Blogging Strategy

3 Neuromarketing Thoughts for Your Blog or Website

Neuromarketing, Neuro Internet Marketing for Blogs and WebsitesDoes this situation sound familiar? You're shopping for something online and you've found it on several online merchants' sites. The cheapest two options are from companies you've never heard of. Amazon.com is selling your desired good for a few bucks more. Something tells you to bite the bullet, pay the premium and order from Amazon.com. Chances are, that "something" is a subconscious area of your brain making decisions without your conscious knowledge. It's also a cornerstone of Neuromarketing, and today's post features three thoughts to consider on neuromarketing and your blog or website.

Neuromarketing is an emerging science that measures the physical effects of marketing on different parts of the brain. Each section of the brain is used for something different - motor skills, rational thought, feelings - everything has its own purpose . Neuroscientists use high-tech equipment to understand the relationships between exposing consumers to marketing stimuli and the resulting changes in blood flow and chemicals to the different parts of the brain. Clearly understanding these effects are in the best interest of any company hoping to be effective with neuromarketing.

Buyology by Martin LindstromPlease read our affiliate recommendation disclaimer here.I've been a fan of neuromarketing for some time now - my most recent post on the topic was on web design and layout back in January. Recently, I purchased the book Buyology: The Truth and Lies About Why We Buy, by Martin Lindstrom. Lindstrom, a neuroscientist and author, shares case study after neuromarketing tidbit after brain physiology fact in this quick read. After reading a good chunk, I wanted to share a few thoughts on how neuromarketing might be able to help your blog or website.

Neuromarketing Blog/Website Thought #1: Brands have profound impacts on our purchasing decisions. One of Lindstrom's case studies involves a follow-up to the famous Pepsi Challenge, a marketing campaign in which Pepsi conducted a double-blind scientific experiment/taste test against Coke. In the campaign's results, Pepsi was chosen slightly more than half the time over Coke. Lindstrom's case study first mirrored the conditions of the original test, which produced the same results. Then, participants took the challenge again, but this time they were informed which drink was which prior to testing. Participants in the second condition chose Coke about three quarters of the time over Pepsi.

The brain-monitoring equipment used in the study showed all sorts of brain activity differences between the two conditions, suggesting that our brains respond differently in purchasing decisions that involve brands, even when there is perceived/actual difference in quality (or price, from the Amazon example). It's clear how having a strong and consistent brand can help your blog or website immensely.

Brand effects of Neuromarketing on a WebsiteNeuromarketing Blog/Website Thought #2: Your brand is much bigger than your logo. In another study, Lindstrom described an experiment in which participants - all smokers - were shown two distinct conditions of imagery. The first condition involved images of people smoking, the Marlboro logo, other Marlboro branding, etc. Participants reacted as expected, with their tobacco-craving sections of their brain firing off signals loud and clear. In the second condition, the participants were only shown things that invoked the brand, but didn't explicitly mention smoking or Marlboro: a cowboy, a Marlboro-red Ferrari, a desert sunset. In this condition, participants' tobacco cravings flared up even more than when the Marlboro-specific imagery was shown.

Logos, advertising and branding all trigger special filters in our brain that say, "Hey, you may not want to believe this fully because someone was paid to write it in order to get you to buy it." The second condition from Lindstrom's case study didn't involve the brand, but rather the feelings, thoughts, and experiences most closely associated with the brand and was thus able to avoid the "advertising" filter while triggering the desired behavior from the participants.

How does this translate to your blog or website? One of the first tips for bloggers is to avoid being overly commercial within their blogs. Instead, they're encouraged to be helpful and demonstrate knowledge. It's a great way to begin to allow your potential customers to learn about your brand without immediately putting up the "advertising" filter.

Mirror Neurons and NeuromarketingNeuromarketing Blog/Website Thought #3: The power of mirror neurons. At the center of many nueromarketing reactions is the mirror neuron. Think of these guys as our brains' most primal form of empathy. Mirror neurons fire when we see others yawn, prompting us to yawn too. Mirror neurons make us want to dress like the cool kids at school. Mirror neurons make us emulate our idols.

They also make us buy stuff. Lindstrom points out that when you get an impulse to buy those new jeans or iPhone, it's our mirror neurons firing up. Buy this and your social status will match that of the cool people. 

If you have a blog or website, use this neuromarketing fundamental to your advantage. Know what "cool" is to your target demographic and be sure to convey how using your product or service will help others get there too.

I'm nearly finished with Buyology, which is a super quick read and packed with much more information and case studies on neuromarketing. I'd encourage you to pick up a copy yourself. What are your reactions to neuromarketing? Does it seem like something you could use for your blog or website? Are there ethical implications with this type of marketing? Leave your thoughts in the comments section below.


The Best Way to Block/Ignore Your Own Google Analytics Traffic

Block/ignore your own Google Analytics trafficIt's a problem avid internet marketers, Google Analytics enthusiasts and bloggers face all the time when viewing reports. Which visits to your website are from your visitors and which visits are from you yourself?  And despite excellent guides on identifying your own traffic by using techniques like blocking your IP address, filtering out your service provider or even trying to ignore your browser cookies, there remains no bullet-proof process to block or ignore your own visits within Google Analytics. Until now.

Ok, technically we're not going to filter out your traffic completely. We're going to go a step further and create segments, letting you measure all of your activity separate from your visitors' traffic. Doing so will not only prevent your traffic from muddying your web analytics waters, but it will also enable you to develop insights into your own traffic (and work) patterns.

The process will require you to dabble in Google Analytics' advanced segments and one of my favorite tools for tracking campaigns, Google's URL builder. Finally, it's going to take a minor commitment on your part. Here's the basic plan:

  1. Create a special bookmark using the Google Analytics URL Builder tool that only you will use to access your website - your "Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark"
  2. Set your Traffic Boomark in every browser and every PC from which you normally access your website
  3. Start your browser session for your website by using your Work Bookmark any time you visit site,.
  4. Create two new Google Analytics Advanced Segments to separate your traffic from your visitors' traffic

Creating the Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark

The first step to measure, not blog/ignore your traffic is to create the Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark. Visit the Google Analytics campaign url builder and follow these steps:

  1. Enter your Website URL in Step 1
  2. For Step 2, enter your company name as your Campaign Source
  3. Enter your name as the Campaign Medium
  4. Enter "Work" as the Campaign Name
  5. In Step 3, generate your URL and copy the resulting link to your clipboard
  6. Add your new Traffic Bookmark to every browser from which you access your website

your own google analytics trafficGoogle Analytics URL Builder is great for creating custom campaigns like the Traffic Bookmark.

Making Your Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark a Habit

Every successful solution is the perfect mix of people, process and tools. This one will require some diligence on your part. Once you've set your Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark, make sure you use it consistently. Every time you access your website, use your Traffic Bookmark. Make sure you use it after each break too as Google Analytics' default session length is 30 minutes. After you've built up some of your own traffic to the site, crack open Google Analytics to perform the final task, creating Google Analytics Advanced Segments.

Segment, Segment, Segment

Seeing how certain types of visitors behaved on your site relative to others - like you and your co-workers' traffic vs. your customers' traffic - is a critical part of success with Google Analytics. If you've never used their Advanced Segments, today's the day learn. 

Access the Dashboard for any Google Analytics profile. Click on All Visits on the right side of the dashboard, just above the date range selector. Then Create a new advanced segment.

google analytics advanced segmentsCreate new segments from the drop-down near the date range selector of your reports.

Next, follow these steps to create an advanced segment to filter our your Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark:

  1. From the menu on the left, click on Dimensions, then Traffic Sources
  2. Click and drag the Source dimension into the "dimension or metric" area in the main report section on the right
  3. In the Value field, be sure to enter your company name exactly as you typed it in your Campaign Source field from the Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark creation process above
  4. Click on Test Segment to ensure everything went OK. Your new segment should filter out a handful visits from the total.
  5. Once you're happy with your new segment, enter a name and click on Create Segment
  6. Optional: You can repeat this process with one exception to create a segment for every visit that wasn't a result of your Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark. Just make sure you change the Condition to "Does not match exactly"

dont block or ignore your google analytics trafficAlways be sure to test your segments. :)

Measure to Succeed

Now that you've created your Google Analytics Traffic Bookmark, adopted your new process of using it religiously and created advanced segments to filter your Traffic Bookmark, it's time to enjoy the fruits of your efforts. Data. Simply apply your new advanced segment to any report in your Google Analytics profile to distill the insights you seek. You'd be surprised what you can learn by measuring, not blocking or ignoring your own traffic in your Google Analytics reports. 

best way to filter google analytics trafficUse the process outlined here today to clearly measure your own traffic to your website.What else could you learn by measuring your own traffic? Are there productivity or community engagement patterns to be analyzed? Something else? What will you look at in Google Analytics or your web analytics tool when you stop blocking or ignoring your own traffic? Leave a comment below and share your thoughts.

Tracking Blog (or Website) Leads with Google Analytics in 1-2-3

People generally tend to blog because a) they're passionate about something, b) it's their job to blog about something, or c) both. In either case, it's important to understand whether your blog posts are hitting the mark with your community. Tracking your blog with website analytics software such as Google Analytics is a great way to gauge your blog's performance. Today, we'll walk through the steps necessary to track blog and website lead requests through your website's contact form. Before we get into the step-by-step, a few things:
  • I track my blog leads/emails with Google Analytics but it doesn't mean you have to. There are many other great web analytics choices - for example, I am starting to web-analytics-cheat on Google Analytics with super cool and super cheap Clicky Web Analyticsb which also supports goal funnels and starts at around $5/month.
  • Although Big Picture Web is Powered by Squarespace - our blog/website publishing platform of choice - you should be able to use this guide to track your blog/website leads if you're on a different platform, too.
  • To best demonstrate the process, I'm going to invite you to take a peak under the hood of Big Picture Web today. And while in doing so you'll see that my humble blog and content strategy hasn't quite peaked yet, I felt full disclosure was necessary to best illustrate the potential value in tracking what happens on your blog.

Step 1#: Defining Your Blog/Website Lead "Goal Funnel"

The first step in tracking blog leads/contacts is to define the Google Analytics "goal funnel." A goal funnel is the unique progression of URL addresses a visitor views as they perform a desired action on the website, such as going to the Contact Us form, filling it out, then hitting the "Submit" button. Go through the process on your own site and take note of the exact URLs you see along the way.

tracking blog leads(Click to enlarge)

tracking website leads(click to enlarge)

Step #2: Creating Your Goal Funnel in Google Analytics

Once you have your URLs, you can add a new goal funnel by editing your Google Analytics Profile Settings, then adding a new Goal:

google analytics blog goals

Name and activate your goal. Be sure to select a "URL Destination" goal type. 

google analytics lead goals

Paste the URL that corresponds to your contact/lead form's confirmation page as the "Goal URL" and be sure to select a match type of "Exact."

tracking website contacts

Advanced Tip: If you have an average lead value, you can enter it as the goal value to help you better understand the ROI of all your web efforts. I don't have a sense of what that is for Big Picture Web yet, so I just put in $5 to get a relative gauge of what's working on the blog/site. (Sidenote: An important part of web analytics is having a relatively decent idea for the size of the grain of salt required to be taken with a particular data source, based on it's level of imprecision.)

Enter any additional URLs that occur throughout the goal funnel, such as the Contact Us page itself.

google analytics contact goals(click to enlarge)

Step #3: Viewing Your Goal Reports in Google Analytics

Once you've done all the necessary work to track your blog in Google Analytics, it's time to look at the reports. A great place to start is the funnel visualization report, which will tell you where potential leads are coming from and where they're bailing throughout the process. Google Analytics experts can even customize their reports to show which fields on the Contact Us form itself are causing people to abandon the process.

contact us goal funnel(click to enlarge)

Moving past the goal funnel itself, you can then use the rest of Google Analytics tricks to analyze your website leads even further. See which blog posts are driving contacts. Which traffic sources are good for new business? Where should you focus your limited blogging time and resources to maximize your contribution to your community?

tracking blog leads with google analytics(click to enlarge)

So there you have it. How do you use tracking tools like Google Analytics or Clicky Analytics to measure the leads your blog or website generates? What insights have they provided? Have you shifted the direction of your blog based on leads you've received on certain posts? Do you comment more frequently on certain websites because they drive the most people to contact you? Leave a comment below to share your insights with the Big Picture Web community.

Squarespace Vs. the World: The Best Blogging Platform Quest Continues

Squarespace vs Blogger vs DrupalChoosing the best blogging platform is a critical first step for new bloggers. It's important to choose a tool that matches your goals and your abilities. For many (including Big Picture Web), Squarespace is an excellent publishing choice because it provides a comprehensive, best-practice blogging platform that's easy to use right out of the box. But as the middle weight content management system (CMS) class continues to grow, will Squarespace see its success continue or will some missed opportunities and some fierce new competition see a new industry sweetheart emerge?

First off, what do I mean by "middle weight" CMS? I'm defining this class loosely as a tier of blogging platforms that is between full-on CMS solutions like Wordpress and templated CMS solutions like Ning and these other simple CMS. Squarespace is a mid-weight favorite because there are no extra modules to download or configure and yet it's easy to create a customized, beautiful site in the eyes of your visitors, search engines and social media networks.

Big Picture Web has been powered by Squarespace for several months now. And while my review of Squarespace has been largely positive, I will acknowledge that nothing is ever perfect. For example, Squarespace's blog commenting system sorely lacks any reply or email notification capabilities that would enable visitors to engage more fully with the Big Picture Web community, key functionality that's critical to the blog's "stickiness" factor. (Disclaimer: I'm in no way connected to Squarespace other than being a mostly happy customer of theirs.)

Best Blogging PlatformWhile Squarespace has been good about releasing smaller updates to fix obvious flaws (e.g., SEO-friendly 301 redirects came out back in December), their ravenous community is beginning to point out the platform's faults and cry out for the next major upgrade. Nearly all of the 12 comments on Squarespace's most recent blog post involve some sort of speculation and/or dismay about the blogging platform's next big step forward. And Squarespace's response? Nothing. Not a single employee comment on their blog in response to the conversation. And in a day and age where ignoring your community can be a death knell for any company, does this mean the mid-weight CMS market may just be ripe for the picking?

If they're not careful, Squarespace could see a dip in sales or even worse, a mass exodus of its core fan base. Where would they go? Tech giant Google recently announced a major upgrade to Blogger's  design interface (some of it even oddly resembles Squarespace's interface). I'm sure Google would gladly take on any Squarespace defectors. And if that weren't enough, anticipation of Drupal Gardens continues to mount as its beta efforts gain steam. I have to imagine Gardens' free custom domain package will somehow cut into Squarespace's market. Bottom, line, blog platform creators would be wise to realize that the competition for this market is about to get a lot more fierce.

Whether its Squarespace vs. Drupal Gardens or Squarespace vs. Blogger, the best blogging platform will be the one that enables bloggers to grow their blogs easily and share the most with their communities. That said, what do you think is lacking the most from blogging platforms today?  What new features would make you try Drupal Gardens or Google's Blogger? If you're a Squarespacer, what features would compel you to switch? Or should everyone just learn how to use Wordpress? Leave a comment below to help us create a list of important missing blog platform features for blog platform creators that are willing to listen.

The Importance and Benefits of a Blog, Illustrated by Google Analytics

importance of blog(Google Trends search on the term "blog" - Click to enlarge)More and more evidence is showing the importance of investing in tools like blogs and social media as a vital part of your online marketing strategy.  Benefits of a blog include building an ever-growing source of lower-than-average cost leads and standing out as an expert in your industry.  This week's post centers on some recent industry blog stats supported by some Google Analytics and Google Trends parlor tricks to highlight the growing importance having a blog.

Blogging has been around for quite a few years now but it's just now starting to really take off for companies, according to some recent articles by eMarketer.  Companies increased blog participation from 16% to 22% between 2008 and 2009. And bolstered by a lower-than-average cost-per-lead, companies are "spiraling" their spending towards blogs and social media as they realize the growing importance of the blog.

Benefits of a blog include promoting yourself in a friendly way by educating and entertaining the people researching your topic of expertise.  The goal of each post is to help solve a problem or answer a question, not to shill your product or service. Don't be afraid to point out the occasional chuckle, epiphany or brain-teaser in your industry. Ultimately, bringing your niche together on your website to have a conversation about something interesting also means potentially creating a lot of traffic on your blog.

Successful blog posts pull in tons of traffic from search engines, and other blogs/websites.  They can also provide huge spikes in traffic when they "go viral," which occurs when many people quickly spread a link to an Internet destination through social networks like Youtube, Twitter and Facebook.  That traffic can then be routed through your company's online goal funnels to seriously move the revenue needle.  Just look at how easy Twin Cities Online Marketing firm Top Rank makes it look in their recent case study on a client's online revenue cycle.

benefit of blogSometimes it just takes the right tweet to generate a large spike in traffic to your site.

Not every topic is going to be worthy of a conversation, though. That's why it's important to use a web analytics platform like Google Analytics to see which posts are creating the most results.  Over time, you'll see how consistently creating new blogs posts pulls in more and more traffic to your site. Think of it as planting seeds throughout the internet, growing into nice little streams of traffic, new leads and business. The brief little video that follows, courtesy of the Motion Charts feature of Google Analytic's Top Content reports, illustrates this effect by looking at some of Big Picture Web's recent traffic.

Big Picture Web's Blog Post Pageviews Per Day, 12/5/09 - 3/7/10 (via Google Analytics Motion Charts):

As you watch the video, you'll see the number of pageviews each article received over time. As I added more posts to Big Picture Web, I slowly built my overall website traffic. Posts like my short review of Squarespace (the yellow bar on the chart) delivered a steady trickle of pageviews by consistently ranking in search engines for searches like "squarespace review." On the other hand, you can also see when Twitter delivered a spike of traffic to my blog when Avinash Kaushik (a Web Metrics Ninja) tweeted a link to my post on using Google Analytics to track comments on your blog (the orange bar on the chart).

In the end, blogs help build the most important aspect of any relationship, trust.  It may be days or months after someone reads your how-to article until they decide they want to call in the pro's.  But when it finally comes time for them to make a purchase, they're remember that you were the expert that helped them. You demonstrated your skills through all your helpful blog posts and have overcome a major hurdle to new business just by consistently sharing your thoughts. And therein lies the importance and benefits of a blog.

What tips could you share about your industry through a blog to help to your community? And how are you using your web analytics platform to gauge your success? Leave a comment below to continue the conversation.