Do you understand the numbers
that your web site generates? Do you know how many
sales your site actually generates? Do you know
how you can apply that knowledge to your business
and cause it to grow?
I will answer all of the above, and also
discuss how to use statistics to enhance your web
business through the use of sales, traffic flow,
uniques, hits, click-through rates, and many other
important business factors. Part 1 focuses on
sales and traffic, while part 2 is all about where
your traffic is coming from (and how to get more
of it!). Part 2 will be discussed in the next
issue of our newsletter - so be sure to stay
tuned!
Sales
The most obvious statistic for many businesses
is sales.
Here are 2 of the most pertinent questions
every business needs the answers to:
- How many sales do you make per
day/month/year?
- How much profit do you make per sale?
Not hard figures to find, but how many sales
actually came from your Internet business? Often
it is easy to gather this figure simply by looking
directly at either online sales, or by asking your
customers ("How did you find us?"). But sometimes
the Internet is just one part of a very
complicated sales process. You may make all your
sales in person, but how many of your clients go
home and research your products/services using
information found on your web site?
These are the questions you need to find
answers to in order to estimate how many sales
were completed due to your Internet presence but
not necessarily completed online. If you make
sales online, the answers are easy. If you sell
real estate or other "in person" products or
services, then you have to ask your customers
individually. Either way, it will come down to a
concrete number that can provide insight into how
you can grow your business.
Profits
>From the number of sales made per month, you
can easily figure out your gross sales amount.
Then you have to take your expenses per sale into
account and figure out your profits. Only cost of
sale expenses should be deducted and NOT one-time
expenses such as overhead. On the Internet, this
would normally be the cost per click of
pay-per-click campaigns (such as AdWords or
Yahoo Marketing Solutions), or the CPM (cost per
thousand) for banner ads, and of course, your
direct costs for the item or service being sold.
Once you have these figures in hand, you can then
calculate your profit per sale.
Traffic
So now that we know how many sales we make per
month, and how much profit we're actually making
off of those sales, let us take a look at how many
potential customers walk through our virtual
store. There are many different statistics for web
site traffic: page views, hits, daily uniques,
monthly uniques, etc… Which one should you be
using? From my own experience, I recommend using
daily uniques.
Daily uniques measures how many unique visitors
come to your site in a single day. By that we mean
that no single user is counted twice in the same
day even if they visit the store several times
within a twenty-four hour period. Thus, if someone
comes to your site four times on Monday, and six
times on Tuesday, he/she would only count as two
daily uniques.
Page Views measures how many times your page is
viewed (usually including reloads). Page views are
also counted for each page. Thus, if someone comes
to your site four times on Monday and views eight
pages each time, and six times on Tuesday (viewing
two pages each time), you would measure (4 x 8) +
(6 x 2), or 44 page views.
These statistics are usually available through
your server's statistics program. Alternatively,
you could also use one of a myriad of other
statistics programs available on the Internet. For
most of our clients we set up
www.hitbox.com on their sites. With our daily
uniques per month figure in-hand, we suddenly have
some very powerful numbers to work with.
Conversions
Conversion is the measure of how many people
who visited your site were subsequently converted
into clients of some sort. Measuring how many
uniques turn into buying customers is one method
of conversion, but you could also measure how many
visitors your site gets vs. how many visitors sign
up to your newsletter, or how many of them go to a
specific page, or how many send you an email, etc…
These are all measures of conversions, and simply
use the ratio of sales (or sign ups, emails, etc…)
to visitors (or uniques).
Let us assume our site has the following
statistics:
- Sales: 100/month
- Gross: $250/sale
- Average Profit: $150/sale
- Daily uniques: 12 000/month
In the above example, we have 100 sales per
month, and 12000 daily uniques per month, thus our
conversion ratio is 1:120 or 0.83%. Not such a bad
ratio, especially for items that cost $250 each.
Most markets would want a ratio of 1% or 2%, but
of course each industry is different.
Analysis
Using our imaginary numbers (profit of
$150/sale, gross $250/sale) we can then figure out
how healthy the online business really is. At 100
sales a month, we are grossing $25 000 per month,
and profiting $15 000 per month. At this point in
our analysis, we can now see that there are three
ways in which to improve the site:
- Increase profit margin
- Increase conversions
- Increase traffic
1. Increasing profit margins involves lowering
costs or raising prices, both of which fall out of
the context of this article.
2. Increasing conversions involves optimizing
the usability of your web site; usability is a
quality attribute that assesses how easy user
interfaces are to use. For more information on
usability and how it can help your Internet
business, go to
www.useit.com.
3. Increasing traffic involves improving your
link network, your PPC campaign, or your search
engine optimization. We will look at the latter in
detail in Part Two of this article (exclusively
available by signing up to our FREE Monthly
Newsletter at
www.RedCarpetWeb.com). Part Two will also
discuss referrers, search engine keyphrases,
search engine positions, and how to use these
statistics to increase your sales. Don't miss out!
Sign up for the Newsletter today and learn how you
can make the most of all your web statistics and
improve your Internet business.