It's been a while since I've had some time to get a post up, and one of the reasons why is because I have been spending a lot of time preparing for the Omniture Web Analytics Competition at BYU. This was my second semester participating in the competition, but unfortunately we worked with the same website's data. Though you'd think I had an advantage, being familiar with www.costumecraze.com, the Omniture people made it clear at the opening meeting that we needed to come in with new information this time around.
I can't share any specific information due to my signing a non-disclosure agreement, but I can talk a bit about the SiteCatalyst product! To be completely honest, SiteCatalyst is an absolutely fabulous tool that still needs a little work. Currently, you have great flexibility and customization available to you (though sometimes you end up paying quite a bit more for some of those options) as an Omniture customer. The task of keeping up with all of your key performance indicators is pretty simple with the advanced dashboards you can create. From my experience, which is admittedly little, SiteCatalyst blows the competition away in sophistication and the level of customization available. Granted, those who use Omniture's tools are paying out the nose, so SiteCatalyst better be good.
I do, however, have a few complaints. Omniture has broken up their reports into three main sections: Commerce, Traffic, and Paths. This is really helpful in some regards because it breaks up the many reports available into three different categories, yet I found myself extremely frustrated on several occasions. Because these three categories are very rigidly constructed, getting reports on data from both traffic and commerce is impossible (or at least hard enough to seem so). For example, should I want to find a report that gave me the percentage of site traffic that came from a specific domain and the revenue from that domain I would be out of luck. For some questions you can look up two different reports within their respective categories, but this is not always the case.
Without giving out specific information, I was trying to do research on CostumeCraze's global presence (where commerce and traffic were coming from geographically) and I could not find reports that really helped me drill down on the issue. SiteCatalyst provides traffic maps, showing which countries around the world are providing site traffic, but I could not find anything that would help me see the revenue that matched up with that traffic. The data already being tracked, so why can't I get to the information I need? There were ways to work around the problem, sort of, but I'd rather just have interoperability between the three categories.
Omniture does offer other services, and it's entirely possible that Discover or another piece of software solves some of the problems I see in SiteCatalyst. Unfortunately, I haven't had access to any of the more advanced tools, but I can probably research it a little bit.
Friday, March 2, 2007
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