This topic was covered at yesterday's "Money Talks" seminar. I said I would post some info on how you can segment your mobile users within Google Analytics; well here it is! What appears below is cut from an article I wrote for Marketing Pilgrim in the States. You can check out the full article here.
Understanding
Mobile Users: Entry Level
Even if you feel the implementation of a mobile strategy is a long
way off for your company, and you have no technical skills whatsoever,
there is no excuse for not starting to try and get a handle on who your
mobile users are, and how they interact with your site. This is a
customer segment that will grow in the future.
Demographics You can easily build up a picture of
mobile web users through the plethora of surveys currently being
released. Here are a few recent stats:
- 74% of iPhone users are over the age of 25, (31% are 35-49) and more
than 70% of iPhone users are male. [see
here]
- 64% of key decision makers in marketing departments are using
mobiles to view emails [see
here]
- Leading mobile browsing systems worldwide (May 09) = iPhone/iPod
Touch 37.2%, Opera 24.6%, Nokia 17.9%. [see
here]
- In 2008 61% of all smartphone owners had a household income of
greater than $70000, compared to just 49% of normal mobile owners. [see here]
- 40% of “smartphoners” in ‘08 would access the internet at least once
a week on their device, (78% for iPhone owners specifically). [see here]
Behaviour as well as looking at the demographics of
people browsing the mobile web, it’s also vital to understand their
goals are likely to be different to those of folks browsing on a
computer. Conversion points for mobile users are often basic things such
as finding a shop location, contact information, or viewing product
details. Generally speaking goals are more immediate and information
based. More traditional goals such as purchasing or accessing documents
will only be undertaken as a last resort where a computer is
unavailable.
Mobile users break down into three rough categories:
- “Time to burn”: browsing between events / meetings etc: your goal
is to offer bite sized chunks of interesting content in order to attract
repeat visits later via traditional browsing methods.
- “Monitors”: Users who browse your site for specific data that
changes over time: stocks and shares, sports scores etc. Identify the
information on your site which gets repeat visits and make it as easily
accessible as possible.
- “Need it Now”: Live information e.g. running information, store
locations, opening hours etc should all be easily accessible from your
mobile homepage for those people who are relying on
your brand rather than just browsing.
Understanding the key differences between your mobile and traditional
users should directly inform the architecture of the mobile version of
your site. For instance: An airline may focus on selling tickets online,
but its mobile site should focus more on check in information, live
flight times, and airport locations for people who are about to fly.
Similarly, a financial services company might view their website as a
place for prospective customers to research their products, but their
mobile site could add value by offering simple services to existing
customers e.g. balance checks.
With a bit more budget you can start to build up data specific to
your organisation. Marketers should be equipped with smartphones, as
using a mobile browser is the best way to understand and discover the
difficulties and opportunities surrounding your brand and the mobile
web.
Understanding
Mobile Users: Intermediate / Advanced Level
Google Analytics provides a segment for iPhone users, but a broader
mobile segment for analysing this traffic would be preferential. The
most obvious way to construct this segment is by grouping together the
different types of mobile browsers currently on offer, but this list is
ever-changing and many of these browsers are poor at executing
JavaScript: mobile data will be missed altogether and the segment will
be less accurate. [
more info here]
A better option is to construct a GA segment based around screen
resolution, as there is a greater accuracy of data collection:
- Open a new custom segment within your GA dashboard
- Select “screen resolution” as the segment’s dimension. You can find
this by drilling down on “Systems”.
- Select the match type “Matches Regular Expression”
- Paste the following regex into the next field:
(^[1-2]?[0-9]?[0-9]|^3[0-1][0-9]|^320)x([1-3]?[0-9]?[0-9]$|4[0-7][0-9]
$|480$ )
For the more advanced technicians amongst you the installation of
mobile-specific tracking software is a further option, however this can
be costly and difficult to integrate with GA. Bango Analytics,
Mobilytics and Amethon are key players in this
sector.
UPDATE APRIL 2010: GA now offers mobile website tracking for FREE.
Once mobile users behaviour on your site is isolated marketers are
able to analyse top content, entry and exit points, site search, etc. It
is crucial to try and understand mobile user’s goals this data. These
goals will define the architecture of your mobile site.
I hope that's useful: Try applying this segment to your website and looking at monthly visitor numbers over the past 18 months: usually a pretty telling statistic.
If you're struggling to get buy-in for a mobile site, why not sit your boss down, give them an iphone and get them to complete a key user action on your site?! - better still set them a time limit of the average time it takes a desk-bound user to complete that goal.