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Report Excerpt

The Web Analytics Report 2008 looks at... Access controls in WebTrends

"WebTrends can become a bit problematic in super-distributed environments, however, because it lacks the ability to control permissions down to the report level. Currently, you can only control permissions down to report set. This creates a scenario where users in different business groups could alter reports that impact each other."

(p. 256)

More about The Web Analytics Report 2008

 

TrendWatch Blog

IndexTools and WAA Standards

25-Mar-2008

Given pervasive confusion around analytics terminology, I lauded the Web Analytics Association's August, 2007 announcement of Report Definition Standards, but was somewhat skeptical with regard to how vendors might use the cloak of compliance to make it harder for you to interpret their report definitions.

Fast forward to March 9, 2008, and IndexTools' COO Dennis Mortensen posted a refreshingly comprehensive, easy to understand, and transparent list of how the IndexTool's solution complies (or doesn't) with the standards.

Critically, Mortensen describes the methodology IndexTools uses to make the calculations, which lies at the crux of using the standards definitions to understand reports generated from any product.

Mortensen's post must also rank as an industry first for a vendor to actually go public that their product cannot produce every metric under the sun, making it far easier for you to potentially draw an "apples to apples" comparison and clearly see what you get, and what you don't, from a basic reporting perspective.

All of the other web analytics vendors...especially those with the largest customer bases, such as Omniture, Google Analytics, Nedstat, ClickTracks, Unica, Coremetrics' and WebTrends should step up and clarify in similar terms how they meet (or not) these standards.

- Submitted by: Phil Kemelor, Contributing Analyst

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