Metrics To Monitor On Your Insitutions Website

Website Metrics

Your credit union could have the best-designed website in the world, but without tracking the proper metrics, it can be related to the old saying, “You can lead a horse to water, but you can not make him drink.” The digital space a website creates allows you to put data behind what is working and what is not, making it crucial you pay close attention to your metrics. Let’s explore the top three metrics to pay close attention to on your credit union’s website.

Users

In Google Analytics, “Users” are unique visitors that come to your digital branch. This metric offers information pertaining to the type of visitors frequenting your website. Looking at the picture below, there are two caveats of information to dive into:

The number of users indicates the popularity of your website and the loyalty of your visitors. Over time, you’ll want this number to continue to grow, as that means you’re creating more traffic to your site. 

New vs Returning Users is tracked by Google Analytics through cookies. If you have a large number of returning visitors, it means that your site is performing well. If you have a considerable number of new visitors versus returning ones, you can safely assume that your online branding and SEO tactics are working well. If not, view this as an opportunity to improve on. 

 

User Report in Google Analytics

Figure 1

 

Traffic Source/Medium

Diving deeper into your website traffic, we can analyze traffic sources. The traffic sources metric allows you to examine how users are getting to your website. There are several ways traffic is directed to a website: direct, referrals, organic and social. Direct traffic comes from people who type the URL in their search bar – for example, navyfederal.org. Referral traffic can be from a linked site. For example, you were featured on the news or sponsored an event. Organic referrals are those who got to your website via a search engine. Social referrals are people who clicked on a link through social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn. 

Looking at Figure 2 below, we can see this site’s traffic is mostly coming from direct, shown as (none), and organic traffic. As we go down the chart and analyze the next two traffic sources, that’s where the real power of this metric kicks in. It allows us to see how our digital marketing channels are performing. Looking at these results, we see that search advertising (CPC) is outperforming display advertising (Audience_Targeting_Display). Taking this in, it may be worthwhile to invest more in search, rather than display for this given site. It should also be a goal to increase referral traffic to keep new users coming to the site. 

Screenshot of Traffic Source/Medium

Figure 2

 

Keyword Tracking

Keyword tracking is essentially the activity of monitoring the position of your website on a search engine results page for specific keywords. It’s a process that allows you to get important data and metrics about specific keywords and shows how well your website ranks for those exact keywords (Amando, 2020). In the financial world, example keywords we’d all love to rank for are words like mortgage, car loan, credit card, savings account, etc. Although these words are competitive to rank for, keeping an eye on keywords, in general, can help you move up in rankings for terms that are not as competitive and boost your new visitor traffic organically. 

Looking at Figure 3 below, you’ll see an example keyword ranking report from the online visibility management platform SEMrush. Looking at the report we can make note that this particular site could better rank for the terms “upper peninsula credit union” and “up credit union.” Through some SEO optimization, this site could improve rankings from spot 11 and 13 to number 1. Without keyword tracking, we would not know this opportunity existed. 

SEMrush report

Figure 3

 

The three metrics above really only scratch the surface of the possible website stats you can track. I highly recommend diving into the Google Analytics Academy to learn all the resources available for your website. The more you know, the more informed decisions you can make. 

 

References:

Amado, F. (2020, October 12). What is Keyword Tracking? Retrieved September 21, 2021, from https://snowball.digital/blog/what-is-keyword-tracking