• Home
  • Research
  • What We Offer
  • Who We Are
  • Blog
  • Your cart is empty.
  • Log in
  • Subscribe
  • Free Sample
  • Contact
  • Recent Entries
  • Get Custom Feeds
Team Blog
Free Research Sample
Byrne

Omniture and the Business Intelligence - Web Analytics divide

Added By Tony Byrne at 21-Aug-2008 | Twitter: @TonyByrne |

At the TDWI Summit this week, I had the opportunity to talk about Web Analytics with enterprise Business Intelligence (BI) execs. I came away concluding that the worlds of enterprise data and web metrics still remain far apart.

I've argued before that the separation is partly technical and partly cultural. BI managers are wary of the firehouse of web traffic data, and most web managers just don't think much about non-web data stores and the value of website metrics to the broader enterprise.

Chatting with a BI manager at a major Omniture customer highlighted some of the issues. As Web Analytics Report readers know, Omniture is good at getting data into its system, but not very friendly about getting it out. Now, this customer wanted a small subset of key web data to bring back into their data warehouse. The key word here is small: you don't necessarily need and in fact can't handle all that extra traffic data for CRM-oriented enterprise datamarts. But you do want to know what your customers are doing. So, this enterprise put their own unique tag on key transaction pages (downloads, inquiries, and other form submissions) that wrote to a separate database, which they could then synch up with their master customer data to get a more holistic view. It's a useful work-around that seems to be working well for the BI team there.

At the same time, it made me a bit uncomfortable, because now they run two different tracking systems -- Omniture and the bespoke capture application -- and experience suggests that they will generate different metrics. The web managers will make decisions based on what they see coming out of Omniture, while the master enterprise data may show something different.

That's not the end of the world -- at least this customer actually made an effort to extract some web data for long-term enterprise use -- it's really just a first step.

Before you start to criticize Omniture, understand that no web analytics tool has been built to integrate with enterprise BI systems (indeed, the free Google Analytics service has no data access API at all). I think the marketplace still reflects the fact that within most enterprises, web managers and enterprise data managers live in two different worlds. But, if like the customer I met, you are trying to bridge that gap, be prepared for some custom development.

Categories: Tony Byrne, Web Analytics, Web Content Management, Implementation, Marketplace at Large, Google Analytics, SiteCatalyst

  • Tweet This Entry

Online Education

Check out our classes and Register Today.

Evaluation Research

Get the real story about vendors and products.

My Research

Remember MeForgot password?

Not a subscriber? Learn about our subscriptions

Categories

Channel

  • Collaboration & Community Software (128)
  • Web Analytics (151)
  • Web Content Management (802)

Analyst

  • Adriaan Bloem (46)
  • Tony Byrne (661)
  • Apoorv Durga (8)
  • Jarrod Gingras (33)
  • Alan Pelz-Sharpe (65)
  • Theresa Regli (36)
  • Kas Thomas (77)

Topics

  • Asia-Pacific Marketplace (3)
  • Building Business Case (142)
  • Cloud Computing (6)
  • E-Discovery (1)
  • European Marketplace (16)
  • Governance (14)
  • Implementation (218)
  • Industry Events (1)
  • Industry Standards (111)
  • Information Architecture (84)
  • Intranets (6)
  • Marketplace at Large (505)
  • Open Source (93)
  • Selecting Technology (548)
  • Services Oriented Architecture (4)
  • Software-as-a-Service (18)
  • Usability (7)
  • Vendor Viability & Financials (129)
  • XML (28)

Industries

  • Finance (2)
  • Government (21)
  • Health Care (2)
  • Higher Ed (7)
  • Legal (1)
  • Manufacturing (2)
  • Pharma (1)
  • Publishing-Media (4)
  • Retail (7)

Dates

  • 2010 (69)
  • 2009 (200)
  • 2008 (223)
  • 2007 (166)
  • 2006 (99)
  • 2005 (104)
  • 2004 (58)
  • 2003 (67)
  • 2002 (67)
  • 2001 (28)

Have Questions?

Sales & Customer Support

+1 800 325 6190 (USA)+44 (0) 20 3318 1911 (UK)+1 617 340 6464 (Int'l)sales@realstorygroup.com support@realstorygroup.com

All other inquiries: info@realstorygroup.com

Copyright, 2001 - 2010, Real Story Group. All rights reserved.

  • Contact Us
  • Copyright Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

The Real Story Group

  • CMS Watch
  • Enterprise Information
       Watch
  • SharePoint Watch
  • The Real Story Group

Research

  • Vendor Evaluations
  • Webinars & Advisory Papers
  • Online Education
  • Vendor Lists
  • Free Research Sample
  • Purchase Now

What We Offer

  • Research & Advisory
       Services
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Consulting Services
  • Customer Support
  • Contact Sales Team

Who We Are

  • We're Different
  • Our Team
  • Media
  • Customer List
  • Events
  • Contact Us

Get the real story via our bi-weekly newsletter.

Follow us on: RSS twitter

Log In

Remember MeForgot password?