known attributes (such as purchasing propensity) about and individual or segment.

Enter one of the holy grails of online advertising and new media: “behavioral targeting” – an advanced form of targeting. Behavioral targeting refers to the process in which content is shown to a visitor based on the web sites they visit (or have visited) and the actions they take on those sites.  

Behavioral targeting involves:

  1. Knowing where a visitor “comes from” and what they’ve done in the past. 
  2. Determining the context of the visitor on the site. 
  3. Detecting the visitor’s current behavior.
  4. Serving relevant content and/or ads matched to the behavior.

By understanding the visitor’s past history, current state, and most recent behavior the marketer can target content in order to influence some point in the customer buying cycle- often at the stages of awareness and consideration.

So where does web analytics come in?  You would think web analytics data from “web analytics” technology would provide the seed data for enabling “targeting.”  It can be but in most cases, targeting is a function provided by the ad server or network or another technology called the “behavioral targeting platform,” not the analytics tool… the data does not come directly from the web analytics tool.  I’d love to hear how well (or if at all) Omniture TouchClarity is integrated with Omniture Discover or other offerings. 

In order to make web analytics data useful for targeting (if you can at all), you will need to use your web analytics data to:

  1. Define segments to target (hard to export from web analytics tools)
  2. Feed those segments and associated behavioral data to another tool (achievable if you own your data and run a tool in-house.  Harder and more costly if not).
  3. Report on segment performance after targeting (that requires employing the right people and enabling them with the right tools)..
  4. Analyze segment performance after targeting (again employ the right people and enable them with the appropriate tools and resources).

While I’ve only covered a very little bit about “targeting” and even less about “behavioral targeting” in the context of web analytics, I hope that my simple description of current methods for targeting and some thinking about “what is BT” will help you understand the emerging ecosystem in which analytics tool are interoperating now and will interoperate in the future.

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