Digital Marketing Analytics in Practice
Instructor: Kevin Hartman
Beginner Level • 7 hours to complete • Flexible Schedule
What You'll Learn
- Gain hands-on, working knowledge of a step-by-step approach to planning, collecting, analyzing, and reporting data
- Learn to evaluate and choose appropriate web analytics tools and techniques
- Utilize tools to collect data using today’s most important online techniques: performing bulk downloads, tapping APIs, and scraping webpages
- Understand approaches to visualizing data effectively
Skills You'll Gain
Web Analytics
Data analysis
Data Collection
Digital Marketing
Trend Analysis
Google Analytics
Marketing Analytics
Analytics
Digital Advertising
Marketing
Data Storytelling
Information Privacy
Shareable Certificate
Earn a shareable certificate to add to your LinkedIn profile
Outcomes
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Learn new concepts from industry experts
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Gain a foundational understanding of a subject or tool
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Develop job-relevant skills with hands-on projects
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Earn a shareable career certificate
There are 4 modules in this course
In the orientation, you will become familiar with the course, your instructor, your classmates, and our learning environment. The orientation also helps you obtain the technical skills required for the course. Every analyst dreams of coming up with the “big idea” – the game-changing and previously unseen insight or approach that gives their organization a competitive advantage and their career a huge boost. But dreaming won’t get you there. It requires a thoughtful and disciplined approach to analysis projects. In this part of the course, I detail the four elements of the Marketing Analytics Process (MAP): plan, collect, analyze, report. Module 1 also explains the role of the analyst, the six mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive (“MECE”) marketing objectives of analytics, how to find context and patterns in collected data, and how to avoid the pitfalls of bias.
In Module 2, we dive headlong into the most important aspect of digital marketing analytics: transforming the data the analyst compiled into a comprehensive, coherent, and meaningful report. I outline the key characteristics of good visuals and the minutiae of chart design and provide a five-step process for analysts to follow when they’re on their feet and presenting to an audience. The goal is to equip analysts with the tools they need to tell a compelling and memorable story that “cuts through the noise” of the overwhelming amount of information audiences experience every day.
Module 3 brings to life the concepts, theories, techniques, and tools discussed in the course in a business case written about Bellabeat, a high-tech design and manufacturing company that produced health-focused smart devices for women. Students will see each step in the MAP illustrated through the case.
Data’s road from crude maps to gigabytes of multidimensional information has been a long and winding one. But it is far from over. If anything, the industry finds itself at a critical crossroads that will determine its future for decades to come. Module 4 explores this predicament while casting an eye toward what comes next for digital marketing analytics.