Posts Tagged 'data'

Taking the time to tell a good story

With data becoming the new cool, there has never been a more important time to make its interpretation as useful as possible. As a self proclaimed chart perfectionist at the agency, nothing concerns me more than the need for endless PowerPoint, when a well thought through design, using key insights can get the point across in a compelling and engaging way in a fraction of the time.

Okay, so my pulse does rise when the new version of Wired gets delivered and I get to admire the simplicity of conveying a global issue on two pages without endless copy…But when I came across the blog by David McCandless it was great to see someone dedicating themselves to the cause in everyday working environments where data is required and interpreted.

As an “independent visual and data journalist” (and proclaimed pie-chart hater; let’s hope he doesn’t mind Venn diagrams) he certainly makes a convincing case with his clever site, Information is Beautiful.

Click to visit the site

Billion Dollar Gram

The “Billion Dollar Gram” chart. This eye-opener compares billion-dollar budgets—comparisons of, say, the estimated total amount that will be spent on the Iraq war ($3 trillion) and the cost to feed and educate every child on earth ($465 billion). “I’m interested in how designed information can help us understand the world, cut through BS and reveal hidden connections, patterns and stories underneath,” writes McCandless. “Or, failing that, it can just look cool!”

I guess we just all need to take the time to think things through a tad more before we rush to PowerPoint…as Oscar Wilde once said “I’m sorry I wrote you such a long letter; I didn’t have time to write a short one.”

http://www.informationisbeautiful.net/

Author: Matt Scott, DraftFCB

Data and analytics are the key to more efficient online marketing

As the explosion of new platforms, applications and utilities continues to take hold of the masses; the tools which we use to track and monitor this surge have grown a lot more sophisticated – the output is rich, granular, and instantaneous data, offering salient insight into the behaviours of our target consumers.  This presents great challenges to agencies and clients alike.  Just as many clients were starting to get a handle on the data they generate from their websites and understand how it ties to marketing; along comes a plethora of new technologies with different reporting requirements.

In the old world, the predominant method for tracking the consumer interaction with your site was counting the number of unique users and the number of page views.  At the more advanced end of the tracking and reporting spectrum, analytics have traditionally tracked a linear progression through pages on a site, which is often represented as a funnel diagram that shows where users drop off in a defined path.  The new world has seen significant advancements in data analytics that have made the output both more complex; however, potentially a much more powerful marketing weapon.

Analytics are not a new phenomenon, and the outputs from some of these tools have been used for years by some of the world’s biggest brands to optimise their digital ad spend and create a more compelling online experience for their customers.  Tools and technology have revolutionised data analytics, moving from simple demographic targeting, through to audience segmentation and behavioural targeting, to more highly specify the impact of our messaging and communication.  Behavioural analysis tools for prospective and existing customers, can now give us unique insight into the intent of the site visitor.  These tools accurately deliver a prediction on the likely behaviour of this individual based on previous web browsing and purchasing behaviour habits on the client’s website and others.  Analysing this data then provides a huge amount of learning’s to optimise over time.

With such a competitive landscape, especially in the travel, finance and retail categories, developing a strategy around which messages are delivered to which prospect through multivariate creative testing, can impact positively on sales.  The data and tools are the central pillar to enabling this targeting exercise.  With this continually rejuvenating pool of information delivering a lot of power to the marketing team, clients can finely hone advertising initiatives to optimise existing advertising campaigns thereby attracting a better quality prospect.  As a client’s database of behavioural attributes develops, we can take steps in real time to influence an individual’s activities to increase sales, prevent attrition, and build loyalty.

Webmasters and clients have the choice of a large number of tools and analytics suites.  These range from the free version of Google Analytics, to a full enterprise-level analytics suite from Omniture costing many thousands of dollars.  The analytics industry is rapidly consolidating.  Large analytics vendors are procuring smaller specialist players, to not only add new features and functions, but also expand into broader, qualitative measurements, such as customer experience data.

The granularity and volume of the data being collected by clients is growing exponentially.  With all this data and consumer insight, clients must develop a clear plan as to how they will implement a strategy around it.  Tracking and measurement is one thing, making sense out of what’s being reported is another.   It would be easy for a lot of clients to get overcome with the enormity of this task, as it’s not like they are sitting around all day with nothing to do.  This is where agencies should come into play.  Many have invested in qualified strategic and digital practitioners who understand the tools, the outputs and importantly what the data means to communications planning across all platforms.  Some agencies however are not equipped to offer a solution in the space.  They should think very carefully about the specialist competition that will be sniffing around their big accounts.

The football field is no longer level.  Clients who embrace a data strategy early and leverage this skill base, will, without a doubt, gain significant advantages over their competition.

Author: Chris Riley, OMD