Web analytics
gives a brand more clarity about the traffic visiting its site as well as the
results of an advertising campaign. These analytics also represent the ability
for companies to learn about customer behaviors allowing it to take corrective
action whenever necessary. By regularly reviewing web analytics, brands have a
chance to build an efficient and user-friendly site, therefore, making it
easier to communicate a message and increase conversions.
Crazy Egg is an
analytics tool that allows users to build heat maps and track visitors’ every
click based on where they are specifically clicking within a brand’s website.
This platform allows brands to explore what parts of a site that users are
finding most interesting and clicking on the most (Walsh, 2013). This is
helpful in improving website design and in essence improving the rate of conversion.
In theory, by finding out the users click paths, companies can make changes to
its site and therefore hopefully be able to create a higher rate of
conversions. Metaphorically, Crazy Egg is like a pair of x-ray glasses that
lets a person see exactly what people are doing on a specific website.
Once signed into
a Crazy Egg account, the first step is to create a snapshot, which is a moment
in time for a given page similar to a virtual screenshot (Walsh, 2013). When
creating a snapshot, a small code snippet is provided to enable tracking for
that given snapshot. It only requires the code to be added to the footer of the
site in order for Crazy Egg to begin receiving data.
Crazy Egg is
broken into four categories: heat tool map, scroll map tool, overlay tool and a
confetti tool.
While Crazy Egg
shows which parts of a website’s page visitors click on, Google Analytics will
tell a brand manager what links visitors click on. Crazy Egg shows clicks even
if the user isn’t on the link. This is displayed as a heat map.
Crazy Egg shows
things that are not clickable. A brand can find that users are clicking on
parts of the page that aren’t actually links (Walsh, 2013). This is a good
opportunity to reevaluate what should be a link and where those links should
be. For example, if a brand discovers that users are clicking on a product
photo and nothing currently happens to that photo, he or she might consider
making the photo have an action if clicked on. The photo could be magnified or
readers could read more information about the product. The heat map tool can
also reveal which parts of the page are getting the most attention. This is
also very helpful when showing clients data even if they aren’t very
experienced in web analytics.
By using
confetti, a brand can segment visitors on the basis of keywords, location and
referral source. Once a company knows where the most valuable click traffic is
coming from, it has uncovered the exact traffic sources that bring high revenue
with the least amount of effort.
When analyzing
how far visitors scroll down on pages, Crazy Egg provides an easy-to-interpret
heat map. It also shows which parts of the page get the most attention based on
average viewing time. This tool helps identify which parts of the pages are most
important to the visitors and at what point users abandon the page. This tool
helps determine exactly where to add elements in order to hold a visitor’s
interest longer.
Crazy Egg also differentiates
between links to the same page, so a brand will know exactly which parts of a
web page work and which don’t, helping analyze which links might be positioned well.
This information is available in overlay.
Google
Analytics, a product of Google, is a website statics service that generates
traffic, conversion and advertising related data (Sharma, 2013). Webmasters
commonly use Google Analytics in order to track visitors from different sources
including search engines, social media platforms and referral sites.
Although Google
Analytics is free to use until a site reaches over 10 million page views per
month, Crazy Egg is a paid service with plans starting at $10/month (Walsh,
2013). Small business may very well decide just to use Google Analytics, solely
to save on costs, although the use of Crazy Egg simultaneously may provide
behavioral information valuable in enhancing a website’s usability.
While Google
Analytics provides complete information about all quantitative metrics and
dimensions, it does not assist in analyzing the performance of each element a
brand’s website has unless a very experienced web analytics team is available. Generally,
Google Analytics lacks in visual presentation when it comes to website
analytics. Google Analytics also works by placing a JavaScript tag into the
code of pages on a website. For websites with many pages, it may be difficult
to successfully track every page. Some webmasters are worried that using Google
Analytics might also effect page load speed, making its code location
undesirable at times (Denyer, 2013). Google
Analytics is also known to update data in a 24-hour cycle, while Crazy Egg
boasts of its real time data (Hunsucker, 2009). On the other hand, Google
Analytics seems to have more sophisticated segmentation and reports than Crazy
Egg.
However, Crazy
Egg is much more effective for analyzing user behavior and click patterns. All
of the observations and data collected from the tools helps in taking an
informed decision about which parts of the website need improvement and which
parts are actually bottlenecks in the conversion path. By having a completely
different perspective on visitor interactions, Crazy Egg could work well in
tandem with Google Analytics but might not be sufficient to replace Google
Analytics in totality.
References
Denyer, T. (2013, January
05). Why I removed Google Analytics from my website. Retrieved February 15,
2015, from
http://tristandenyer.com/why-i-removed-google-analytics-from-my-website/
Hunsucker, M. (2009, February
20). Some like it hot Get real-time visual analytics for your site with
Crazy Egg. Retrieved February 15, 2015, from
http://feedgrowth.com/idea-categories/insights/get-real-time-visual-analytics-for-your-site-with-crazy-egg/
Sharma, A. (2013, December
04). Sorry Google Analytics but CrazyEgg and ClickTale are better! Retrieved
February 15, 2015, from
http://www.fatbit.com/fab/sorry-google-analytics-crazyegg-clicktale-better/
Walsh, D. (2013, April 22).
Incredible Analytics with Crazy Egg. Retrieved February 15, 2015, from
http://davidwalsh.name/crazyegg
First, cute title to your blog post! Secondly it is interesting to see that this analytics tool allows you to segment more on acquisitions, which is need for marketers!
ReplyDeleteExcellent post! I learned a lot about Crazy Egg, but you also mentioned a couple of good points about Google: Its not free for high-traffic sites and page tagging can be difficult for sites with many pages. Good analysis!
ReplyDelete