My thoughts of eMetrics and the future of web analytics
With Toronto, and it’s rain, well behind me (or at least very much to the west of me), I felt I should write about my overall feeling of eMetrics and my thoughts of web analytics’ future. Warning: Possible CLM ahead.
Web analysts agree
If there was a common thread throughout the early sessions of eMetrics, it was this: everyone agrees. Lots of nods and “uh huh”s throughout the room. “Start small”, “think about business goals”, “learn to communicate effectively”, “avoid puke” – yes, yes, yes and oh my yes. They were giving out Avinash’s latest book – but I had a strong feeling that a good proportion of the room already owned a copy, I know I did. The entire conference was dancing on the edge of preaching to the choir. “Test, and be prepared to change”. Yes. “It’s not about the tools”. Yes. Web analytics is here and will thrust business into the new world! Hooah! The Spartans of 300 we were. United in thought, united in action.
Sure. There were tidbits of new material. A method of analysis perhaps we didn’t think about. And, of course, there was the contradicting ideas where some say that web analytics is hard and those that felt that web analytics is easy (I’ll weigh in on this debate on day). Though, mostly everyone agreed that web analytics could be way more complicated – just ask the predictive analytics panel.
But overall, unfortunately, for the first two days, eMetrics felt… dare I say, monotonous?
For the first two days, as interested as I was, there was a lack of fire. It felt like each presentation was a slight flavor of the last. Missing was any serious opinion about social media as a marketing channel (other than a way to hold a contest or campaign). Missing was how to tangibly measure engagement. Missing was any talk about pushing the envelope into offline media’s turf. I started to wonder what happened to the visionary spirit of web analytics? Did Peter Pan grow up when I wasn’t looking? When did we stop dreaming and putting out wild ideas out there for people to shoot down? Where was the passion? Perhaps my expectations were set too high. Who knows… at least the beer was cold, I guess.
Thank God it’s Friday
But just as the conference was beginning to feel old shoe, comfortable but ordinary, Friday came to save the day. While the attribution panel was, by far, the most exciting session of the conference for me, it was the final panel that day that made the conference worth coming to. The overarching question posed to the panel of web analytics’ answer to rock-stars: “What is the future of web analytics?”. No one knew. They had ideas, but no one was sure. There was no across the board agreement. There wasn’t a, “I have nothing to add” to be heard. The time flew by and you wanted to hear more. There was a sense that the field come to a fork in the road, and no one had a map.
Would web analytics be drafted into service by business analytics? Would our opinions ever hold weight with the c-suite? Would we live in the basement with the statisticians or in the limelight in front of CEOs? So many questions, so few answers. Yet, being lost never felt so good.
I’ve always felt uneasiness about the future was the cornerstone of any serious profession and that all good ideas are born from a million bad ones. Proper professions always look for ways to be pertinent and meaningful, not only for today but for our children’s tomorrows. Web analytics is just too young to know all the answers already and much too young to know what it should be when it grows up or what not to do.
I left the session pensive with my head full of questions. It couldn’t have ended better.
My take
While, I too cannot predict the future, after some thought, I come up with this: We can do better. We can do more. We must start now.
As web analysts, we have a great opportunity ahead of us. The tortured history of BI does not have to be that of web analytics. We can learn from BI’s mis-steps. We’re the pioneers in a new medium and we’re much more nimble than our predecessors. The old marketing channels are stumbling and are lusting over the potential of the web – we must leverage this. Instead of us aiming to join their aging clubs, we should be paving the way towards a new league of measured media. We should further blur the boundaries of web, print, radio and TV and look beyond the click towards offline. While perhaps web analytics will be part of BI one day, it doesn’t mean it should be a minor player. Web analytics practitioners must not become the modern day number crunchers or Javascript grunts – we’re better than that.
We will make mistakes and that’s OK. Our mistakes will make us better. We will overcome challenges. This will give us confidence. We will make a difference. And this will give us purpose.
Who’s with me? Hooah.



I am with you. Thank you for your considered and thoughtful views. Yes, “We can do better. We can do more. We must start now.” I totally agree. If you want to hear more about how much I agree with you, click on bit.ly/adVNRr and fast-forward to minute 4:00.
The future is in the integration of all things analytic.