Congratulations, you've reached the final topic of my Digital Marketing Breakdown series! You're an SEO expert, you know all about social media marketing, and you've mastered search and display advertising (if these are unfamiliar to you, please head back to post one by clicking here). There's only one topic left that will set you on your way to earn a Michigan digital marketing degree: Web Analytics. Businesses can't maintain an effective marketing campaign without knowing how their users interact with their website. Numbers people, welcome to heaven.
Web analytics is a generally simple concept, though its processes can be extremely in depth. The ultimate goal for web analytics is to optimize a website by collecting and analyzing data about how its users interact with it. Data typically collected can range from how long users stay on each webpage and how they arrived at the site, to which links they clicked on while surfing the site and what page they were viewing when they left. By collecting this data, web administrators can tailor the site so that it provides its users with the best possible browsing experience.
Though I don't consider myself an expert web developer by any means, I'm quite fascinated by the collection and analysis of web browsing data, and I'm interested in learning more about this topic in my marketing classes at school. If you're interested in this topic too, and would like some info about the best digital marketing degree in Michigan, check out U of M - Dearborn's digital marketing degree overview for a comprehensive explanation. I can assure you web analytics will be discussed in one class or another.
Thanks for viewing my digital marketing breakdown series! Check back often for more posts about all marketing things digital!
Showing posts with label web analytics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label web analytics. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 2, 2014
Digital Marketing Breakdown: Part 4 - Web Analytics
Monday, October 27, 2014
Digital Marketing Breakdown: Part 1 - SEO
Welcome to the first lesson in my Digital Marketing Breakdown series. To kick off our deeper analysis of digital marketing, we can begin by understanding our first topic, search engine optimization, and how this process might occur in an agency.
SEO can most accurately be defined as a technique used to increase the amount of visitors to a website by earning a higher ranking in the results page of a search engine. I couldn't begin to cover the many different factors that go into increasing a site's rank, so we will look at three of the vital few.
SEO can most accurately be defined as a technique used to increase the amount of visitors to a website by earning a higher ranking in the results page of a search engine. I couldn't begin to cover the many different factors that go into increasing a site's rank, so we will look at three of the vital few.
Keyword Usage
Buried deep within the stupendously intricate algorithm that Google uses to rank page results is an analysis of keywords on webpages. For each individual keyword searched, Google will rank a page higher if it determines that the content on that page is relevant to that searched keyword. For example, if I were to create a website for my car repair business, I would make sure to also include keywords on my site like "collision repair", "auto repair", or "local car repair shop". It helps to think about what terms you might search if you wanted to find that information.
URL Creation
This step is extremely obvious, and yet so easy to forget about. When developing the name of your site, it is critical that the URL name makes it easy for people to understand what your site is about. The URL "www.worldsbestrollercoasters.com" makes the purpose of your site obvious to Google and your potential site visitors as well.
If your website contains few pages, it would be valuable to spend some time making sure that other links on your site are easy to understand as well. "www.worldsbestrollercoasters.com/cedarpoint/milleniumforce" is much more relevant than a combination of numbers and letters that appear as the default for that page.
Links
While it can be beneficial to your readers if you provide a link to another source on your own page, including these outbound links to your site may not be directly optimizing your site. On the other hand, it is quite valuable for another page to link directly to your site. Links from third parties to your site indicate to Google that your link is relevant, and links from sites with supreme authority (espn.com, ehow.com, nytimes.com, etc.) can be game changers. Building a network of trustworthy, relevant links is tough, but it's extremely beneficial for SEO.
If this topic interests you, I would strongly recommend checking out the University of Michigan - Dearborn's Digital Marketing program. The Digital Consumer Search and Marketing class will teach you much more about SEO, as well as other extremely valuable tools necessary for earning your digital marketing degree.
If you're interested in learning more about this topic, visit Moz's Beginner's Guide to SEO for an excellent resource. Check back soon for the next post in my Digital Marketing Breakdown series!
If this topic interests you, I would strongly recommend checking out the University of Michigan - Dearborn's Digital Marketing program. The Digital Consumer Search and Marketing class will teach you much more about SEO, as well as other extremely valuable tools necessary for earning your digital marketing degree.
If you're interested in learning more about this topic, visit Moz's Beginner's Guide to SEO for an excellent resource. Check back soon for the next post in my Digital Marketing Breakdown series!
Saturday, October 18, 2014
The Digital Marketing Breakdown Series

Digital Marketing is made up of lots of subfields, some of which I mentioned in my previous blog post. It is critical for a Digital Marketing degree program to teach the basics to its students so that they are fully prepared to solve marketing problems with new digital solutions. In my upcoming series, The Digital Marketing Breakdown, I will highlight four of these basic subfields under the digital marketing umbrella:
1) Search Engine Optimization
2) Social Network Marketing
3) Search and Display Advertising
4) Web Analytics
I look forward to discussing each of these topics in depth, while simultaneously informing you about how U of M - Dearborn's digital marketing program hits on all these topics and more. Stay tuned...
1) Search Engine Optimization
2) Social Network Marketing
3) Search and Display Advertising
4) Web Analytics
I look forward to discussing each of these topics in depth, while simultaneously informing you about how U of M - Dearborn's digital marketing program hits on all these topics and more. Stay tuned...
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