TechTalk: Should I Spend More on Facebook or Google?
Spring cleaning for your online marketing budget.
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Philip King
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This is where tools like Google Analytics are essential. Ask your website person or company to list for you the top five or six sources of traffic to your website, in order of how many users each source brings to your site.
The list will look something like this:
- 100,000 users: Direct traffic (mainly people who know your website and type it into their browsers)
- 50,000 users: Organic search traffic (people who come to your site from a Google search)
- 25,000 users: Paid search traffic (people who click on an AdWord that links to your site)
- 20,000 users: Facebook traffic (ask about the split between Facebook mobile and Facebook desktop)
- 15,000 users: Referral traffic (people who arrived at your site from another website)
- 10,000 users: Email traffic (people who clicked on a link in an email you sent)
Based on this list, some may argue that they should spend twice as much time on Facebook as they do on email, since it drives twice as many users.
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Philip King
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Philip King is founder of The Donation Funnel Project, an experiment in online and mobile fundraising. He is a regular contributor to NonProfit PRO.
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