Shoes of Prey – Using Custom Reports to identify influential pages
January 31st, 2011 | Published in Google Conversions, Uncategorized
This post was first published on the Asia-Pacific Conversionroom blog
Michael Fox is a co-founder of Shoes of Prey, an online retail store that allows you to design women's shoes online, which are then handmade and shipped to you. Michael blogs about running Shoes of Prey at the business blog www.22michaels.com. - Ed.
Like most online retailers, we’re always looking for ways to turn our website visitors into customers. We use Google Analytics to monitor the performance of our website and our online marketing and to understand how to make our website even more appealing to potential customers.
As part of our ongoing efforts to improve our website, we recently asked ourselves: which pages on our site are most influential to our customers’ purchase decisions? For example, if someone visits our testimonials page, does that make them more likely to make a purchase? How about watching the videos on our leather page, visiting our gallery, or arriving on our small shoes or wedding shoes landing pages? We knew the answers to these questions would help us maximise the number of purchases from our website.
Custom reports
To start answering these questions, we created a Custom Report in Google Analytics to review the “Highest Converting Pages” on our website. You can make a copy of our custom report setup here and use it with your own site data.
This report shows us three key data points:
We then divided Total Goal Completions by Pageviews (on a separate spreadsheet) to discover what percentage of people who visit a particular page end up making a purchase. We assumed that the higher the percentage, the more valuable that page for turning visitors into customers. We could then promote the content on those pages more across our website.
We kept in mind a few circumstances that could impact this data. For example, people visiting our shopping cart or logging into our members area will have a high conversion rate, so we filter those pages out. Customers looking to purchase may be more likely to visit our page about our returns policy. We also kept in mind that we were looking at the same visit session only. Often, customers make multiple research visits before they finally make a purchase. Therefore, we were conscious that there may be other pages that motivate purchases, but are not reflected in our custom report because they were viewed in another session.
After reviewing the data, we determined that our most influential pages were:
Taking action from our insights
Knowing our most influential pages has helped us maximise the number of purchases we generate through our website. Once we reviewed the data, we took the following next steps:
Posted by Alan Wrafter, Google Analytics Team
Michael Fox is a co-founder of Shoes of Prey, an online retail store that allows you to design women's shoes online, which are then handmade and shipped to you. Michael blogs about running Shoes of Prey at the business blog www.22michaels.com. - Ed.
Like most online retailers, we’re always looking for ways to turn our website visitors into customers. We use Google Analytics to monitor the performance of our website and our online marketing and to understand how to make our website even more appealing to potential customers.
As part of our ongoing efforts to improve our website, we recently asked ourselves: which pages on our site are most influential to our customers’ purchase decisions? For example, if someone visits our testimonials page, does that make them more likely to make a purchase? How about watching the videos on our leather page, visiting our gallery, or arriving on our small shoes or wedding shoes landing pages? We knew the answers to these questions would help us maximise the number of purchases from our website.
Custom reports
To start answering these questions, we created a Custom Report in Google Analytics to review the “Highest Converting Pages” on our website. You can make a copy of our custom report setup here and use it with your own site data.
This report shows us three key data points:
- Pages that people visited (Page column)
- The number of views each page received (Pageviews column)
- How many sales (ie goal completions) were generated in that same visit session after visiting one or more of those pages (Total Goal Completions column)
We then divided Total Goal Completions by Pageviews (on a separate spreadsheet) to discover what percentage of people who visit a particular page end up making a purchase. We assumed that the higher the percentage, the more valuable that page for turning visitors into customers. We could then promote the content on those pages more across our website.
We kept in mind a few circumstances that could impact this data. For example, people visiting our shopping cart or logging into our members area will have a high conversion rate, so we filter those pages out. Customers looking to purchase may be more likely to visit our page about our returns policy. We also kept in mind that we were looking at the same visit session only. Often, customers make multiple research visits before they finally make a purchase. Therefore, we were conscious that there may be other pages that motivate purchases, but are not reflected in our custom report because they were viewed in another session.
After reviewing the data, we determined that our most influential pages were:
1. Leathers page
2. Returns policy page
3. Tab2 - the delivery tab on our product page
4. Customer testimonials page
Taking action from our insights
Knowing our most influential pages has helped us maximise the number of purchases we generate through our website. Once we reviewed the data, we took the following next steps:
- We’re in the process of redesigning our shopping cart, and we’ll look at ways to incorporate this information within each step to reduce drop off and increase conversion rates. For example, we’ll provide information about our returns policy and deliveries within the shopping cart pages itself. This will reduce the need to click away to our FAQ page.
- We’ll also consider making some of this information, especially our customer testimonials, more readily accessible on our home page and custom shoe designer.
- We’ll include some of this information on key search engine marketing landing pages such as our gift certificate page. For example, we’ll incorporate customer testimonials in order to assure those purchasing our gift certificates that they are providing a gift that will be appreciated.
- This will be good information to incorporate into discussions on our Facebook fan page and in videos on our YouTube channel.
Posted by Alan Wrafter, Google Analytics Team