In today’s environment, we must often pull data from a variety of marketing vehicles, such as an email campaign, a physical event, and an online advertising campaign, to better understand purchasing behavior and correlate marketing programs with purchases. As organizations leverage both digital and traditional vehicles in their media mix, there has been an increased interest in multi-channel analysis to help measure the interaction of various channels, such as websites, customer service, phone support, and print media, to understand how these channels relate to each other and impact customer behavior. Organizations deploying using cross-channel analytics to understand the impact of each channel on customer behavior are trying to understand what’s really working and how to enrich customers’ experiences. What does it take to do cross-channel analytics? We’re going to need skills, tools, and models that go beyond web-analytics. While web analytics focuses on “visitors” behavior, in cross-channel analytics, we want to be able to track individual behavior across channels to fully understand our customers, their experiences, and their actions.

Therefore, cross-channel analytics requires path to conversion analysis and cross-channel synergy analysis. Path to conversion analysis requires that we assess all the “events” in the customer pathway that the customer has been exposed to that contributed in some way to the customer’s conversion at the end of the path. Identifying cross-channel synergies requires looking at how different elements of the communication mix work together to move a customer through the buying process. Assuming that each element contributes something to the conversion path, the questions we want to be able to answer at a minimum from our cross-channel analytics are:

– What percent did each element contribute to the path to conversion?
– What is the ratio between these elements?

While cross-channel analytics takes some investment and effort, they bring value to many of the business intelligence tools we’ve already invested in. Here are just a few ways cross-channel analytics add value to our forecasting, predictive analytics, and modeling capabilities.

– By creating and using forecasting algorithms from both digital and traditional channels, we will be able to estimate sales based on changing customer behavior. The statistical models we will be able to build will enable us to determine the level of confidence of behaviors by various buying groups
segments.
– And as our analytical and cross-channel analytics capabilities improve, we will be able to develop models that can predict traffic and revenue impact associated with changes in the communication mix, which can be used, for example, to make real-time adjustments to keywords used in pay-per-click marketing efforts.
– Cross-channel analytics can make our modeling capabilities and marketing mix models more effective because we will have a better understanding of the relationship between the different marketing channels, and improve our use of decision optimization tools to determine the
combination or sequence of messages to maximize engagement and sales.

What does it mean to you? Cross-channel analytics is going to require every company to invest more in acquiring and analyzing data in order to produce true insights and recommendations that are valuable to the business. And marketers are going to need to embrace statistics, modeling, and predictive analytics. As this need for whole business analysis increases, marketers are going to increasingly need tools and models that bridge online and offline data.

Because customers today can move across several channels in the process of making a single buying decision, organizations will need to improve their cross-channel marketing capabilities and deploy solutions that enable analyzing customer behavior, making customer-centric decisions, and responding quickly to marketing opportunities. This ability to overlay many complex layers of data in order to generate a holistic view of customer behavior and campaign effectiveness has numerous implications for all of us in marketing, starting with improving analytical skills, addressing data quality, and investing in better tools.

FAQ:

Q1: What is cross-channel analytics, and why is it important?
A: Cross-channel analytics tracks individual customer behavior across multiple marketing channels—digital and traditional—to understand how these channels interact and influence customer actions and conversions. This holistic view is essential for optimizing marketing strategies and enhancing customer experiences.
Q2: How does cross-channel analytics differ from traditional web analytics?
A: While web analytics focus on aggregate visitor behavior on a single channel (usually a website), cross-channel analytics integrates data across various touchpoints—email, events, phone support, print media—to track the complete customer journey and interactions.
Q3: What are the key analyses involved in cross-channel analytics?
A:
  • Path to Conversion Analysis: Identifies all customer interactions (“events”) that contribute to a final conversion.
  • Cross-Channel Synergy Analysis: Examines how different marketing channels work together to move customers through the buying process, assessing the contribution and ratio of each channel.
Q4: What business benefits does cross-channel analytics provide?
A:
  • Improved sales forecasting by integrating data from multiple channels.
  • Enhanced predictive models to estimate traffic and revenue impacts of marketing mix changes.
  • More effective marketing mix modeling and decision optimization to maximize engagement and sales.
Q5: What investments and skills are required for effective cross-channel analytics?
A: Organizations must invest in data acquisition, integration, and quality. Marketers need to embrace statistics, modeling, and predictive analytics, supported by advanced tools that bridge online and offline data sources.
Q6: How does cross-channel analytics impact marketing capabilities?
A: It enables marketers to make customer-centric decisions, respond rapidly to opportunities, and deliver coordinated, personalized messaging across channels, ultimately improving campaign effectiveness and ROI.
Q7: Where can I get expert support to develop cross-channel analytics capabilities?
A: VisionEdge Marketing offers advisory services to help you assess current capabilities, improve data quality, implement analytics tools, and build predictive models that drive integrated marketing performance.

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