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Google Analytics does a great job of collecting your data, but it does a bad job of helping you understand it. For example, at Dabble DB, we are very interested in how many people come to us after searching for online database. Here’s what that keyword’s traffic looks like for the first few months of 2009:

Google Analytics keyword traffic example

It’s definitely going up and down a lot, but we don’t really care about daily fluctuation, we care about the trend. On average, how many people should we expect each day? And is that changing?

Trendly uses a statistical model to answer that question for us. It assumes that our traffic is going to stay the same for days, weeks, or even months at a time, but every once in a while something is going to change — like our ranking for “online database” improving, sending more people our way. The red line shows how Trendly sees this keyword over the same time period:

Trendly interpretation of keyword traffic

According to Trendly, our daily visitors from “online database” went up from 24 to 40 in early January, and then again up to 50 in early February. It reports these changes as items in a news feed:

Items in a news feed

By boiling several months of data down to a couple of items in a news feed, Trendly helps us keep on top of many different things at once. For example, this same feed actually tracks all of our search keywords:

Tracking all search keywords

You can see that our traffic from searches for co-founder Avi Bryant had a bump at the end of January (around the time he gave a talk at CUSEC), but went back down again. The sparklines beside each news item show those patterns concisely.

The news feed is continuous, and shows up to three years of history. If we want to see the earlier change to “online database”, we just scroll down a few weeks:

Scroll to see changes

The news feed does a great job of showing what’s changed, but it’s nice to put those individual keywords into a wider context. A chart running down the left provides the big picture:

A big chart for the big picture

The chart is locked to the same timescale as the news feed — and so, unlike most charts, time runs vertically. Each colored layer in the chart represents a single keyword. For example, the big green layer represents visits from “online database”. If I click on either the chart or the news item, the layer will pop out:

Pop-out layers

You can see how the green layer gets wider at the same time as the news item appears. The wider the layer, the more visits we get each day. The wider the chart as a whole — the sum of all the layers — the more visits we get in total from search. You can also see that Trendly tries to make things more meaningful by clustering similar keyword phrases together: The popup for “online database” shows that, while most (86%) of the searches in this cluster are for exactly “online database”, there are less frequent similar phrases that are also being included here, like “make an online database”.

Trendly isn’t just for tracking keywords. It has feeds for many of the reports you’re used to from Google Analytics: referrals, content, ad campaigns, and more. If you use goal tracking or ecommerce, Trendly also helps you track those:

Track goals and ecommerce
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Or contact us at info@trendly.com for more information.