| Occam’s Island Reports |
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| Blog | |
| Written by Jon Gibson | |
| Monday, 16 June 2008 | |
Avinash Kaushik recently wrote a series of fun articles on his blog, Occam’s Razor, in which he investigated what would be the best single desert island Web analytics report. First he described his own favorite report, then he looked at the best reports as suggested by his readers.
Another thing I noticed is that while these favorite reports are all great, none of them are entirely sufficient on their own (I guess that puts a damper on the desert island marketing job openings). This goes without saying, perhaps, but I think it’s worth mentioning. As I read through the examples, I kept thinking about other data or reports that would enhance the reader’s suggestion. For example, campaign tracking reports are great but would really be complimented by a funnel report to investigate how people use a site in order to refine the navigation or the user interface (UI). Finally, I noticed that almost all of the reports that were mentioned could be made more useful and actionable by segmenting the visitor data. Many of the reports did have some level of segmentation - i.e. on site search terms segmented by user registration - but there are many questions to ask through visitor segmentation. After reading through these report examples, I started to think about the key metrics that are measured and reported in Web analytics. Conversion rate and ROI get a lot of attention (as they should), but there are some other metrics that have a lot to offer as well. In my next post, I’ll go into a little more detail about a couple of the more humble Web analytics metrics. Comments (0)
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Avinash Kaushik recently wrote a series of fun articles on his blog, Occam’s Razor, in which he investigated what would be the best single desert island Web analytics report. First he 


