Skip to content. | Skip to navigation

Viewing: Home / Digital Marketing News | Digital Media & Advertising News / 2009 / February / Guest Comment: Web analysts- Should you rent, buy or rebuild?

Guest Comment: Web analysts- Should you rent, buy or rebuild?

— filed under: ,
Added:
Feb 06, 2009

With the apparent shortage of Web analysts, should you rent, buy or build? Jim Sterne, producer of the eMetrics Marketing Optimization Summit, investigates...

If you're looking to hire a web analyst in the next few months, you might want to get started now. They are far and few between and requisitions are staying open for months on end. This is true the world over, never more evident than at the eMetrics Marketing Optimization Summit where attendees from around the globe agree that a lack of experienced analysts was chief among their most significant problems.

Since the better analysts are snapped up by vendors and consulting firms and the best strike out on their own, there are very few experienced people wandering the planet in search of gainful employment. So your options are to rent (engage a consultant), buy (hire one if you're lucky) or build (train your own people.)

Tim Goudie, Group Manager, Interactive Marketing at Coca-Cola, gave up on having online marketing analysts on the payroll a year ago. He sees the learning curve around the technology and techniques growing so fast, that it's much easier to familiarize a professional web analyst with a 122 year old business model, than it is to ask a seasoned brand marketing professional to come to grips with and stay on top of the wild and wooly world of web analytics.

Further, there are dozens of consulting firms that each have a unique approach to online marketing optimization. That means a myriad of organizations  can help you in a variety of ways. There are also the two generic values of any type of consultant; a) they work with many other firms and can bring best practices to your door and, b) they don't know all the reasons why your company is not doing all the things that will provide obvious and immediate benefit. They are not stuck in your mindset of "we've always/never done it that way."

On the other hand, you may not have a 122 year old business model. You might be thrashing your way into a brave new world or have multiple models to work with. In that case, training a current employee makes more sense. Somebody with deep knowledge about what you are trying to accomplish as a company and how your marketplace works can start applying basic marketing optimization techniques at once and learn the more advanced methods as time goes on.

To whom within your organization should you hand this awesome responsibility? How do you recognise a would-be marketing/web/business analyst in your midst? Ask your team members about their idle-hours habits. If you find an individual who likes advanced Sudoku puzzles, uses a pen for Sunday crosswords and enjoys detective stories, you have an analyst in the raw just waiting to be polished. I've actually done this myself and will be putting it to the test again at the London eMetrics Marketing Optimization Summit in May.

If, on the other hand, you are one of the lucky few to have an open requisition, by all means start looking now. Hire one as soon as you can. Once on board, they will be able to identify and harvest the low-hanging fruit (instant ROI), plan the implementation of those advanced methods and help you build the business case for bringing more resources to bear. They can also start training the rest of your staff.

The ultimate goal is to make everybody a marketing optimization analysts. In an ideal world, everybody in your company will manage their marketing by the numbers, understand the power of continuous testing and measurement, and do advanced Sudoku puzzles in ink while reading detective novels.

By Jim Sterne
Producer of the eMetrics Marketing Optimization Summit

www.emetrics.org/london

Document Actions
Subscribe to Netimperative Newsletters

Email address:


Daily
Weekly
Search Marketing
Events
Publishing & Media

Send as:
Text
HTML

Alternatively, click here to unsubscribe

Digital Training Academy
Digital Training Academy
Essential skills for today's marketers: boost your team's results with customised advanced digital marketing coaching from world class trainers at the Academy.
Mail our academy managers Ask our tutors for more
Full details here...
Digital marketing audits
Digital Training Academy

Getting the best ROI from your websites, emails and online ads? Sure?

Our digital marketing audits review your current and planned campaigns to find ways of cutting budgets without cutting impacts.

Mail our academy managers Ask for more
Full details here...
 
Digital events
Latest polls
Mobile ad networks
Apple's iAds Vs Google's AdMob- which do you think will be most succesful in the long term?



Votes : 114
Comment
Right to reply: The New Twitter – a sticky, revenue-rich service that blitzes the third-party apps
Twitter is now a 'destination website' and that means it is gunning for Facebook, but cleverly avoiding a direct dogfight. It’s more an information network than a social network and so is offering much, much more. Tanya Goodin, CEO of search and social conversion agency Tamar comments…
Sep 16, 2010
Right to reply: ‘Instant Search’– Google giveth then taketh away
Google has just announced its “streaming search” service, Google Instant, is coming out of limited Beta testing and going live for all users. According to Adam Bunn, Head of Search at leading independent search and social marketing agency Greenlight, when it comes to search engine optimisation campaigns (SEO), some websites may now suffer a drop in traffic.
Sep 10, 2010
Guest comment: No rival to the SMS text exists in the market today
SMS is the obvious “lowest common denominator” mobile marketing solution... yet critics still talk about apps and website and vouchers. Darren Daws, Managing Director at Txtlocal argues why SMS is still the best mobile marketing medium, even on smartphones.
Aug 04, 2010
All subject items…