Copy and Paste Google Analytics Profiles

Ever wish you could create identical Google Analytics profiles, apply a new filter against the new profile and thereby track portions of your web site as if those sections were totally independent? You can now accomplish that very same task natively within Google Analytics!

This raises the obvious question, why would I desire to create duplicate profiles and apply unique filters against that content? The most obvious example which comes to mind is to track different products, or product lines found within different sections of your web site. Your internal customer often does not consider their section of your web site "part of a whole". In fact, quite often your internal customer only cares about their section of your organization's web site, specifically the analytics for their department's folders. For them, their products or services are stand alone businesses which should be managed independently!

As a support person, hopefully you understand your internal customer's need to track analytics independently of the rest of your site, but you also are not interested in recoding your Google Analytics scripts with additional ID codes whenever an internal customer needs independent analytics (remember, with unique profiles you can grant independent user access to reports for each profile. 

Before I give an actual example, let me note that it was a pleasure to work with Google's Product Support Team and provide feedback on the need for this feature. I actually demonstrated and pointed Google to an old Firefox add-in which accomplished much the same task (see blog post from October 2010). I'm thrilled to see Google incorporate this feature into the new version of Google Analytics.

Here are some screenshots which will work you through an example. Click upon any image to view at full size / resolution!

1. Invoke the GA Admin Menu

2. Click upon <New Profile>

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3. Create new profile

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4. Create a new filter to distinguish the new profile from the old

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5. Configure your new filter

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6. Continue your flter configuration process

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7. Check your GA account for your new profile

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8. Assign users reports access to your new profile

9. Access your GA metrics

Remember: it may take 24 hours for your new profile to start collecting data! 

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Still with me? You may also be interested in another post of mine on the topic of Google Analytics virtual page views. The linked post reviews how to track non html pages (like MS Office, or Adobe pdf files) via Google Analytics. Remember, it's impossible to insert Google Analytics tracking script in non html pages, but there is a fairly simple work around.

Lake Superior Moonrise Sunrise Bike Ride

What a perfect way to start the July 4th holiday than with a bike ride up the Northshore of Lake Superior timed perfectly for me to arrive at Stoney Point just as the full moon would make it’s appearance on July 3rd. The fact that Duluth had experienced a 90F plus day with high humidity gave me all the additional incentive to hold off with my bike ride till dusk. (Wikipedia: North Shore of Lake Superior)

The real goal for my ride was to photograph the full moon as it rose over Lake Superior. Take my word for it; it’s darned difficult! One’s major problem is dealing with a brilliant white globe surrounded by darkness while still getting some context and color into the photograpic composition. I’m still learning!

Thus, at 8:15 pm I started my 30 mile bike ride up the shore via Scenic Highway 61. I planned to rendezvous with the moon at Stoney Point. Thankful that I had waited till the day’s heat and humudity had “cooled” down to 80F, I biked off into the gathering dusk .. appreciative that this particular highway had a huge shoulder. I was able to bike far away from the traffic, and my red flasher was easily viewable by drivers. There was only one scarey cycling incident all night when I almost biked right into a bridge abutment. The headlights of an oncoming car had blinded me, and I missed seeing the narrowing of the shoulder.

Arriving at Stoney Point, I unstrapped my tripod from bike and got to the process of taking photos. Although I tried many options ranging from full programming of my camera including the manual setting of the aperture, exposure and ISO speed, in the end my best photos resulted from using HDR photography. In short, I picked my desired aperture setting and then took three bracketed photos … Normal, under, and over exposed photos. Learn more about HDR photography via an earlier post on my blog.

Overall I spent about a half hour at Stoney Point, both taking photographs and just enjoying the blood red full moon as it came up over Lake Superior. By this point it was time to head home. Early the next morning I decided it would be fun to follow my full moon ride up with a sunrise bike ride. Thus, even though I had only returned home from the prior night’s ride at 10:30 pm, at 5:30 am. I was once again off on my bicycle. This time I biked into town and to the Duluth harbor. The view of the freighter reflecting the sunrise while anchored off the Duluth Ship Canal intrigued me.

Here is a photo from each ride plus a sunrise photo taken the weekend before on Northstar Lake near the Minnesota – Canadian border! Click upon any photograph to view at full resolution.

Moonrise at Stoney Point, Lake Superior

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Sunrise Ships off the Duluth Ship Canal, Lake Superior

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Northstar Lake Sunrise, Chippewa National Forest

Welcome to the Brave New World … Hopefully Not Fahrenheit 451!

Just took a late lunch, and had a fascinating read from the WSJ: "Your E-Book is Reading You"! This is great 4th of July or Canada Day reading material!

I don't know why it had never dawned to me that device manufactures (Kindle, iPad, Nook) are collecting the equivalent of web analytics on our "book reading habits". For instance … with respect the Hunger Games trilogy … "Nearly 18,000 Kindle readers have highlighted the same line from the second book in the series: "Because sometimes things happen topeople and they're not equipped to deal with them."

Or … "The perfect man, according to data collected by digital publisher Coliloquy from romance-novel readers, has a European accent and is in his 30s with black hair and green eyes. Optimal chest-hair level: 'slightly hairy.' " (definitely not me, folks, except for the green eyes!)

Apparently the device manufacturers are only just starting to share this data with publishers. I'll leave you with one more quote from the article: "For centuries, reading has largely been a solitary and private act, an intimate exchange between the reader and the words on the page. But the rise of digital books has prompted a profound shift in the way we read, transforming the activity into something measurable and quasi-public." Use of these kind of analytics will transform the use and publishing of books. As a user of Google Analytics for years, "I get it"!

Just in case the WSJ ultimately removes the article from their free web site, here is a pdf copy hosted on NorthStarNerd.org. However, the WSJ article has  a video interview and slideshow in addition to this article. Worth a visit.

Welcome to the Brave New World (pun intended); Hopefully not Fahrenheit 451! 

Photo credit: Wall Street Journal and William Duke

EBook-WSJ

Microsoft Buys Yammer … Confirming Cat 2.0!

I've used Yammer for 3.5 years, and have extensive experience with running a large corporate wide Yammer network. Thus, earlier today I was pleased when my black tabby cat's opinion of Yammer was validated! Microsoft purchased Yammer. This also confirmed what I have known for some time … microblogging adds value to the enterprise by optimizing collaboration.

As a member of Yammer's Customer Advisory Board, I offer my congratulations to Yammer! It's been a fun ride over the past 3.5 years, but more importantly I've seen the perception of Yammer change from a interesting experiment in business collaboration, to an important tool for enabling global internal business conversation.

Here is my cat's post from January 11, 2009, and a more serious post further down from Yammer's earliest days.

Cat 2.0 or … Cyrus Joins Our Corporate Yammer Network! (Jan. 2009)

Last night I went to a neighborhood party, but forgot to shut my laptop down. Cyrus, our black tabby cat decided he wanted to understand what Web 2.0 and company wide chat via my Fortune 100 firm's Yammer network was all about. Anyhow, Cyrus settled down on my keyboard and invoked some commands … and even took a screenshot via SnagIt (like a dummy … I did not save the screenshot). Four times Cyrus asked (via my profile) … "what are you working on?" Ultimately he received a few responses.  The first response was "writing some reports for root cause investigations"! Thus, if you want to get true value out of company-wide chat … use your cat! Here are two screenshots of our Yammer network responding to Cyrus masquerading as me, and of course, a photo of Cyrus! Click to expand any image to full size.

You need to understand that my cat loves the warmth of my computer, and enjoys walking and sleeping on my laptop … thus his clandestine entries by stepping on various keys!

Click upon any image to view at full size.

Yammer-Cyrus-1  Yammer-Cyrus-2  Yammer-Cyrus-3
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Yammering Together (Dec. 2008)

“The best innovations occur when you have networks of people with diverse backgrounds gathering around a problem,” says Robert Fishkin, president and chief executive of Reframeit Inc., a Web 2.0 company that creates virtual space in a Web browser where users can share comments and highlights on any site. “We need to get better at collaborating in noncompetitive ways across company and organizational lines.” (From the NY Times: For Innovators, There Is Brainpower in Numbers)

How did I learn of this article? Yammer! A colleague at my company posted some information about the innovation process. Here are my comments about this kind of tool … essentially Twitter for the corporation:

  • My first impression of Yammer … what a waste!
  • My second impression … boy was I stupid!
  • Yammer introduces the unknown to me … valuable people and ideas in my company

Let me expand. My expectation was that listening to folks … even my colleagues post small messages a la Twitter would be a distraction, and a waste of my time. Instead I discovered:

  • Via Yammer I joined groups that pertained to my job
  • People from my groups who I DID NOT originally know provided me valuable knowledge

In summation, it's easy to talk to the folks you know. It's easy to seek ideas from your known peers. The big question … how do you discover knowledge hidden to you within your own organization? My company has over 120,000 employees. So far, I don't know everyone. Yammer helps me expand my knowledge base. Thus, this experiment is worth continuing.

Finally, link to my Minnesota Yammer colleague … and watch his overview on how to update your Yammer profile (via Slideshare).

Yammer-Standing

Poohsticks at Stanley Falls … the Movie!

Ahh … vacation … idle days with hikes up to the top of Wilcox Pass and its snowfields, followed by hotly competitive games of Poohsticks at Stanley Falls on Beauty Creek near the Columbia Icefields in Banff National Park.

Just in case you don't actually know about Poohsticks, this most agreeable game was invented by Winnie-the-Pooh in the 100 acre wood. There are actually official rules for Poohsticks, but given Erik, Molly and I were deep in the Canadian Rockies, we had to be somewhat liberal with the rules! There was no bridge handy, but everything else was perfect.

The key to Poohsticks is to find some sticks and a river or stream. Playing is very simple. Drop or throw your sticks in the water, and then see which stick gets to the finish line first. In official Poohsticks, you drop your sticks into the water on the upstream side, and then see which stick first reaches the downstream side of the bridge. In short, this is a great Summer time game!

In our case, what could be more perfect than playing Poohsticks later that afternoon way down the mountain side using the snow runoff from the snowfields of Wilcox Pass that feed Beauty Creek?!

The short hike along Beauty Creek requires a fair amount of elevation gain, but in just over 3 kilometers you are rewarded with phenomenal views of all six Stanley Waterfalls. However, this hike is not a good trail for children. The overhangs are dangerous and require extreme caution. I have also included a photo I took from the top of Wilcox Pass. Alhough it was the middle of June, snow was very much still in evidence.

Click upon any image in this post to view at full size / resolution.

And finally, Poohsticks … the movie!