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Blog posts for June, 2010

Loop 11 Adds New Features, and Why They Rock

Monday, June 28th, 2010

If you have ever ran an un-moderated usability study you know that most solutions don’t provide advanced features for research panels or the functionality for custoloop-blog-imagem analysis. We personally use Loop 11 for un-moderated usability studies. Although we love the tool and the great insights we get we always sigh when it’s time to crunch the numbers. But not anymore!! Loop 11 just released new features that will make setting up and analyzing un-moderated usability studies a breeze. Within this post we will review the changes and why they are important.

1). Tracking participants using unique IDs
When using a research panel for a usability test tracking individual participants is important not only for segmentation but also to know exactly what participant completed the study and should be paid their incentive, terminated, or was over-quota. Previously, I had to ask the participant to fill in their Ids and as you can imagine some participants didn’t answer correctly. I would also download all of the IP address Loop11 gave me and try to match it back just to double check, which took hours!

Why this rocks: Now all you have to do is customize the end of the URL with a unique ID for each participant. You can now easily pay your participants and segment your users without having to invest a lot of time.

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2).Re-Categorise multiple URLs at a time
Instead of re-categorising one URL at a time you can now re-categorise multiple URLs at the same time.

Why this rocks: Some websites have dynamic URLs, and you can’t set-up a goal for every possible combination within Loop 11. Now instead of re-categorising one URL at a time you can select what pages you want to re-categorise. This saves time during the set-up process of the study and analysis because once you re-categorised the URLs the data re-configures!

3). Pop-up invitation controls
If you are recruiting your participants by intercepting them via your website; you now have a feature allowing you to control the percentage of visitors that you ‘invite’.

Why this rocks: Selecting what percentage of your visitors is super valuable because too high a sample rate might mean you are surveying more visitors than you really need to in order to get valid results. Remember, too small a sample could produce results that lack statistical validity.

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4). Individual participant path analysis in exports
Full path analysis of individual participants can now be exported into reports. This allows you to segment the conversion funnel by your top segments, whether you segment participants by female only or participants that clicked abandoned when they actually succeed the task.

Why this rocks: In the past, the way we collected this data was by using the interface within Loop 11 and simply copying and pasting each link for each participant for each task. Needless to say that it took awhile and there was lots of room for human error. Now all you have to do is download the report. Once you have this data you can segment your funnel analysis to view how different users completed or failed the task based either on their demographics and/or geographic.

5). Individual responses for Rating Scale Matrix questions
The results for rating scale matrix questions, while always available at an aggregated level were never available so you could see the individual participant responses.

Why this rocks: Let’s say you asked a gender question because you wanted to know how many females or males participated in your study. Loop would just tell you the percentage but not who was female or male. Now you can download the report and know who was who. This type of information is important if you had follow-up question after the task, you can find what type of user rated the task easy or difficult. Or if you didn’t use a research panel you can start your test with some demographic questions so your analysis can get a little juicer with segmentation.

What is your experience with Loop 11, are you excited about these changes? As Toby Biddle would say “Happy Testing”!

If I Had to Pick One Report, This Is It…

Monday, June 21st, 2010

About two years ago, Avinash Kaushik asked “if you had to pick one web analytics report on a deserted island which report would you take.” I totally agreed with his selection of the outcome by all traffic sources report as I am also a fan of outcomes. (Show me money!) But what if I got stranded on this island with an iPad and because of this I got to cheat only a little? This post is about my one favorite report in each of the top three web analytics tools that I would.

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1). Google Analytics-one of the coolest reports just released is the intelligence report. I have been adding upper and lower control limits to my dashboard for about four years now. It really helps me know whether an upward or downward trend is something I should be paying attention to. This new report not only automates that process but emails me when there is activity above or below my limits. I would take this report (although a dashboard, so it is a cheat) because I am assume that before I got stranded I took the time to set up this alerts about all the important KPI’s my company has, so I would still be on the pulse of the companies objectives.

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2). Coremetrics- ( let’s assume that we are an eCommerce website) one of the reports that I always go to is the top abandoned products report. Talk about leaving money on the table, this report tells you exactly how much -down to the last penny! As seasons change revenue is expected to change, but what if you knew what products online users wanted but didn’t purchase last year. Would you start rolling out some landing page test or re-design the products check out funnel to ensure that this year’s sales don’t follow the same pattern? Why I would take this report, simply because it is actionable. It lets me know immediately what users want but due to either bad usability or messaging and change it.

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3). Omniture- pathing analysis is something that I love to look at especially using segmentation (so this is why it’s a cheat). In the example above I selected my Facebook visits as my segment and can see exactly what path they took and see what the fallout rate was to my success pages. This type of information lets me see if my content has continuity and analyze key website process flows in hopes of identifying opportunities for improvement. From a usability standpoint I love this report because it will help me identify how user’s navigate through the website and using segmentation will allow me to find key traffic drivers that maximize ROI.

What about you, what report would you take? would you also have an iPad and have one workaround this question? I would love to hear your thoughts or comments.