RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Dell’

Join Dell Now and Make a Difference!

24 May

Three weeks ago I did a short presentation in eMetrics San Jose and talked about why now it is the best time to join Dell’s Online Analytics & Testing team. This is simply because you can make a big difference as a web analytics professional as Dell is investing heavily in people, process and technology and building out the best in class digital measurement capability.

Today I am glad to tell you that we have a number of openings in our CSMB Online Analytics & Testing organization. To be exact, 10 openings total globally! And here is the summary:

  • 1003T2QG -Senior Analytics Manager, CSMB Online, 1 position available
  • 1004FOZS- Senior Online Analytics Program Manager, supporting Behavior Targetting, 1 position available
  • 1004FPJS – Senior Online Analytics Program Manager, supporting Interactive Content, 1 position available
  • 1004FPX4 –Senior Online Analytics Program Manager, supporting Shopping Experience, 1 position available
  • 1004FQAG – Online Program Analyst, supporting various programs, 4 positions available
  • 10018M14 – Senior Web Analyst SMB Europe, 1 position available
  • 10018JZS – Senior Web Test Manager Consumer Europe, 1 position available

How to apply?

This link details the application steps. The key is you need to use the job search tool to find the right job. Once you are on the job search page, you can use the 7 digit job numbers, all starting with “100″ as you can find from above.

Let me also offer some practical tips. Free of charges of course :) It may save you sometime and help you find the dream job.

  • If you are still not convinced that Now is the best time to join Dell, don’t worry, I am here to help you. Just let me know what your question is and how can I contact you, and I will be very happy to discuss with you.
  • If you are not sure which job to apply, just pick the one seems most interesting to you. What we will do is to make sure to help you find the best position matches your interests and strengths, even that’s not necessarily the job you applied.
  • Make a killer resume. If you can’t find a good example, checkout my linkedin profile. The key to highlight is what you have achieved through analytics and testing, NOT what tools you know and what data you provided. So focus on results, results and results! And please don’t send us a 10 pages resume.
  • Prepare your interview. If you have a strong resume, you will be invited to interview. And the interview questions are…oops sorry I can’t disclose that. :)

Finally, did I mention that we might be open for remote options, depends on the job and your background? Yes we are. So for those of you who haven’t made to Austin, Texas, worry not because now you might get to work at Dell without moving. For those who have been to Austin before, I am sure you are convinced that this is the best place to be! :)

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Digg
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • FriendFeed
  • Hotmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Share/Bookmark
 

My eMetrics Summit Speech

17 May

Thanks to Jim Sterne and the Web Analytics Association who kindly gave me five minutes to talk about Dell’s ambition to become the best in class in online analytics & testing and what kinds of talents we are looking for.

This is probably by far the shortest presentation I have delivered. But the message is simple and clear: as Dell is building our online analytics & testing capability and really focus on investing in people, process and technology, NOW is the best time to join Dell and really make a big impact.

Are you fired up by this? Let me know if you are.

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Digg
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • FriendFeed
  • Hotmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Share/Bookmark
 

Hear Me Speak in eMetrics Summit DC!

18 Sep

It’s that time again–eMetrics Marketing Optimization Summit will be hosted in Washington DC from Oct. 19 to 22nd. Same time last year, only a month after I joined the Global Consumer Analytics and Optimization team, I set out a mission to discover what the super secret of a successful web analyst is during my DC trip. I wasn’t disappointed. I really enjoyed my experience there and wrote several blog posts: eMetrics Summit 2008

Believe or not, in about a month, I am going there again. Now this time, in addition to sit down and listen to those mind blowing presentations, I am actually going to stand up and speak about our journey in the last couple of years. The title of the presentation is “Dell’s Evolution–Leveraging Analytics Globally as a Key Strategic Business Driver”. My boss, Gautam Madiman and myself will co-present this topic and we will describe the unique approach Dell is taking to evolve analytics globally and the positive impact it is having on the business. We will cover a broad view of Dell’s web analytics strategy, organization structure, technology and internal processes along with specific key wins that the program has delivered.

Looking back past twelve months, we have made tremendous achievements including:

  • Rollout the first enterprise wide web analytics solution with advanced segmentation technology is in development
  • Built a process through which multiple functions and business units can discuss and prioritize analytics and optimization requests
  • Launched numerous high impact analytics, testing and targeting programs
  • Developed a global analytics team with talented and passionate individuals in HQ as well as regional hubs
  • Most important of all, now we understand what the vision is and how we can get to there and we are having a lot of fun in the process!

So come to listen to us if you are in DC this year. I understand it is not easy to make the investment to go any conference in the current environment, but if there is only one conference you could go, absolutely go to the eMetrics Summit. Let me know if there is any specific topic you would be interested in hearing.

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Digg
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • FriendFeed
  • Hotmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Share/Bookmark
 

What’s your analytical framework? (part two)

28 Jul

Last time, I talked about “Analyze” and what you need be careful about.

In this post, I am going to talk about the first “M”, Monetization. In web marketing, when people talk about monetization, they usually refer to one of the two activities: the first is about how to utilize the real estate on a website and sell the space to other companies who might be interested in showing ads there. For example, if you look at www.dell.com/home you’ll find there is Nokia and Vizio sitelets at the bottom of the page.

The second is actually what I want to address here: “monetization” in web analytics’ sense, refers to the process and methodology to quantify the possible financial impact of an optimization effort based on certain facts and assumptions.

Monetization is a great tool to sell an optimization project. Obviously agencies use it a lot in their fancy presentations. Shane Atchison and Jason Burby from Zaaz wrote a whole chapter “Monetizing Site Behaviors” in their book “Actionable Web Analytics” (You can preview most pages at Google Books They built a simple yet nice template. You can view the sample here.

Of course, the same concept and similar template can be used by practitioners to prioritize the optimization roadmap.

At Dell, we have a site optimization meeting on the weekly basis. One critical item always on the agenda is to review the testing & targeting roadmap. When we first started with testing, we feared that we didn’t have enough testing ideas. But once the ball is rolling, we often find ourselves faces the problem of too many ideas. Almost everybody from HIPPO’s to sales agents has something in their minds that they are curious about and want us to test. Of course, only less than 20% of those ideas are truly valuable. Spending any time on 80% of the rubbish, your testing program is at risk to fail. How do we get to identify the 20%? We do monetization-we estimate potential impact from each test and prioritize based on dollars amount as well as ease of implementation. Using data instead of emotion to argue with those who are passionate about their testing ideas is such a life saver.

In addition to help prioritize test roadmap, it can also help us prioritize the analytics roadmap. Does analytics need a roadmap? Yes, of course! As a web analyst, I always find myself swim in the sea of tons of different requests from executives I support. The only way for me not to drown in the sea is to prioritize by monetizing all requests. The question I always ask myself is “how much more revenue or margin I can bring to the company if I spend this many hours on this request?” Astonishingly, many times I found the answer is “none, not really”. So I move on. I am lucky to have an alignment with my direct management on this process. He and I often sit down, during our weekly meeting, to review the projects I am working on and prioritize it based on monetized values. Of course, we both realize that we still have to do some monkey works nobody wants to do, such as clean up data etc. That is just part of our lives and we all have to live with it. But if you are spending most of your time in the monkey works, I am pretty sure soon you will either burn out, or find yourself replaceable.

Our time is VERY precious. In fact, I believe the most valuable asset a company has to drive site optimization is not any of the tools, either free ones or the ones they pay millions of dollars, but the time of its web analysts. We can either protect this valuable asset or let it be ruined. We shouldn’t do any analytics just for the sake of analytics. Nor we should do any analytics only to satisfy somebody’s curiosities. The end result of analytics should be either concrete recommendations to the business that some parts of the website needs to be changed, or some test ideas that the testing team can take over to execute.

Monetization is a great friend of web analysts and we all should wholeheartedly embrace it. Sadly I find often we rush from “Analyze” to “Optimize”, without really “monetizing” the efforts. Do it now, and it will help you live longer and happier.

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Digg
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • FriendFeed
  • Hotmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Share/Bookmark
 

Brutal Logic or No Logic

24 Jul

As an analyst, I write a lot of reports (actually “powerpoints”) and like to read a lot of analyst reports. Sometimes I’ll have an “ah” moment-this guy is just genius and he said something that I want to say but can’t with the same clarity, logic, cleverness or sense of humor. However once a while, I can also get an “hm?” moment when I think either the guy is too smart for me to understand or this is just a dumb report.

I had one of these “hm?” moments today when I came across a commentary made by Eric Auchard, titled “A brutal logic to Dell’s reinvention” and you can read the whole article here http://tr.im/tR82  Particularly this paragraph:

“Dell’s current reliance on PCs also has an upside as it leaves it best-positioned among major computer makers for a long overdue upgrade of ageing corporate PCs set to start later this year with the introduction of Microsoft’s new operating system, Windows 7. “

Don’t get me wrong. As a Dell employee, I certainly wish that we are “best” positioned and I work very hard to help make that happen. However I just can’t really understand Eric’s logic here. Some questions I have:

  1. Why Dell is more reliance than other PC manufacturers? Dell is not the king of PC any more. Why HP and Acer is less reliance than Dell? You can kind of argue that HP has a much broader portfolio than Dell, but what about Acer? PC is the only thing they make!
  2. Why overly reliance on PCs is a good thing? Notice I am not saying it is a bad thing. I am saying it is not a relevant question here. For enterprise customers or consumers alike, nobody is going to analyze how much reliance Dell or HP has on PCs and then make their purchase decision. They are going to look at the product, price, services everything and then make their decision. To assume there is a direct correlation between reliance and the quality of products and services and pricing competitiveness is a serious mistake. We all know HP sometimes is more aggressive in PC space because they have a huge profit pool with their printer business.
  3. Finally, I think it is too early to say that the introduction of windows 7 is going to shake up the whole PC purchase cycle. And if that cycle does come to reality like everybody is wishing, it is a “rising tide” effect and everybody will get a free ride. The question is who will grab a bigger pie? The answer to that question again, is on the overall competitiveness of products, prices and services, which Dell is making tons of progress, but not its reliance on PCs.

Ok, maybe I am just too dumb to understand what Eric exactly has in mind when he made that statement. What about you? What do you think? Agree? Disagree?

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Digg
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • FriendFeed
  • Hotmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Share/Bookmark
 

Dell Implemented Omniture SiteCatalyst

17 Oct

Dell is no stranger to the web analytics. Since the inception of dell.com in 1996, we have been collecting and analyzing dell.com Web traffic data. And since 2003, we’ve used a global internal IT system to  continuously improve the user experience and drive online sales.

But yesterday marked an important milestone in our web analytics history and probably my career as well. We finally implemented Omniture Sitecatalyst across business segments and units. This is significant for several reasons:

  1. Democratization of online data – By getting more information about what’s happening on our site into the hands of more talented Dell marketers, we will generate more awareness, discussion and insight about what’s working and what’s not working on the site.
  2. Increase in number of testing ideas – Testing is one of the most powerful tools we have for tuning the site based on customer behavior. With easier access to information about what customers are doing on the site, we expect more testing hypotheses to be generated that will flow into the MVT testing roadmaps in various segments around the world.
  3. Global Metrics Standardization – Over the years, different segments around the world have created their own reporting silo’s and metrics, making it almost impossible to compare performance around the world. With the release of Omniture SiteCatalyst, we are standardizing web metrics globally for Dell. Being able to compare apples to apples around the world will help us extend best practices around the world and measure impact of changes globally.

So personally I am excited. But I am also aware that Sitecatalyst is no panacea no matter how good it is. I am a firm believer of Avinash’s trinity strategy and I think we are far away from integrating clickstream, outcomes and experiences data together to drive holistic, insightful and actionable recommendations. But I feel that we are on the right direction and I am proud to be a member of this movement in the company.

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Delicious
  • Yahoo Bookmarks
  • Plaxo Pulse
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Digg
  • Windows Live Favorites
  • FriendFeed
  • Hotmail
  • Yahoo Mail
  • Share/Bookmark