82,720.14 PLN in 73 days that's how much I earned for the company I work for. How? Read more
This entry, will be exceptionally short. Due to the fact that all my work has already been described by Pawel Kepa, for whom I gave an interview at the beginning of 2019. My efforts in Facebook Ads campaigns have had an unexpected effect. At the present time with the date of this entry I invested approx. 3800 PLN gaining almost 114 thousand in earnings. Of course, it is not my money. This is money I earned for the company where I work. In the interview you will find out how I did it 馃檪
To begin with, let's clarify the definitions. We do marketing for new people. If we want to attract customers we display ads to them. If we already have a customer who buys from us, or has done any interaction - we remind them that we are there. As you'll notice in the screengrab above, I got the cheapest customer already buying. Remarketing is the display of ads to an already "caught" customer/user. However, I will talk about this in other posts.
Google Analytics - A series of tutorials by KamikStudio that will teach you how to move freely with the tool.
Google Analytics is an underrated tool by many marketers. Too bad. Many people ask a lot of questions aboutwhether it is worth using Google Analytics. How many people use Google Anal ytics and how often to check Google Analytics. The answer is simple - it is a very important Google tool and should be used for daily work. Google Analytics is your best and free analytics. You could say it's such a free worker that analyzes your entire site for you once you implement tracking code for it.
Introduction about Google Analytics - what it gives and what it is
Google Analytics Guides - Episode 1 - Introduction about Google Analytics (C) 2019 KamikStudio
In the first episode in the GA series, I talk about what the tool gives us and what/who it is. I know you may think - "well okay but there are plenty of such guides". I answer: but surely they are all detailed? I've done a series where I talk step-by-step about each category of report in GA and more.
Google Analytics - Guide - Episode 1 - Watch on YouTube.
Google Analytics Tutorial Series - Episode 1 - KamikStudio YouTube Channel (C) 2019
Adding GA tracking code to your website - That is, how to implement GA tracking code to your website
Google Analytics Guides - Episode 2 - Adding GA tracking code to your site (C) 2019 KamikStudio
In the second episode in my GA tutorial series, I talk about how to add tracking code to your website. The ways are several. We can so-called. with a programmer's eye - that is, directly encode in the <head> element of our website
Pattern for adding tracking code
<html>
<head>
Tu umieszczamy nasz kod/y 艣ledz膮ce
</head>
<body>
Tu jest zawsze tre艣膰 naszej strony - to co widzi u偶ytkownik
</body>
</html>
Of course, we can also place the code before </head> or in general in the element <head>. It is known that we can have a dozen tracking codes, for example, from other sites like hotjar or Google Tag Manager etc. And everyone will say to put right after <head>
In the head section, we insert only tags ie.
<meta>
<script>
<link>
<style>
Another way to add tracking codes, for example, is through plug-ins in our CMS (content management system). Whether it's WordPress or phpbb3 or IP.Board or Joomala or Prestashop or Magento or even any dedicated SaaS technology platform like. Shoper or IAI, i-systems.
Recommended plugins for WordPress
HFCM, or typically GA. HFCM is a plugin that places code at a particular location on a page. Add snippet
HFCM Plugin. Plugin for wordpress - add codes to your site easily
Google Tag Manager
The last way, which I will also talk about and make a video, is Google Tag Manager. Generally, it's best if the created page is immediately connected with Google Tag Manager. We have full control over our site and code. However, there will be a separate post on GTM and episodes on my YouTube
Google Analytics - Guide - Episode 2 - Watch on YouTube
Google Analytics Tutorial Series - Episode 2 - KamikStudio YouTube Channel (C) 2019
The desktop so-called. Analyst's dashboard - or quick data about our site in a nutshell
Google Analytics Guides - Episode 3 - Dashboard or DashBoard in GA - Analytics Home Page (C) 2019 KamikStudio
If you want quick information about - what is happening on your site now or in a given period then Google Analytics Dashboard comes to your aid. The information we can get from there is:
Users, revenue, conversion rate, sessions from the last X selected days. We can also go to the Recipients Total tab as well as see on the right the actual time of page behavior (whether someone is now on our site).
How we get our users - from which traffic channel, from which source/medium or referrals. When it comes to sourcing we need to know about an important thing like building URLs with UTM tags
Where are your users located - in what locations, etc.
When and at what time do your users enter your site
What pages your users visit on your site. A useful tool when you want to measure, for example, how many people visited your article about, say. "Google Analytics in Kalisz. Positioning Kalisz." We don't need any additional plug-ins, because you will monitor this through GA.
What trend prevails on your site
From which devices users access the site
To what extent we retain our users based on cohort analysis. Did the person, for example, who entered in week 1, also enter in week 3.
Google Analytics - Guide - Episode 3 - Watch on YouTube
Google Analytics Tutorial Series - Episode 3 - KamikStudio YouTube Channel (C) 2019
Real time in GA - or how to read data from the first category of our Analyst's report
Google Analytics Guides - Episode 4 - Real Time - First Category Google Analytics Report (C) 2019 KamikStudio
In the third episode in the series, I begin to move on to the first category of reports that our Analyst gives us. This is real time. It's actually useful if and only if a lot of users actually come to our site - now. We can check their locations, what page they are currently on from what keyword they came in. We will also get information if it is from some external link or socialmedia (e.g., Facebook). As I mentioned. The real time report category comes in handy when we have these 5 - 10 users on the site all the time.
Google Analytics - Guide - Episode 4 - Watch on YouTube
Google Analytics Tutorial Series - Episode 4 - KamikStudio YouTube Channel (C) 2019
Audience - that is, what group of users browse my website. Second category report in GA
Google Analytics Guides - Episode 5 - Audience, Segmentation, Analysis and User Flow (C) 2019 KamikStudio
In my daily work without Recipients in Analytics and Acquisition I do not part. At audience observes who they are, and how to target themselves in Ads campaigns. In acquisition, on the other hand, how my advertising campaigns are performing. I tried to tell the story in detail in the video. However, keep in mind that I record each video live - there is no time for correction here. Therefore, always read the descriptions carefully. In the Recipients category, we can check the active users in a given time period.
Segmenting customers / clients
In addition, you can create segments, which I talk about in the video. You can indicate all users but, for example, those who buy on the site. You can segment, for example, users who entered only from mobile or from computer and tablet. The options are many. Segments are default but you can also create your own. Segmenting users is very important. We can target perfectly the people we are looking for by what they are looking for. And by what they want.
Demographics, location, behavior, technology data
Not only will you find out how many people came in, and what segment of the audience was on your site. Google Analytics gives you full capabilities. Assess how many women you have, how many men. From which location they enter. What are the behaviors on the site. What technology they use. Skillful use of GA allows perfect audience targeting in Ads (AdWords or Facebook Business).
Benchmarking, cohort analysis, user flow
If your boss asks you a question - what is the flow of users on the site. You reply: the analyst will tell me! It is in GA to check any sub-page paths that a user visits. You will also check on a cohort table whether a user who entered in week e.g. 1 came back in week 3. You can extract paths, compare with other data. Example: how many transactions came out of site A. How many exits were from site B. Did the user who was on site A move to site B. How many interactions were made at site A and did they go to B.
Google Analytics - Guide - Episode 5 - Watch on YouTube
Google Analytics Tutorial Series - Episode 5 - KamikStudio YouTube Channel (C) 2019
GA tutorial series - Playlist - YouTube. Want more?
This entry will be expanded when the next 5 episodes arrive.
Copyright
I would like to remind you that any articles on kamikstudio.co.uk, subpages or subdomains Are of my authorship and mine alone. If you copy then at least write the source or me as the author. Especially when they are extensive entries like the one you just read. Thank you.
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