πŸ”„ Data Polymaths: The Future of Web Work


Use Data Or Be Used By Data!

The March 31 issue of Seotistics is here for you!

It's undeniable that the Western data job market has changed and is still changing.

OK cool but what's your point?

Simple, it's necessary to go beyond labels (e.g. SEO, Product, Growth, Analyst) if you work with web data.

I've writte a new article covering the other part of today's NL, it's about Descriptive Web Analytics and why it matters.

Please move this email to your Primary inbox or reply to it. This is to prevent Seotistics goes into spam by accident. Gmail users can read this tutorial to do it.

​Read this in your browser​

πŸ“£πŸ“£ Important Announcements πŸ“£πŸ“£

I will be speaking in Brighton on April 11 (Friday) about "How to do content auditing with SEO/web data for small & big websites" in Auditorium 2.

(If anyone wants to meet, just DM me).

Progress on my new course has been made and I will make a post on it this week...

my beta testers will get to test it in advance.

You can preorder it at a 30% discount until launch (May 12)!

It gives you all the missing business and marketing skills I mention when talking about Web Analytics.

I will publish my progress this week, there are some cool updates to share with you!

If you purchased my previous course, go to this lesson here and the last section contains a special promo code for you:

Data As Raw Material

The biggest disservice you can do to yourself as a professional is simping for data.

Data is nothing else but raw material.

This raw material is essential for our daily tasks, however.

Text, numbers and pretty much the information you store are all data.

Wouldn't it make more sense if anyone was at least proficient in some basic data tasks ?

Spoiler: yes it would.

Remember the holy DIKW Framework:

Data sits at the lowest level as an input.

It doesn't tell you anything and doesn't think.

Analyst VS Marketer (It Doesn't Matter)

The more you work, the more you notice labels are just illusory.

For sure, they affect your salary and all if you are an employee.

But again, many roles work with data and this isn't clear from their title.

This trend already exists in many forms:

  • SEO -> Product/Growth -> CMO
  • Analyst -> some role with a complete different name -> CDO

In terms of results, it shouldn't matter how you call yourself.

Yes, branding and positioning are super important but those are just titles for other people.

While you do your work there is no reason to limit yourself to a single role.

If you are a consultant or an agency, this is even truer.

Almost everyone works with some kind of data and you need a decent level of proficiency.

What DOES matter is the difference between Analysts/Marketers and Engineers:

The 2 are completely different... companies who delegate engineering work to analysts are doomed.

Let the analysts thrive and you will get awesome business results.

Let the engineers do their job without pointless bureaucracy and everyone will be happier.

Analysis work isn't only for specialists.
​
Web Analysts should become specialists themselves.
​
A little bit of marketing is necessary.

So marketers are also analysts. You can say anyone analyzing data is a potential analyst.

A Tale From The Trenches

I was working on a project to unify the customer data in an enterprise company.

If you join something like this with only technical skills, you are screwed.

You have 3-4 engineers at your disposal, so it's not your responsibility to handle the "boring" technical stuff.

Where you must intervene and add value is:

  • Define which data you need and why
  • Build use cases and prepare requirements
  • Communicate with all the necessary people

This sounds far from what many study but it's my normal routine.

Why should a data engineer know about marketing, after all!?

It's on YOU to instruct them about the requirements.

Not only that, you need to build a solid use case to convince the stakeholders and not waste budget (and time).

In this case a simple Analyst would never be able to massively contribute to the business without proper knowledge.

That's why I insist on you learning about data sources like GSC and GA4:


[Analytics For SEO Course - v4]

If you want to be guided and start from scratch, this is the course for you!

[An update is coming soon :3]

You will:

βœ… Use GSC and GA4 Data to their fullest potential

βœ… Learn Python/SQL for your needs

βœ… Get a complete blueprint for auditing websites

βœ… Learn how to 10x your productivity

βœ… Learn BigQuery to work on large websites

I teach you what's needed to go from 0 to a professional Data Analyst.

Even if you leave SEO, the foundations are the same for other jobs!


Shift Left Or Right?

The term shift left has many meanings in software engineering.

I was inspired by this recent article by Joe Reis and applied a twist based on what I usually talk about.

What people are located on a Business-Tech Spectrum? Nothing revolutionary here!

Seotistics has always been preaching that you need to understand business requirements (and the business).

If you think you can survive with technical skills, you are in for a tough ride.

For sure, it's a different topic for engineers... but even so they need a little bit of "soft" skills.

Back to us, marketers and analysts are by definition part of the business.

So there is no reason to ignore the fact you need to know your industry and the business.

The issue with being on the right side as a non-engineer is that you are not an engineer (lol).

Some skills you may need (e.g. cloud platforms, DBT/Dataform) but you don't need to go into detail.

I see many technical marketers go out of their ways... my advice is not to, companies pay engineers for that!

You can retain your technical skills (they are important) but don't think those are what makes the difference.

Being Comfortable With Changes

The market is what it is right now and upskilling is a necessity.

Of course, it's not like skills are the only factor to take into account but you need a bare minimum to be considered.

You can gradually start with:

  • gradually shifting away from Excel/Google Sheets
  • think about processes and draw them
  • get comfortable with cloud platforms

If you already are a technical marketer, it's easier to dig deeper on the business side.

For example, how you can add value to the organization and be perceived closer to the business.

People with a background in content can simply learn a little bit more of technicalities.

Even basic automation like the one I showed in my past issue can be invaluable.

Marketers and Analysts are 2 sides of the same coin.

The sooner you mentally get rid of current labels, the better you are in terms of added value.

What are you waiting for? Change now and avoid disasters tomorrow!

πŸ‘₯ Join Our Community

Our Discord community offers a small place where we can talk business and web data.

If you hate all the noise of social media, then this place is for you.

πŸ”Ž Analytics For SEO Ebook (v8)

If you want to learn about Analytics for SEO and prefer self-study, this is for you!

It will teach you or your employees to:

πŸ‘‰ Prepare audits that make sense and are actionable πŸ”₯

πŸ‘‰ Avoid common pitfalls that cost you money πŸ’Έ

πŸ‘‰ Create analyses that add value and moneyπŸ’―

πŸ‘‰ Move the needle faster with efficient SEO systems ⏳

This comes with periodical updates to keep the content fresh.

πŸ“š Recommended Reads - Peak Content πŸ—»

Some peak resources:

My LinkedIn content:

❗️Feedback and Recommendations

If you have ideas/recommendations for the next issues of Seotistics, you can simply reply to this email.

Marco Giordano
​
Data/Web Analyst

Follow me on πŸ”½πŸ”½πŸ”½:

Bernerstrasse SΓΌd 169, Zurich, Switzerland
​Unsubscribe Β· Preferences​

Seotistics - Web Analytics + Business + Strategy

The Seotistics newsletter is written by Marco Giordano, a Data/Web Analyst with the goal of combining business and web data. Tired of the usual boring Analytics content without any business impact? Seotistics teaches you how to use Analytics, web data and even content in your workflow while helping you with Strategy.

Read more from Seotistics - Web Analytics + Business + Strategy

Use Data Or Be Used By Data! The March 18 issue and 100th of Seotistics is here for you! Finally, we are at the #100 issue! Thanks to all for the support and for reading my content with passion. In this issue I will go through our story and what you can expect to see in the future! Please move this email to your Primary inbox or reply to it. This is to prevent Seotistics goes into spam by accident. Gmail users can read this tutorial to do it. Read this in your browser πŸ“£πŸ“£ Important...

Use Data Or Be Used By Data! The March 17 issue of Seotistics is here for you! If you have wondered aimlessly searching for cool automation through the depths of social media... don't worry, I will show you some ideas to get started and what you need to know in 2025. Consider this as a nice introduction to the topic. P.S. I am also working on a lot of new content for you folks, stay tuned πŸ‘€ You will get some freebies and more stuff on what I'll discuss today. Please move this email to your...

Use Data Or Be Used By Data! The March 10 issue of Seotistics is here for you! Everyone talks about data but not many showcase actual processes that support the business. Seotistics exists to tie (Web) data to business and I am here to show you some nice examples. You should adjust them based on your specific use cases, so follow the logic! Please move this email to your Primary inbox or reply to it. This is to prevent Seotistics goes into spam by accident. Gmail users can read this tutorial...