536 CHAPTER 15 E-COMMUNICATION
may be expected. Including a feedback form may provide more detailed feedback and more
direction as specifi c questions and categories of information can be included in the feedback
form.
To fi nd out who really visits a website and what his or her evaluation of the site, the brand
and the sales eff ects are, visitor surveys (online or offl ine) are necessary. Surveys may give
socio-demographic, psychographic and webographic (with regard to the use of the Internet)
profi les of visitors. Th ey can also measure attitudes, satisfaction and intentions, and are a good
way of tracking the eff ectiveness and success of a website. InSites Consulting ( http://www.insites-
consulting.com ), a leading European Internet research agency, developed a model to evaluate the
performance of a website using scientifi cally tested questionnaires and constructs, adaptable
to specifi c research questions and needs (see Figure 15.1 ). In pre-testing, usability testing and
post-testing of websites, qualitative market research techniques such as focus groups and
in-depth interviewing can be used in conjunction with quantitative Internet panel surveys to
add research insights to the website visitor surveys. Website users’ input should be integrated
with the design process to ensure targeted and eff ective website building.
Even without any research budget there is a possibility to gain insights into how many
(unique) visitors your site has per day/week/month/etc., how visitors use your site, how they
arrived on your site (from which site, using which searching words, etc.), from which countries,
how you can keep them coming back by using Google Analytics. Google Analytics is a
reporting platform where the user can decide which parameters are of interest. Content
reports give insights into which parts of the website are performing well, which pages are
most popular, how much time the surfer is spending on these pages, in order to create a better
experience for the visitor, your prospect or customer. Even social media (what your visitors
are sharing and where) and mobile (know which mobile platforms work best, see where mobile
traffi c comes from) are now incorporated. You can analyse how visitors interact with sharing
features on your site. Conversion parameters give insights into the number of customers that the
brand or the company attracts, how much it sells and how users are engaging with the site.^235
Also, Google Analytics can be used for analysing an online advertising campaign. Advertising
Analytics is providing detailed insights to know if the advertising programme is working. All
digital channels such as search, display, social, affi liate and e-mail can be included to see the
eff ect on conversion rates and return.^236
Apart from these measures, the most important issue for marketers is what happens aft er
users click through an online ad or visit a website. Does the online marketing strategy lead to
conversion? What is the eff ect of the e-marketing campaign on brand equity and purchase
intention? For e-commerce sites, purchase behaviour is easy to link to e-marketing tactics
Figure 15.1 Assessing website marketing performance: the InSites Consulting model
Source : Developed by InSites, http://www.insites-consulting.com.
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