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Sarah Worsham / Apr 8, 2009

Web-based Tools We Use Everyday

toolsbatega21We’re an Internet company, so we’re on the nets pretty much all the time.  Many of the tools we use every day and couldn’t work without are web-based.  We thought we’d share them and find out what you use and like.

Analytics, Statistics & SEO (oh my!)

  • HitTail
  • Google Analytics
  • Google WebMaster Tools
  • FeedBurner
  • Website Grader
  • Twitter Grader
  • WHOIS
  • SEOQuake

Firefox plugins/clients

  • SEOQuake
  • Firebug
  • Web Developer
  • FireFTP
  • Delicious

Productivity

  • Gmail
  • Google Docs
  • Google Calendar
  • Remember the Milk
  • BaseCamp

Images & Design

  • Flickr Creative Commons
  • iStockphoto

News

  • Google Reader

Social Media

  • Flickr
  • Twitterfeed.com
  • Ping.fm
  • Delicious
  • Social Networking Finder

What are your favorite tools?

(photo by batega @ Flickr CC)

Technorati tags: analytics, web tools, productivity, social media, business, SEO, marketing

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Sarah Worsham / Apr 6, 2009

Important Metrics for Your Pay-Per-Click Campaign

advertisingtheancientbritMany businesses run pay-per-click (PPC) campaigns in order to increase traffic and sales to to their websites. However, many are not looking at how effective those campaigns are.  I’ve run across several websites which thought they were doing ok with their PPC campaigns, but upon closer examination, we found they were spending more than they were getting out of the advertising.

Conversions

A conversion is when an action that you’re advertising is actually taken on your website.  So if you’re advertising a product, it’s when someone actually purchases that product.  This is usually tracked by putting a script tag from your PPC ad on your thank you page that happens after a purchase is made. Conversions are the whole reason you’re advertising, so they are very important to track.

Cost Per Conversion

For the number of conversions you get in any time period, how much are you spending on advertising? Taking the total amount spent and dividing it by the number of conversions will give you how much you’re spending per conversion – or cost per conversion.  This metric is extremely important for knowing whether you’re spending too much on your advertising for what you’re getting out of it.  If this number is too high, it’s time to look at optimizing your ads, website and landing pages.  (As an aside, sometimes people will click on an ad and purchase a product much later – days or weeks – this is not tracked with this metric).

Conversion Rate

How many clicks do you have to get before someone purchases from you?  How effective is the path the visitor takes to purchase the product?  The number of conversions divided by the number of ad clicks gives you the conversion rate.

Clicks

How many times people are clicking on your ad- how much interest and traffic it is generating.  If you are using advertising for branding or just for traffic, and are not tracking conversions or sales, this is an important metric.

Cost Per Click

How much each click costs – or how much you’re paying for each person that your ad brings to your website.  Taking the total amount spent and dividing it by the number of clicks will give you this metric.

Click Through Rate (CTR)

How effective your ad is – in message and targeting (keywords, placements, etc.)  Measured by the number of clicks on an ad divided by the number of impressions (number of times it is shown).  A low CTR can indicate poor messaging or targeting (keywords, placements, etc.).

(photo by The Ancient Brit @ Flickr CC)

Technorati tags: pay-per-click advertising, internet advertising, internet marketing, search engine marketing, business, SEM, SEO, PPC, marketing

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Sarah Worsham / Feb 23, 2009

Ask Sazbean – What's a Pingback?

fleur120Sandra from Brighton (MI), asks:

Can you explain what a pingback is?

A pingback is when another blog links to an article on your blog and their blogging  software automatically notifies your blogging software of the link (also works with websites).  Usually blogging software will then put a link on your article with a link to the page linking to it.  Sounds a bit confusing, but it just lets you and your readers know who has linked to a particular article and posts a link to it so anyone can go see what was said.

Since part of blogging is having a conversation, pingbacks make it possible to know when someone may be saying something about what you’ve said.  Reversely, if you comment on someone else’s articles, they’ll know about it.  It’s also a way to get some extra traffic to your blog – readers often follow links to get more information on a particular subject.

Have a question you’d like an answer to?  Just email us and we’d be happy to help.

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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