Clickstream Analysis Digs Deeper 2Clickstream Analysis Digs Deeper 2
WebTrends and WebSideStory are announcing new clickstream analysis technology/services
Clickstream analysis: It's not just page hits anymore. Early versions of clickstream or Web data-analysis tools provided basic information, such as how many visitors a site had, how long they stayed, and what they looked at.
"That's not really useful information from a strategic point of view," says Manny Sodbinow, a Patricia Seybold Group senior analyst. Two new products aim to provide more useful details. This week, WebSideStory Inc. will unveil HitBox Enterprise 7.0, an updated version of its hosted service for analyzing Web-site data. The service offers visitor-segmentation capabilities, letting business managers categorize site visitors by demographics, the content they view, the Web sites they come from, and other criteria. It's available now, starting at $1,500 per month for 2 million page views.
Last week, NetIQ Corp. began shipping its WebTrends Intelligence Suite with new report-design capabilities and predesigned tables for integrating data from customer-relationship management applications, such as Siebel Call Center, with Web-site data. The suite links to Quadstone Ltd.'s predictive-modeling application for advanced data mining, segmentation, visualization, and customer analysis. Pricing starts at $30,000.
BackcountryStore.com, an outdoor recreation equipment supplier in Heber City, Utah, uses WebSideStory's HitBox Enterprise and HitBox Commerce services, the latter to analyze online sales data. The tools help the retailer better understand who its customers are and what they buy, says co-founder John Bresee. "This data is invaluable to us," he says. The company redesigned its Web site when the tools showed that 96% of its buying customers have PCs with 800-by-600 pixel resolution or better.
Still, Web-analytical tools have a ways to go before they can help managers understand the "why" of customer behavior, Sodbinow says. Bresee has run into that problem: While browsers of the retailer's ski equipment frequently make a purchase, many snowboarders don't. "We're doing something wrong there," he says. "We don't know what it is yet, but at least we're aware of the problem."
About the Author
You May Also Like