Title: INTERNET COMMERCE METRICS
1INTERNET COMMERCE METRICS
2What is Metrics?
- A basic unit used to quantify audience activity
- the yardstick of measurement
- Uniformly defined across the entire medium
- Metrics example in advertising
- click through a metric which describes a user
positioning his/her mouse over an ad, and
clicking on it - page view a metric that entails the successful
transfer of a web page to the users browser
3What is E-Commerce
- Electronic commerce has been defined as
- all orders received online automatically without
staff intervention, regardless of payment method,
for traditional commercial products and services
(excluding internet access and hosting) - Internet commerce metrics therefore, is performed
only on companies whose qualities meet the above
definition
4Measuring a Sites Performance Quality
5Web Site Performance Quality and Management
- WSPA M is a process of collecting and
presenting web site performance information from
the web site visitors perspective - Critical in managing any web-based presence
6Performance Quality (1)
- 3 basic factors make up a web sites performance
quality - speed
- availability
- speed and availability of virtually all sites
fluctuate with daily ebb and flow of overall net
traffic
7Performance Quality (II)
- consistency
- can be controlled by web managers by tuning
servers, databases and backend systems or working
with service providers
8I-Commerce Metrics Methodology
9ActivMedia Top 100 Retail E-Commerce Websites
(I)
- Conducted 4 successive waves of research to
define vendors at the top of the e-commerce food
chain between mid-September 1998 and January 1999 - Qualitative and Quantitative field techniques
- Secondary Database Research
- compilation of 1,000 likely candidate web sites
and contact information from publicly listed
top lists by sites such as Lycos, PC Magazine,
MediaMetrix. Also judgmental inclusions based on
E-commerce vendor recommendations
10ActivMedia Top 100 Retail E-Commerce Websites
(II)
- Primary telephone research
- Direct contact and screening of each of the 1,000
likely candidates for E-commerce qualification
and revenue/growth information - trained executive interviewers entered each
company from the starting point and laddered its
way through the company to qualify them for
e-commerce capability - secondary sources (news releases, SEC filings,
database information sources) were utilized to
estimate missing data (1 out of 4 cases)
11ActivMedia Top 100 Retail E-Commerce Websites
(III)
- Site Performance data collection
- online server-based Agent technologies were sent
to scan 240 known E-commerce sites for server
performance and design characteristics - ActivMedia teamed up with SiteMetrix for this
during the high intensity thanksgiving shopping
period - integrated 3 elements of site performance that
determine the quality of a visitors experience - server response, link integrity and page size
12ActivMedia Top 100 Retail E-Commerce Websites
(IV)
- Field site visits
- made by analysts to the top 100 e-commerce sites
on the internet to analyze business and web site
strategies deployed at each site, and create
mini-case studies for the top 50 merchants
13Business2 The 100 Hottest Companies on the Net
(I)
- Companies must have web-based, or web-assisted
revenues in order to qualify - business-to-consumer companies must make money
from web orders or services, or deliver via the
web - business-to-business companies must make money
from direct web orders, or a significant part of
the order
14Business2 The 100 Hottest Companies on the Net
(II)
- Winners were set apart based on strategy
Relentless work on branding
AOL Schwab
An intuitive engaging customer buying experience
Amazon.com NECX
Rapid introduction of new services
Yahoo! Sabre Group
Long term approach to investment returns
Marshall Industries Getty Images
Leveraging market value power for acquisition
ETrade Cisco Systems
15Methodology
16Forrester Travel Sites Ranking (I)
- Online travel industry poised to grow from 3.1
billion now to gt 29 billion in 2003 - Majority will be from travel sites being
researched on by customers today - Who is most likely to win? - Forrester Inc.
Technographics report - sites ranked by profiles of their current users
www.forrester.com
17Forrester Travel Sites Ranking (II)
- Evaluation of todays web travel providers
- Reach
- the percentage of travel lookers/bookers that
report visiting a site in the past year to
research travel - Booking score
- how well a site converts its experienced bookers
- Revenue index a sites earning power
- how much its visitors spend on leisure travel
each year, and what percentage is booked online
18Forrester Travel Sites Ranking (III)
Formula Revenue index
X Reach X Booking score Average amount spent
online
- Web portals scored well in
- ratings due to their audience
- reach, but however, produced
- little revenue
- Portals need to add more
- powerful travel features into
- their pages to offer incentives
- for travelers who book through their travel
agencies
19Forrester Travel Sites Ranking (IV)
- Suppliers have limited reach and
- revenue growth
- Major airline beat this constraint
- by offering full-fledged reservation
- systems on their sites
- Suppliers need to focus on wider
- distribution of their inventory
- Online travel agencies will only be
- in demand for a few all purpose
- sites, although they offer the best
- of suppliers and portals sites in one
- location
- Travelocity and Expedia have ascended
- to the top largely due to their affiliation
- with Yahoo! and MSN respectively
20Forrester Travel Sites Ranking (V)
21I-Commerce Metrics Services
22E-Commerce Metrics Services
- Small and large e-commerce sites need to know
their web site performance quality, - How their site ranks in the competitive world of
e-commerce - A number of metric sites have evolved in the
process - employ different approaches in rating different
web sites - discrepancies sometimes exist between these sites
23Media Metrix RelevantKnowledge (I)
- The 2 audience measurement sites produce nearly
identical results - Differences lie only in certain parameters
- universe definition
- universe size estimate
- website definitions
- reporting interval
- known sample biases
- standardization of these parameters led to more
accurate and reliable rating results
24Media Metrix RelevantKnowledge (II)
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26Neilsen/NetRatings (I)
- Makes use of 2 methods of measurement
- Measurement technology internet activity
tracking and reporting software - BannerTrack
- top banner ads by impression
- advertising by domain
- advertising by company
- CommerceTrack
- CacheTrack
27Neilsen/NetRatings Audience Measurement
- Audience measurement service provides 3 levels
of audience information - traffic measures for web sites (by property,
domain and unique site) - audience exposure and response to ad banners (by
advertiser, site and banner) - audience demographics linked directly to site and
advertising data
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29Service Metrics
- Has developed measurements that use automated web
site visits to generate data for site performance - allows customers or professional services to
isolate and troubleshoot sources of performance
problems - managers can prioritize problems and select from
available options, the most cost-effective
solution
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31Other Web Metrics Services (I)
- Keynote Lifeline (TM) measurement service
- provides small to mid-size e-commerce sites an
easy and economical way to - gauge the performance of their web sites
- identify and diagnose problems
- improve service quality for customers online
http//lifeline.keynote.com
32Other Web Metrics Services (II)
- E-Marketer (www.emarketer.com)
- employs a very different approach to compiling
web site data - consider data from as many reputable web sites as
possible - taken together, multiple sources, coupled with
common sense and business intelligence , create a
reasonably accurate picture
33Conclusion
34Questions to Ponder (I)
- Majority of online users may put merchandise into
their shopping cart, but end up not buying - Survey by Net Effect indicates the culprit as the
sites lack of real-time online customer service
and support - sites surveyed include Amazon, Dell and eToys
- Online companies must rethink how they can
provide immediate expertise to customers so that
contemplated purchase become sales
35Questions to Ponder (II)
- Do we greet new arrivals in a way that will
enable us recognize them on subsequent visits? - Do we offers services choices that move customers
from automated to personal service based on how
much assistance they need? - Do we have a system that effectively tracks
customer events? - How complete and accessible is our knowledge
base? - Are our shopping carts smart?
- Quick easy access to service tools during a
purchase
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