Archive for facebook traffic

How to Track Social Media Traffic With Google Analytics

social media how toYou have a website and you are building traffic to it, but what do you know about your visitors?

Do you know where they come from, how engaged they are with your website or if they have converted as a reader, subscriber or customer?

You can see all of these insights for free using Google Analytics.

Why Google Analytics?

Google Analytics allows you to see where your visitors come from and if they engage with your content or leave immediately. Additionally, you can set up goals that match your business goals and measure if visitors are meeting those goals.

With Google Analytics, you can get valuable insights about your visitors and in this article I am going to show you how to track social media traffic.

This will help you identify the social media sites that send the most visitors back to your website to see which one needs more attention.

You will also discover how you can learn more about the visitors who come to your site from Twitter, Facebook, Google+ or other social media sites.

Additionally, you will learn how to use a feature called Advanced Segments to segment your social media traffic and see how those visitors behave on your site.

Getting Started With Google Analytics

Before we dive into this, I want to make sure that you use the latest version of Google Analytics.

To do this, just login into your Google Analytics  account and click the New Version link from the top left section of your screen.

new version google analytics

Click the New Version link to switch to the latest version of Google Analytics.

Once you do that, you are all set up and ready to follow the rest of this article.

Identify Your Main Traffic Sources

First you will need to discover what social media sites send the most traffic to your website.

To do that, go to the Traffic Sources section, select Sources and All Traffic.

Here you will be able to see a list with all of the websites that send traffic back to your site. Right now, you will need to identify which are social media websites and keep the first three in mind.

google analytics traffic

Identify the main 3 social media sites that send you traffic.

From this example you can see that Twitter (t.co is Twitter’s shortened URL), Hacker News and Facebook are the main social media sites that drive traffic.

For you, the most important may be Google+ or StumbleUpon or any other site where you have an active profile.

Create Advanced Segments

Once you have identified your main social media traffic sources, you can create Advanced Segments for those websites and segment the traffic to individually analyze your visitors.

You can also set up multiple Advanced Segments and compare them to see the difference among them.

To make this easier to understand, I will show you how you can set up Advanced Segments for Twitter, Facebook and Google+ to compare their traffic and for multiple other social media sites to better analyze traffic.

Twitter Traffic Segment

You can create an Advanced Segment for Twitter to see how it compares with Facebook and Google+.

To do this, simply click on Advanced Segments from any Google Analytics report and click + New Custom Segment.

create advanced segments

Create Advanced Segments to individually analyze your visitors by traffic source.

Then add a name for your segment and start to include as sources the following containing terms that might send traffic to your website:

  • twitter.com
  • t.co
  • hootsuite
  • tweetdeck
  • bit.ly

As you can see, there are multiple filters that should be added using an OR statement because different Twitter clients might send traffic that will not get tagged as being from twitter.com or t.co.

While adding these filters, you will see that if you have traffic that matches, Google Analytics will insert the filters using an autocomplete function.

This way you can be sure that all the filters you apply actually match visits.

twitter segment

Create a Twitter traffic segment to see how the inbound traffic from Twitter compares with other social media sites.

Once you add all your filters, press the Test Segment button to see if everything is set up correctly. If so, save your segment.

Facebook Traffic Segment

Next on the list is the Facebook segment, which can be created exactly as you did for Twitter—just change the filters to:

  • facebook.com
  • m.facebook.com
facebook segment

Create a Facebook traffic segment and include as a source both facebook.com and the mobile version m.facebook.com.

From my analysis, Facebook sends traffic as facebook.com and m.facebook.com if the traffic comes from mobile devices. To make sure that your filter will match, you can simply use “facebook.”

Google+ Traffic

The Google+ segment is similar to Twitter and Facebook, but simpler. All you have to do is just filter:

  • plus.url.google.com
google plus segment

Create a Google+ traffic segment to analyze only the traffic that comes from Google+.

Google+ sends all traffic from plus.url.google.com. You may also see traffic from google.com, but do not include it, because that is something different.

Social Media Traffic

Now that you know how to create individual segments, you can create a more comprehensive segment that analyzes traffic from more than one social media outlet.

You can use this type of segment to include the traffic from StumbleUpon, Digg, Delicious, LinkedIn and any other social media site.

As an example, below are some of the sites you can include in this segment using the OR statement:

  • twitter.com
  • t.co
  • hootsuite
  • tweetdeck
  • bit.ly
  • facebook.com
  • m.facebook.com
  • plus.url.google.com
  • linkedin
  • youtube
  • reddit
  • digg
  • delicious
  • stumbleupon
  • ycombinator
  • flickr
  • myspace
  • popurls

A simpler version of this segment would be to select as a condition Matching RegExp, which will use a regular expression to detect the traffic that matches your condition.

The advantage of this will be the fact that you will not need to type in 10-20 conditions for this segment, but just one.

To create this segment, select Matching RegExp as condition and then type in brackets “()” the social media sites that send traffic to you, separated by a vertical bar “|”, just like the code below:

(twitter|t.co|hootsuite|tweetdeck|bit.ly|facebook|plus.url.google|linkedin|youtube| reddit|digg|delicious|stumbleupon|ycombinator|flickr|myspace|popurls)

You will need to make sure that there are no spaces in this code.

social media segment

Use a Regular Expression to create only one condition which includes all the social media sites from where you might get traffic.

You can also include other sites that send traffic to you.

Understanding Social Media Traffic

Now you have four powerful segments that will help you get more insights about your visitors.

You can use the first three to see how they compare to each other and if there are any big differences among them.

You can use the fourth to see how visitors who come from social media sites behave on your own site and how they convert.

We will cover more about this in future articles, but to start you should have a look at the Audience reports to determine their behavior, how engaged they are with your site (how much time they spend reading your content), how frequently they come to your site or the ratio of new visitors to returning visitors.

The Content section is the one that you should check next to see the pages your social media peers visit on your site, your site speed for their connection or what they search for on your website.

For example, you can see from the screenshot below that the visitors coming from Twitter (even if they have a higher number of visits) are less engaged with the content of the website, because the majority spend less than 10 seconds on the website.

social engagement

Use Advanced Segments to identify which social media sites send you valuable visitors.

You can use the above segment to compare the traffic from multiple social media outlets and see where you should invest more time, which one sends you more engaged visitors, visitors that convert and much more.

With the more comprehensive segment or if you apply only one segment, you can actually filter the traffic and see all of the Google Analytics reports for that specific segment.

This helps you identify visitors’ behavior and engagement for that specific segment of traffic.

Over to You

These are just a couple of examples, but I would love to see what other experiments you’ve done.

What do you think? Which of these examples have you successfully implemented? Plus, what other tutorials about Google Analytics would you like to see on Social Media Examiner? Leave your questions and comments in the box below.

Facebook Geotargeting Draws 500,000 Fans for Small Biz

social media case studiesMost of us know Facebook marketing is working when more sales roll in or site traffic grows.

But for Alex Morrissey of JamaicansMusic.com, that moment came when a party in Indonesia ran out of goats.

“We invited 200 people to the launch party, but because we’re on Facebook, 1,000 people came,” he said. “We had enough rice and peas, but we had to get more goats.”

indonesian party goers

A JamaicansMusic.com launch party in Indonesia, where the most Facebook fans reside, drew 1000 people.

But don’t let the goats fool you. Morrissey is as business-savvy as they come—even at 22. With a fast-growing music site started when he was in college, Morrissey is well on his way to becoming the Jamaican Mark Zuckerberg.

Today, Morrissey is proof that doing what you love can lead to success. And he says he wouldn’t be where he is today without Facebook.

The JamaicansMusic.com Facebook page now has more than 470,000 global fans—adding nearly 1,000 every day—making it what is thought to be the largest Facebook fan page of any in the Caribbean.

More importantly, the business is bringing in an income and has grown Morrissey’s business to five employees.

JamaicansMusic

JamaicansMusic.com has used Facebook from early on to grow its fan base and revenue.

 

Organization: JamaicansMusic.com

Social Media Handles & Stats:

Highlights:

  • The Facebook page draws about 150,000 unique visitors every month and nearly 1,000 new fans each day.
  • Giveaways and live chat on Facebook for an album launch grew the fan base from 25,000 to 40,000 in just two weeks.
  • Offering a free music download from a sponsor drove 5,000 new fans in a matter of hours.

He Built It, They Came

Morrissey started the website a couple of years ago as a college student at the Art Institute of Fort Lauderdale. He simply couldn’t find a good site dedicated to the reggae and dancehall music he enjoyed, so he created his own.

Alex Morrissey

Alex Morrissey, now 22, started JamaicansMusic.com while still in college.

But likeminded fans of those styles of music soon discovered JamaicansMusic.com. There, they can listen to relevant Internet radio stations, watch videos and learn about artists.

“It was a personal thing where I could find all my favorite music,” he said. “When I noticed how many people were actually visiting, I started asking them questions about what they wanted.”

As traffic has grown, Morrissey has improved the content and started promoting it heavily through Facebook. He moved back to Kingston, Jamaica and opened an office. Now a multimedia company, Jamaicansmusic.com hosts live events and recently started its own Internet radio station and magazine.

jadio

Fans can access the company's Internet radio right from a Facebook tab.

He owes the site’s momentum largely to the growing Facebook traffic. But Morrissey doesn’t just post on the site’s wall. He’s taken a few strategic steps that have made all the difference: rich content on Facebook, attractive giveaways and geographic targeting of promotions.

Idea #1: Make your fan page interesting

JamaicansMusic.com brings people to the Facebook page with engaging and fresh content. First, the team posts several new items on the wall each day, usually music videos. The engaging posts typically generate hundreds of likes and multiple comments.

Additionally, the site offers interest beyond the main wall with multiple content tabs for information such as a top 10 chart, new videos, the world’s biggest reggaefest and access to the company’s own Internet radio station, JADIO.

top 10

Fans can always find out what's hot on the Top 10 tab on JamaicansMusic.com's Facebook page.

 

Fans can also play the popular game created by Jamaicansmusic.com, Song Writa, where they can mix their own music.

song writa

Created by JamaicansMusic.com, the Song Writa game lets fans make their own music.

Idea #2: Give away free stuff!

Like a savvy music industry pro, Morrissey teams with radio stations, record labels and companies at least once a week to run hot promotions that draw fans in flocks. Often that includes a relevant giveaway like concert tickets or free phones.

As a result of those sponsorships, along with display advertising and commissions from iTunes.com, Morrissey has monetized both JamaicansMusic.com and the Facebook page.

For the Song Writa game, JamaicansMusic.com launched the new offering with an event that took place December 15 on the Facebook fan page. To increase attendance, the company offered BlackBerry Curve smartphones and a $5,000 (Jamaican) credit from mobile phone company Digicel.

Blackberry Curve

JamaicansMusic.com gave away Blackberry Curve phones to promote its new Song Writa game.

Those incentives helped draw 218 attendees. But more importantly, the launch helped drive early Facebook traffic up by 7,000 new fans over the course of four weeks. At its peak, about 15,000 users were playing the new game.

With Facebook, the growing startup saved major marketing dollars for its game launch.

“We were able to reach a large number of people interested in this game without spending any additional money on traditional means like newspaper ads,” Morrissey said.

Song Writa launch

Giveaways for the launch of the Song Writa game helped drive up the fan count by 7,000 and increase the number of gamers to 15,000.

Anything related to legendary musician Bob Marley always draws the greatest number of fans. When Marley’s son Damian released an album last year, JamaicansMusic.com teamed up with him.

distant relatives

A promotion with Damian Marley's new album brought in 15,000 new fans in two weeks.

The site ran competitions and gave away autographed CDs, posters and tickets to the live shows. Fans simply had to like the page to be entered. JamaicansMusic.com also hosted a live chat on Facebook with the artist, letting fans ask questions.

In just two weeks, the number of Facebook fans had jumped in response from 25,000 to 40,000.

The most impressive increase in fans came from the release of Vybz Kartel’s new and highly anticipated album. JamaicansMusic.com was given an exclusive track that was made available to fans for free if they entered their names and email addresses. Remarkably, the promotion brought in 5,000 new fans in just a few hours.

Idea #3: Target the audience geographically

Morrissey credits his success in attracting sponsors and advertisers largely to the page’s ability to provide specific demographic data. With tools such as Facebook Insights, he knows the breakdown of fans by country, gender and age, and shares that with sponsors. In fact, JamaicansMusic.com fans come from more than 230 different countries.

For example, Facebook Insights shows that, surprisingly, the greatest number of JamaicansMusic.com Facebook fans reside in Indonesia (more than 65,000).

Facebook Insights

Facebook Insights shows the exact global breakdown of the company's Facebook fans.

When meeting with advertisers, Morrissey shows them stats from Google Analytics and Facebook Insights.

“Since we have such a large fan base in each country, we feel we can get a lot more awareness [for sponsors],” Morrissey said. “It’s better than traditional media or even advertising. We can target countries so advertisers get better results.”

For advertisers like Samsung, Johnnie Walker and Digicel, Morrissey directs messages, wall posts and promotions only for certain segments of the Facebook audience. When he posts on the wall, he uses the pull-down tab underneath the status box and chooses “Customize.”  There, he chooses to share with those only in specific countries. With geo-specific targeting, he can be relevant to a segment of fans without alienating others.

custom content

The company keeps content relevant with wall posts targeted to fans in specific countries.

For the Damian Marley promotion, JamaicansMusic.com used Facebook geographic targeting to reach fans specifically in South America.

“That’s been very attractive to advertisers,” Morrissey said. “Sponsors get really specific by geographic location and type of music.”

As JamaicansMusic.com expands its offerings to a global audience, Morrissey anticipates that the site will get even more strategic in pursuing advertisers for country-specific promotions.

“Our plan for the fan page is to find top companies in countries where there are lots of fans, and provide a proposal, saying, we have these fans, we can, if you become a sponsor, promote products and artists in your country, to get you exposure and help us as well,” he said.

Growing Your Fan Base and Bottom Line, the JamaicansMusic.com Way

  1. Analyze Facebook demographics and proactively target sponsors—Know who your audience is and then find partners.
  2. Identify freebies sponsors can offer—Bring in fans by the hundreds with giveaways.
  3. Woo potential sponsors with stats—Show them they can reach their audience.
  4. Target content to unique segments of your fan base—Bring relevant offers just to certain parts of your fan base without alienating other segments.

What do you think? Have you tailored your content to your audience by geography or interest? Did it improve fan engagement? Leave your comments in the box below.