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Content Critical
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Gaining competitive advantage through high-quality web content



The Web Content
Style Guide

The Web Content Style Guide book cover
The essential guide
for online writers, editors and managers

 
January 24, 2005

How to measure the value of your web content

By Gerry McGovern

The way to make web content more valued is to make it more measured. The more ways you can measure the value your content delivers, the more your career will be valued.

Increasingly, information economies will focus on ways to measure the value of the information they create. Very little work has been done on this crucial area, and most organizations hardly have a coherent information strategy, let alone a way to measure its success. However, we are going to see major changes over the next ten years in content accounting practices and management theory.

We have wonderful tools today that will tell us the value of the physical things in our factories and offices. Now we need to create wonderful tools and disciplines to measure all our information assets. The real test of information is in the actions that it drives, and ultimately, you will be measured and rewarded on the actions that you deliver with your information.

Content is this hidden asset in many organizations and to grow and continue to be profitable, organizations will need to tap this asset in a way they have not done before. The Web provides a wonderful environment where we can test the effectiveness of content in a way that we never could before. The better organizations are going to focus increasing energy on what content is working and what content isn’t.

Right now, the measurement tools are crude, but they are getting better all the time. This is going to be a very exciting time for content professionals. Let’s face it, no matter how many times you edit something, it’s hard to be really sure that it is just right—that it has the killer instinct. Being able to measure how people respond to content is going to help us all discover where the real killer content is.

You must find ways to discover how people respond to your content. Here are some things you can consider:
  1. Make sure you have accurate, consistent data on your website. Many web managers have extremely poor data coming through on website activity. To be blunt, if you can’t measure, you’re not really a manager. Make it a number-one priority to clean up your data.
  2. Focus on action points in the data. How many people are visiting the homepage and then leaving? How many people are failing to fill out forms? How many repeat visitors did you have this month, as against once-off visitors?
  3. Test, test, test. The data will only tell you so much. The best web managers make it part of their daily routine to interact with readers. There is no greater skill you can develop than to have a deep understanding of how your readers think. There is only one way to develop this deep understanding: by consistent interaction with your customers.
  4. Usability test once a month. Watch people try and complete a task on your website. The first time you do it you’ll be amazed.
  5. Consider ‘split testing’: an advanced but very interesting approach. Basically, using special software you randomly split your audience in half and publish two different versions of a page. The pages may be the same except for one element, perhaps a different heading. Then you measure which page works best.

Gerry McGovern

You are welcome to republish this article once you place the following text and link at the end of the article:

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