7 Strategic Analytics Habits You Should Practice

1. Arrive with specific questions in mind  

The more directed you are when you log into your analytics, the better the outcome and the more helpful the data is to you. 

Focus on a specific industry, subject or company. Arrive with the questions you want to have answered. 

2. Use data to build internal consensus or break down silos

Use data to get buy-in from a particular group around a new focus or campaign and delegate this work to a variety of departments, such as Marketing, BD, Communications, Intelligence, etc.

Everyone will bring their own insights and questions to the data, and therefore their findings will be critical for a larger, internal understanding of the opportunities. (Again, there's a terrific use case in the webinar that shows this in action.)

3. Make viewing your analytics and data a regular thing 

Just like signing up for the gym, the act of signing up alone will not help you reach your goals. You actually have to turn up.

The same goes for your analytics dashboards. Make checking in on your readership and reach part of your regular routine, whether that is once a week, once a month, once a quarter. It only works if you commit time to it.

4Use data to guide attorneys to write about topics your target audience actually cares about 

Frequently, marketing professionals suggest that, even if they have a willing participant writing inside the firm, that author isn't always writing about the topics their target audience cares about.

Data helps uncover what readers in specific companies and industries care about most. Related to my point above about using data for internal consensus, there's nothing quite as valuable as being armed with the knowledge of reader interest as you walk into a meeting about content strategy and upcoming writing efforts.

5. Look for cross-marketing and new opportunities with existing clients

Do you see a current client you serve in one area (example: financial services) reading deeply about another area, such as employer liabilty issues? Your analytics can help shape how you approach this particular client, or prospect to expand your services. 

6. Gain insight into your competition 

Are there firms or attorneys that have great visibility and thought leadership traction with a particular company or industry, or in one of your key practice areas? What are they writing about - and how are they doing it? Your reader data offers great competitive intelligence to influence everything from lateral hires to more focused content strategies to, as mentioned above, more informed client outreach and service.

7. Better understand your clients' business 

Last but not least! I have yet to attend an in-house counsel panel in which the attorney clients on stage fail to say: "I need my outside counsel to deeply understand my business, my pain points, what keeps me up at night."

Reader data helps you to understand client needs, concerns, interests, and business.