CXL Institute Growth Marketing Minidegree | Week 5 | REVIEW
https://cxl.com/institute/certificate/cxl-growth-marketing/
About this series
On 25rd May, 2020 I was lucky enough to gain a scholarship to the CXL Institute’s CRO Minidegree program for 12 weeks.
At the end of last week, I started the course about Statistics fundamentals for testing. I have to admit that I wasn’t big math and statistics fan back in uni, so this was quite a challenge. Although the course is short and only lasts about half an hour, it’s very intensive and difficult, especially if you’re new in the world of statistics.
Understanding how to correctly look at a test and interpret it, and understand what you’re looking at, and understanding what kind of sample sizes you might be needing or not needing, is statistical power. Basically, the power of any test of significance is defined as the probability that it will reject a false null hypothesis.
Statistical power is the likelihood that a study will detect an effect when there is an effect to be detected.
The bigger effects are easier to detect than the smaller effects, while larger samples offer greater test sensitivity than smaller samples.
Sample size and how to calculate it
For A/B testing, the right sample size comes largely down to how large of a difference you want to be able to detect, should one exist at all. The other factors are the level of confidence that you want to have, the power and variability of that data. Values closer to 50% have higher variability.
Statistic traps
The final several minutes of the course were reserved for the four most common statistic traps.
Regression to the mean and sampling error
Too many variants
Click rates and conversion rates
Frequentist vs. Bayesian test procedures
Google Analytics
The next course on the list is for Google Analytics. The course is held by Chris Mercer from MeasurementMarketing.io, someone who is all about analytics and measurement. He has a very impressive background in Google Analytics, Google Tag Manager, Google Data Studio, Dashboards, Facebook Analytics, etc.
The course is very intensive. There’s really a lot to learn about Google Analytics, especially if you haven’t been using it before. Personally, I think this is one of the most important segments of growth marketing, so I’ll make sure I pay special attention to the course. The truth is, I thought I knew how Google Analytics works, but it turns out, I’d only scratched the surface. This course dives quite deep into each kind of report and how to use it, so I’m looking forward to leveling up my Google Analytics game this and next week.
I already watched the introduction to the Google Analytics basics, which shows you the difference between Google Analytics, Google Tag Manager, and Google Data Studio, and why it’s important to know them all. It also gives an overview of what you can do with Google Analytics and how to use it to complete your marketing goals.
Next, there’s the introduction to using reports, giving a short overview of each report type. Then, there is the introduction to admin, showing you what you can do when you have admin permissions of a certain GA account. Now, I’ll be learning about real-time reports and their purpose.
The course lasts for about 9 hours and there are many additional resources that you should pass to understand what’s going on, so I think that the entire next week will be about Google Analytics. Looking forward to see how that goes :)Author
Gatesweb Alessandro Eren

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