Would love to see included in reports what percent of our subscribers are opening emails using their mobile devices...to know if we need to focus more on optimizing our emails for mobile.
I'm not sure if this question is in the right message board, but I would like to know if there is any way to determine how many people are accessing our email blasts from a mobile device, tablet and pc/mac. Is there any way to figure this out?
This isn't anything that can be done with the basic CTCT reporting system.
You may be able to build that if you use Google Analytic links but the email viewer would have to take an action of actually clicking on something, not just viewing it.
Tony Schaefer Accredited CTCT GOLD Solution Provider Constant Contact All Star 2009-2010-2011-2012 www.cliquemarketing.biz
The ability to see what percentage of our users are opening the email via mobile would be a great addition to our reporting and future strategy.
Thanks!
It's 2015 now, and everyone should be looking at statitics for mobile - opens, clicks, etc. - because knowing what platform our users engage from is cartainly important to template choice, among other things. Constant Contact reporting does not provide this. I want Constant Contact to provide single-email reporting on what platform people are consuming email from, as welll as an monthly, quarterly, and graphical views.
Please add the ability to pull a report on clicks by email address.
Also, a report that reflects opens by email address. I am aware it would not include mobile opens but it is still helpful to have a spreadsheet showing who opened a particular email.
Thanks
Thanks for posting, You can curentlyexport a report of your opens, including email address and open time. This report won't show which links they clicked on but you can see this information within the email> reporting page.
It would be helpful to have a stat on whether individuals receiving my constant contact emails whose mobile phone or web browser forced them to download images before seeing them (not an auto-load) actually chose to download the images. If a large percentage did not download images, that would change my strategy.