When Your Web Visitors Call: Using Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion to Bridge the Website Analytics Gap |  | Visited: 1720 |
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| | by Scott Buresh February 01, 2011 |
| Scott Buresh |
 Scott Buresh is the founder and CEO of Medium Blue, a search engine optimization company,
which was awarded a prestigious American Marketing Association award in
both 2008 and 2010. Buresh has been featured in respected publications
such as Entrepreneur, Success, Direct Marketing News, Business to Business, Search Marketing Standard, Public Relations Tactics and the Atlanta Business Chronicle. His articles have appeared in numerous online publications, including ZDNet, WebProNews, MarketingProfs, DarwinMag, SiteProNews, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide. He was also a contributor to How to Build Your Own Web Site with Little or No Money: The Complete Guide for Business and Personal Use (Brown, 2010), The Complete Guide to Google Advertising (Atlantic, 2008) and Building Your Business with Google for Dummies (Wiley, 2004). Medium Blue is an Atlanta search engine optimization company with local and national clients, including the Atlanta Humane Society, Afterburner, Inc. and DeKalb Medical. |
| Scott Buresh
has written 56 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Scott Buresh... |
In previous articles about search engine marketing and website
analytics, I have written about the importance of tracking leads from a
website all the way through the buying cycle in order to determine which
of your online campaigns are performing at optimal levels and which
could use some tweaking. A new technology, Dynamic Telephone Number
Insertion (DTNI) has arrived, with the ability to track website leads
based upon your incoming sales calls. With a modern website analytics
platform (i.e. Google Analytics, Omniture, etc.), it is currently fairly
simple to track your closed sales back to their point of origin,
whether from organic search, banner ads, social networking, pay per
click, or other online marketing initiatives. Unfortunately,
traditional analytics platforms are limited to reporting on leads that
actually take a physical point of action on your website, and cannot
track telephone leads like DTNI can. As we all know, prospects
sometimes prefer to pick up the phone and talk to someone at your
company - and this propensity generally increases in proportion to the
price point of your product or service. When you run traditional
analytics programs without utilizing Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion,
as soon as a prospect on your website decides to pick up the phone and
call your company, the source of that high quality or low quality lead
falls off the grid.
That is why it is an important part of your search engine marketing
campaign to implement a website analytics technology like Dynamic
Telephone Number Insertion to your website.
The Basics of Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion
Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion may sound fancy, but in practice
it is actually a fairly simple concept. The DTNI system creates a
placeholder where your phone number would normally appear across your
website (generally located in or near the masthead of each page). When
visitors come to your site, the source of that traffic is noted, and a
different phone number appears for each different entry channel you are
tracking, making it ideal to gauge the amount (and end result) of phone
calls generated from your different online marketing campaigns.
For example, say you focus your online marketing efforts on organic
search engine optimization, banner ads, and pay-per click marketing.
Visitors to your site who came from organic search would see one phone
number when they arrived. Visitors who came from pay-per-click would
see another, and visitors from banner ads would see still another.
Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion is a very simple configuration,
and with DTNI, there are no limits to the number of channels you can
track. Theoretically, you could have a different telephone number show
up on your website for every individual keyphrase that you are targeting
organically, one for each pay-per-click phrase, one for each different
link pointing to your site, etc. Obviously, granularity is not an issue
with dynamic telephone insertion (although the price for thousands of
tracking numbers might be).
Since the DTNI systems offered today are primarily cookie-based,
there is latency built in. In other words, if somebody found your
website through a PPC ad one day and bookmarked your site only to return
to it days later, they would still see the designated PPC number. In
this manner, Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion allows a latent lead to
be (properly) attributed to your pay-per-click search engine marketing
efforts and not to an unknown channel.
Once you have decided which traffic sources you want to track, you
will have to collect all of the DTNI information on a regular basis to
analyze the phone call volume, and subsequent performance for each of
your sources. This involves looking at the phone calls for each channel
and matching up the data with the status of the prospects (closed,
dead, still active, etc.). Using DTNI as part of your ongoing website
analytics can obviously take a little work, but the benefits are
obvious.
Limitations of DNTI
As with all other website analytics systems, there are of course some
limitations to Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion. Unless you decide
to utilize thousands of phone numbers, your designated numbers with DTNI
will track the traffic origins that you specify and will not allow you
to track all the way down to the individual keyphrase level. In other
words, you will be able to track a phone call from, for example, organic
search, but you will not know exactly what keyphrase was typed by the
caller. Also, much like any source in a search engine marketing
campaign, it is often impossible to anticipate where all of the traffic
to your website will come from with DTNI. Let’s say your site was noted
in a popular online publication but you only knew this after the fact;
with your website analytics program you would be able to attribute leads
directly to this channel as the referrals are noted in real-time. With
DTNI, you would have to set the tracking capability in place
beforehand, which is not always possible. Also, there is no guarantee
that the data from the Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion program you
use to measure the efficacy of your online marketing campaigns will
always be 100% accurate. For example, a person may write down a number
they saw from your website when they found it via a particular source
and give that number to someone else, who then calls. The second person
would then be attributed by DTNI as coming in directly from one of your
designated traffic sources. However, considering that there was
probably zero mechanism in place to track phone call leads from your
website prior to Dynamic Telephone Number Insertion, most people find
these instances to be of trivial significance.
With any lead-based online marketing campaign, it is important to
take baselines, track progress, and, most importantly, have the ability
to evaluate the performance of each of your online marketing
initiatives. Before DTNI became available, a huge piece of this puzzle
was missing, but now, companies that are serious about their tracking
the sources of all of their online leads can consider using Dynamic
Telephone Number Insertion.
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