Appraising Your Investment in Enterprise Web Analytics
Monday, October 05, 2009 | 11:54 AM
Labels: Announcements, Business Insights
Earlier this year, we asked Forrester Research to help us understand the key trends in enterprise web analytics. The commissioned study conducted by Forrester, "Appraising Your Investment in Enterprise Web Analytics" provides rich insights into what large companies want from an enterprise solution and how they are thinking about their web analytics decisions.
First, let's provide some context for what was considered an "enterprise." The study looked at companies with at least $500 million in annual revenue. Of the 198 companies that met this criteria, almost half (45%) have annual revenues in excess of $5 billion. Three quarters of the companies have over 5,000 employees.
One of the study's findings that we find interesting is around the role of people and web analytics technology. As companies re-evaluate their investments in web analytics, the study explains that:
"Enterprise companies must ask themselves if they are paying too much for capabilities that they simply do not need. In some cases, gaining fewer seldom-used capabilities is a worthwhile tradeoff if funds can be reallocated to hire more resources necessary for analysis."Companies are recognizing that analysts drive insights, not the analytics tool itself. According to the study, "sixty percent of decision-makers agree that investments in web analytics people are more valuable than investments in web analytics technology." This is in-line with Avinash Kaushik's 10/90 rule for web analytics success: invest 10% of your analytics budget on the actual technology and 90% of your budget in the people who deliver actionable insight, whether in-house analysts, agencies, or vendor partners. It's the people that matter.
Below are other key findings from the Forrester report's Executive Summary:
• Free web analytics takes residence within the enterprise. A staggering 53% of enterprises surveyed currently use a free technology solution as their primary web analytics tool, and 71% use free tools in some capacity. This places use of fee-based solutions in the minority, with only 33% of survey respondents paying for web analytics technologies (12% use homegrown solutions, and 2% use some other option). In addition, it dispels the belief that free solutions are only being used in small organizations or somehow diminished in their capacity to provide value to the enterprise.
• The merits of free analytics products are compelling. Among respondents currently paying for their primary web analytics tools, 66% would consider displacing them with a free alternative. While the primary driver for this consideration is cost, 60% of enterprises are more likely to consider a free tool now because of recent improvements in free solutions. Additionally, 52% are enticed by free tools because they allow enterprises to invest more in the people necessary to drive insight rather than the technology used to collect and analyze data.
• Balancing costs and benefits requires introspection. We found that 52% of practitioners employing both free and fee-based solutions fail to effectively use more than half of the capabilities offered by their tools. This realization is cause for a needs assessment to determine if fee-based web analytics technologies are justified or simply excessive. For many, spending on web analytics technologies could be better allocated toward program development and acquisition of expertise.
• Reliability and ease of use are characteristics that enterprises crave. For 71% of enterprises surveyed, web analytics data plays a significant role in driving decisions. So it comes as no surprise that users place a premium on data assurance, with 45% citing reliable data collection as the most important vendor selection criteria. This was followed by 40% who listed an easy-to-use interface and product pricing as the second equally most important vendor selection consideration.
• Organizations are approaching a point of inflection. Nearly two-thirds of enterprises would abandon their current web analytics provider given the right circumstances. While 74% of large enterprises agreed that web analytics is a technology that they cannot do without, many indicated that alternative tools would suffice. These metrics indicate that organizations are receptive to change and justifiably seek solutions best suited to meet their needs.
If you'd like to learn more, download the full report. We'd love to hear your thoughts. Post a comment and tell us what you think!


9 comments:
Justin Kistner said...
Thanks for sharing this report, Dai. People are such an important asset. As great as analytics technology can be, without a sufficient investment in staff, it can't achieve it's full potential.
Makes me think of the Unica survey on The Web Analytics Headache. Businesses cited integration, verifying accuracy, and not comprehensive types of data as the top three challenges. These challenges are part of why folks talk about analytics being hard. They are the kinds of challenges that it helps to have a team of people with which to work.
Macro economic pressures can force budgets to be tight. And that means businesses have to carefully consider how to invest in people and technology. This study helps people get a sense for the things other people are considering right now.
8:22 PM
johnsantangelo said...
Shocked to see Conversion attribution at the bottom of the “Please select the most important reporting and analysis capabilities of a Web analytics solution.” question/Figure 12.
9:17 AM
espeeth said...
I would say that the barriers to exit, in the case of enterprise analytics, are sometimes too costly to switch providers or to move to a free solution. I've seen it several times in the world of large online retailers. Many of these entities use enterprise analytics tools as a component of a more vast data integration suite and are hesitant to migrate due to time, resource and risk costs.
9:41 AM
gaston said...
Mr.Avinash Kaushik already stated in one of his books how Analytics technology is moving and evolving towards vendors competivity and less targeted to the human side of things. I think there's still work to be done in the professional area, people need experience in developing better online businesses. Nothing good comes out of meaningless information. A good help is always to ask business questions and then try to answer them with tools.
10:02 AM
Chris said...
Thanks for sharing this report. I couldn't agree more that data collection is key. In fact it was cited as the number one most important vendor selection criteria. What is Google doing to attack this part of the equation given that page tags miss a significant percentage of web browsers and a much larger percentage of mobile devices? There's been a quite a bit of noise around passive capture technologies since they capture anyone who views the content and can gather session level data. Any experience there?
1:13 PM
Jason Rushin said...
While I do agree with the statement, "Insight and action are driven by expert analysts," I think you're missing the big point: the analysts need more than just standard web analytics tools to understand the data and make effective decisions.
Web analytics tools, especially free tools, are very limited when it comes to true data analysis. Yes, they offer reports and dashboards that give a clear picture of the operational performance of a website, but they don't provide the interactive, complex analysis tools necessary to understand what visitors are doing and really move the needle in a business.
Web analytics solutions are great for collecting and reporting online data, but not for analyzing it. If they were, companies wouldn't need Omniture's Discover, Quantivo's behavioral analytics, or even Excel.
Jason Rushin
Quantivo
11:33 AM
bluesnapper said...
Thanks Dai.
Just what I needed to help my clients justify internally the use of free web analytics such as GA. It will also give them a warm feeling that they're not alone...
I've always agreed with Avinash's 10/90 rule with respect to technology/people (OK, I admit I'm biased. Often new GA users I deal with are either:
a) paralysed by the amount of data/decisions to be made so no action is taken
b) misinterpret the data and start acting on it immediately
Once they are trained to understand how to prioritise and apply the data available from web analytics to identify/solve problems, then they can start to see a real impact on the performance of their website/business.
One caveat to this is that not everyone is cut out to be an analyst and not everyone wants to be one!
5:53 AM
Mark said...
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Understanding your Web Analytics and using the data will give you the competitive advantage. Most companies when asked if they have Web Analytics will say yes. However, when asked what they do with their data they don't know.
Becoming a better marketer and going to market faster requirs markets to understand the power in their Web Analytics data. This data speaks volumes when tagged properly on you site.
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3:29 AM
Jeff Gillis said...
@Chris: can you give us more information on passive capture technologies? Also, what web browsers are you referring to when you say page tagging misses them? For mobile tracking, as you can see in our latest release, we are adding that functionality.
1:53 PM
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