For years now, working in the web optimisation space, I've always been frustrated by one simple fact: businesses spend millions of pounds every year driving customers to a website, but spend almost nothing helping those customers convert. For me, it's a wholly misguided strategy, but is one that doesn't seem set to change any time soon.
It's easy to come up with reasons for this remaining the status quo and many myths exist. My favourite is perhaps the case that marketing is relatively expensive whereas popping up a website is a drop in the ocean. But with declines in the effectiveness of traditional marketing combined with increased web sophistication and multiple digital channels now available, it's surely getting to the stage where the opposite is becoming true.
Knowledge about the top of the sales funnel where visitors come from and their value to the business is high. But, as customers move through the funnel through product consideration and to purchase, understanding their behaviour is not so easy.
Areas of need and ability to execute aren't synced
The vast majority (83%) of companies surveyed in our research Reducing Customer Struggle consider the reasons why customers abandon the shopping cart or leave the site without converting as 'very valuable' information. Yet, this is one of the areas where companies are most likely to have 'limited understanding' or 'no understanding'.
Despite widespread recognition of the importance of understanding customer behaviour in the pursuit of conversion rate optimisation, the majority of businesses surveyed (61%) are simply not able to quantify how much online revenue is lost through site abandonment due to poor online user experience.
The most glaring knowledge gap for companies is the behavior of different visitor types. Just over two-thirds of respondents reported limited (57%) or no understanding (20%) in this area.
Of course, it is a self-defeating prophecy. Only invest at one end of the funnel and you'll get traffic but no sales. However invest at the bottom and you'll get more money from the same amount of traffic: win-win.
So what is the answer for businesses looking to change the status quo? Well there is good news and there is bad news.
Put analysis first
The good news is that many of the tools you need you probably already have. Companies have vast amounts of data but finding the right data or the data that will make a difference is a whole other ball game. Finding the needle in the haystack requires you to be able to grasp all the data your have at your disposal and find the trends that really matter.
The size of the market research industry is testament to the amount of money that is spent on measuring the success of marketing campaigns that aim to drive traffic to websites. But can the same be said of analysis of conversion rates on digital channels?
Of course, sweeping statements are easy to make and I know a great number of companies that entirely buck this trend. But the research doesn't lie.
So next time you start to plan a marketing campaign to drive website traffic no matter how small make sure you factor in budget for conversion rate optimisation and analysis. At the end of the day it will result in higher return on investment and, let's face it, that's all any of us marketers really care about anyway.
Geoff Galat is Worldwide VP of Marketing at Tealeaf and a guest blogger on Econsultancy.
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