If you have a useful product or service (or even a content site), the utility of it is bound to attract an audience. However, your skill to retain and covert that audience into trustworthy customers or users depends on how well you use and enhance for the right metrics.
There are hundreds of different ways you can increase retention and conversions, but before you do that, you have to figure out what metrics you should be trying to improve.
To that end, here’s a are some points that will help you to determine the most important metrics to track:
- Traffic Sources
It is important to have a diverse number of sources for incoming traffic. The three primary source categories are:
- direct visitors– the ones that visit your site by directly typing your url in their browser address bar,
- search visitors– the ones that visit your site based on a search query, and
- referral visitors– the ones that visit your site because it was mentioned on another blog or site.
All three sources are important but have variable levels of conversion, so you should calculate how much each traffic source is converting and deal with them individually.
- New/Unique Visitor Conversion
The way a first-time visitor interacts with your site is very different from how a returning visitor interacts. To improve first-time visitors conversions you have to separate it from the conversion rates of your loyal or returning customers and determine what they see when they visit the website for the first time and how you can improve that experience. Usability plays an important role in reducing the bounce rate for first timers. - Return Visitor Conversion
There are two questions you should be asking yourself. 1) Why did the person return, and 2) did the person convert the first time around, and if they didn’t, why not and how can you convert them the second time around. Keep in mind; even if someone did not convert as a new visitor, you made enough of an impression to get them to come back. Now that they have liked you enough to return, your goal is to separate the return visitor conversion rate and figure out how to increase that. - Cost Per Conversion
The result to value per visit, and one of the most important metrics, is cost per conversion (alternatively: lead generation costs or cost per referral). It doesn’t matter if you have high conversions and high value per visit if your costs are so prohibitive that your net income is zero or even negative. While trying to grow conversion, keep your costs per conversion and overall margins in mind. - Bounce Rate
Your initial goal when trying to increase all five of the metrics above is to minimize your visitor bounce rate. The Bounce rate is the rate at which new visitors visit your site and directly click away without doing anything (very low time spent and no interactions). A high bounce rate can mean several things, including weak or irrelevant sources of traffic and landing pages that aren’t optimized for conversion (have a poor design, low usability or high load times). Bounce rates for e-commerce sites are often called abandonment rates, i.e., the rate at which people abandon their shopping cart without making a purchase. This is usually a result of an overly complicated checkout process, expired deals, forced cart additions (e.g. to see the actual price of the product, add to your cart), and so on. - Exit Pages
Your bounce rates aren’t entirely derived from your home page. In many cases your final call to action or conversion may be on page 2 or 3 of a process. To maximize conversions you need to dive deeper into your exits and figure out at what stage in the process your visitors are exiting the site or abandoning their shopping cart, and optimize the process accordingly.
Start monitoring all these metrics now, and next time we’ll tell you how to optimize each of them. visit The Jigsaw SEO