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How we measure

Jeremy Zilar edited this page Oct 11, 2018 · 3 revisions

Digital.gov is a community of people in government that share the methods, practices, policies, and tools needed to deliver smart, effective digital services in the government.

Our focus is the craft of applying of digital technology in government, to solve problems and enable new possibilities.

Here is how we intend to measure what we're doing

Reach

Number of people digital.gov reached because of an action

We intend to measure the effectiveness of our brand on our community. When we speak, how many people listen?

  • number of newsletters opened
  • Visits via a tweet we sent
  • Visits via a facebook post
  • emails sent to a community
  • direct visits Unique visitors

Number of people reached organically

We would like to measure the effectiveness of our presence on the open web. How are we doing at being an available resource for people searching for information?

  • indirect visits via Google etc...
  • direct visits to digital.gov

Engagements

Number of meaningful engagements

Once on digital.gov, how many people took an additional action?

  • searches on digital.gov
  • pages printed
  • pages shared (via share tools)
  • pages emailed (via email-this button... coming soon)
  • pages referenced in Slack
  • pages referenced in a community
  • asked a question about a page (to digital.gov inbox)

Number of community contributions

  • submitted an edit/change/pull-request
  • provided feedback via email
  • discussed content of a page in a community

Total Traffic

Number of unique people using digital.gov

  • total unique visitors

Number of pages visited

  • total pages viewed

Topics

Topics that were most viewed

We are making changes to digital.gov to ensure that every blog post, resource page, event, video, and promo to other services and tools is properly tagged with our new "topics" taxonomy.

Content types

Which types of content are most people gravitating towards?

We provide a lot of information across a lot of different content types. In our research, we heard that people would like the information they need packaged as resources and guides and less in blog posts. However, we have a great deal of content in our blog posts. Having the content type available to us in the analytics would help us to make smarter decisions about which type of content we write, edit, and promote on digital.gov.

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