UserTesting Ebook CRO Secret Weapon PDF
UserTesting Ebook CRO Secret Weapon PDF
UserTesting Ebook CRO Secret Weapon PDF
Analytics + UserTesting:
The Secret Weapon
of Conversion Rate
Optimization
06092014
Contents
Introduction........................................................................................................2
Using Analytics to Understand What Is Happening on Your Site......................5
Analytics Part 1: Identify Users and Devices to Test ...........................................6
Analytics Part 2: Determine Where to Start User Testing .......................................10
Analytics Part 3: Find Pages with High Optimization Potential .....................16
Analytics Part 4: Rethink Positive and Negative Stats ............................16
Bonus Section: Optmizing Your Advertising Campaign ................................ 23
Create a User Testing Plan................................................................................26
Create Your Optmization Roadmap .................................................................28
Conclusion.........................................................................................................30
Introduction
In the world of online sales, nothing can be more troubling than low conversion
rates. Customer purchases come at a premium, and online marketers lean
on social media, retargeting, word of mouth, and plenty of other channels to
entice visitors to visit their sites. However, much to our chagrin, website traffic
alone is not enough. Having a thorough understanding of your site visitors
intent can open a lot of doors for site optimization, ultimately leading to an
increase in conversion.
If you find that, even though youre constantly making changes to your website,
the work that is done isnt changing your conversion numbers for the better,
its time to take a step back. Its time to gather some user feedback. Its time for
UserTesting.
User feedback is one of the few techniques that marketing and product teams
have that can actually tell us why things are happening on our sites.
By watching people use our sites, and listening to their unbiased feedback,
we can start to answer these questions and gain an advantage over our
competition.
Exploring analytics is a great starting point that you can use to reveal whats
happening on your site and to pinpoint problems that interrupt functionality
and user intent.
Analytics Part 1:
Identify Users and Devices to Test
You already know who your target audience is, but within that group, there are
a number of subgroups, and many of them can be identified using analytics.
Segment your data by the following metrics to further drill down and identify
the types of people you want to solicit feedback from and which devices youll
want them to use.
NOTE: Youll need to take an extra step to enable Demographics and Interest
reports in Google Analytics, if you havent already.
In this example, the strong correlation between age and visit duration, and a strong disparity among
Revenue, for certain age groups, begs for qualitative testing.
You can access this report through Audience > Demographics > Age.
What to test: After defining the participants age range for your
next study, consider testing various groups with similar tasks. Ask
them to describe what they would expect from a site like yours,
what would convince them to purchase, etc.
Devices
Its imperative today to have brand consistency across device types, and youve
no doubt made some efforts toward that goal. Has your testing plan caught up
to your intentions? Are you looking at bounce rates, exit rates, time on page,
pages per visit, and flow reports across device types to see which devices need
extra testing?
In this example, mobile visitors are staying on the page nearly as long as their tablet and desktop
counterparts, but they are bouncing at a much higher rate.
Also, watch out for rapid changes in mobile devices. Were still seeing new
screen sizes as manufacturers bridge the gap between tablets and phones,
which can affect the user experience. And even operating system upgrades can
impact your stats.
When iOS 7 came out, the updated operating system introduced a new level
of swipe ambiguity, as the Nielsen Norman Group recently highlighted. Safari
now supports horizontal swiping to navigate to the previous page, so website
owners who already employed in-site swipe navigation may notice an increase
in pages per visit from iOS while simultaneously seeing a drop in time on page.
Analytics Part 2:
Use segmented flow reports to
determine where to start user testing
OK, you know who youre going to test. This will come in handy when setting
up your study in UserTesting since its really easy to specify the age, gender, and
type of device of participants.
Now its time to determine which page of your site you want user tests to start
on! While starting off your study from the homepage might seem like a natural
and obvious choice, your visitors arent always starting on your homepage, so
your tests shouldnt either.
Starting your tests from various locations throughout the Web will lead to rich insights about a site
visitors expectations and intent.
By running a Behavior Flow Report, you can see where your visitors are coming
from. A visitor coming from a social network vs. clicking on an ad vs. running a
branded search query will have different expectations, and those expectations
will shape their perception of your site, as well as the path they take.
To access a Behavior Flow Report showing traffic by source, see Behavior >
Behavior Flow.
The report shows a great view of data by source, your most popular landing
pages, where drop-offs are occurring, and the paths that users are taking
through the site.
In the example below, you can see that the football home page is a popular
starting point, and that most of the visitors who start on that page are coming
from Google. But many of those people are not visiting any other pages on the
site. This seems like a problem worth investigating!
Dont trust intuition for determining which pages to start your tests on. See what the real starting pages are,
and identify the ones that are underperforming.
Another flow report, Goal Flow, provides a great visualization of what might
be going wrong with a campaign or any other conversion path (as long as your
goals are configured properly). In the example below, showing a campaign-
filtered view of a gym membership conversion funnel, three issues are instantly
visible:
3. Those who dont backtrack are dropping out of the funnel when
theyre close to completing the purchase.
This sample Goal Flow report for a gym shows a very weak landing page, but also a problem with a huge
number of visitors backtracking or leaving the funnel right before they should be completing signup.
Analytics Part 3:
Find Pages with High
Optimization Potential
While looking at the flow of visitors on your site should give you plenty of testing
ideas, its also smart to take a look at pages that have a high chance of boosting
your optimization rates.
What to test: You could ask people to explain what they would
expect from these landing pages and then ask them to proceed
with that logic and see whether their expectations are met or
exceeded. Or, ask them to explain what the page is for based on
what they see. Youll learn a lot about how people digest information.
To find out which pages are difficult to find, list the pages that you think should
be among the top 10 or 20 most popular and then compare it against your
analytics. When you notice whats missing, youve found something worth
testing.
Analytics Part 4:
Rethink Positive & Negative
Stats
When youre assessing performance, stats like high bounce rates, high exit rates,
and low time on page are often considered bad. In fact, there are times when
a high bounce rate is just fine, but a low bounce rate needs to be investigated.
We can look past the surface to find out which numbershigh or lowreveal
important testing opportunities.
For example, the page listing your store hours is likely to have a higher-than-
average bounce rate, since the visitor intends to find the store hours and then
leave. So its not necessary to test all pages with high bounce rates.
On the other hand, if you see a low bounce rate for a page that should be
answering a very specific question, the page might be worth testing. If your
store hours page has a very low bounce rate of 12%, its time to learn why.
Look at a flow report to find out where visitors are going after visiting that page,
or run a user test to determine whether something is going wrong.
A simple evaluation of bounce rates can reveal great testing opportunities. The high bounce rate on the
Directions page isnt of much concern, due to the visitors intent. But a bounce rate of 41% on a features page
which should be sending visitors further down the sales funnelis cause for alarm. This page should be tested.
Before we figure out how to run a test, we first need to determine which pages
to test.
Look for high exit rates on pages that are intended to convert, such as signup
pages, checkout pages, and middle-of-funnel pages. Youve worked very hard
and likely paid a lot of money to get visitors to this point, so its smart to protect
your investment by testing to find out whether (or why) these pages arent paying off.
You might consider analyzing your traffic sources for a page and finding out
which sources are causing the highest bounce rates. (See the earlier section on
Flow Reports.)
Example:
Here, were looking at the sources for a companys Features page. It turns out
that traffic from Facebook is bouncing far more than traffic from other sources.
Look for differences in bounce and exit rates among traffic sources. Then start the test there, to help testers
adopt the same expectations as the visitors that are bouncing.
Perhaps the test would reveal that one of the companys Facebook posts or
campaigns was telling people, See why we beat the competition, only to drop
the visitors onto a Features page with no competitive comparison. These visitors
were approaching the page with an expectation that the page isnt meeting.
Analytics alone cant give you this kind of insight, but analytics plus testing (and
in this case, even just some analysis of the Facebook posts and campaigns) can
steer you in the right direction.
For pages with a long time on page but a high bounce rate or exit rate,
evaluate the pages purpose. If the goal of the page is to move visitors further
along in the funnel, find out why theyre spending time on the page but
ultimately deciding to leave. If the page is just a content piece intended to serve
very top-of-funnel visitors (such as a blog post), perhaps a long time on page
plus a high bounce rate isnt a problem, but check out your micro conversions.
If this is a blog post, these numbers arent necessarily a problem. If its a page closer to the middle of the funnel,
wed want to test to see why people are leaving after spending so much time on the page.
Bonus Section!
Clickthrough Rates
Clickthrough rates can help you determine which ads are working and which
arent, but they dont tell you why (at least not explicitly). This ends up making
it a bit of a guessing game to determine your next steps, other than disabling
poorly-performing ads.
What to test: Its a good idea to get several ads in front of real
users (you can do this in a one-at-a-time, slideshow format, or
present all ads on the screen at once), and have them answer
questions like, Which ad makes you most interested in this
product or service, and why?
By combining this qualitative data with your click-through data, you can start
making better decisions about which direction to go with your ads, and which
messaging (or color schemes, CTAs, etc.) to keep or drop.
[task]
1.
View this Facebook ad for 2-3 seconds: www.[company].com/images/
bahamas-sun-350.jpg
[question]
2.
If you were to click on this ad, what would you expect to see on the page
you are sent to?
[task]
3.
Visit www.[company].com/BahamasVacation. Look at the page for 5
seconds.
[task]
4.
Is this what you were expecting? Is it better or worse? How does the page
differ from what you were expecting?
Conversion Rates
If you like to get straight to the bottom line, you might be in the habit of skipping
past intermediate stats like CTR, visits, and bounce rates, jumping straight to
your conversion rate. After all, thats the only number that matters, right? But
low conversion rates are only a starting point for identifying important user
testing opportunities.
As you fill out the worksheet, youll start to see your first study take shape. Take
note of any ideas you have around the kind of information youll want to learn
by watching someone use your website.
2. We recruit participants
We recruit your target audience
from a panel of a million users.
Weve created a Complete Guide to User Testing Your Next Project that goes into
specific details on how to structure a test, the types of tasks and questions that
are most commonly used, expert tips from our Research team on how to avoid
common research errors, and much more.
Once youve assessed your sites analytics, and run a series of user tests, youll
have a solid foundation for your optimization roadmap. You may find that some
of your research will lead directly to no-brainer website updates, whereas some
changes may cause you to take a more measured approach.
This is an example of a simple roadmap, created with LucidChart. It features the most im-
portant needs in the top swim lane and, when read left to right, indicates the highest priori-
ties first. (In this case, the shopping carts checkout flow).
Creating an organized Optimization Roadmap will give your team and other
departments within your company insight into your plans and a common
language around their action items.
When you use a combination of data and user testing to power your roadmap,
youll be able to navigate questions raised during executive reviews by backing
up your presentation with tested certainty and build a business case (complete
with video examples!) for the more skeptical stakeholders.
Conclusion
So, what next? Crunch the data, determine the gray areas, using our worksheet
as a way to document your learnings, and start to test out your website! Once
you dig into the nitty gritty of your conversion rate dilemmas, youll be excited
by the insights provided by user testing, and that once-daunting optimization
roadmap will become your new best friend.
Learn more
Visit UserTesting.com/enterprise
Request a demo
Call us at 1-888-877-1882