Google Analytics Training: May 12, 2009 in DC
Save the date (well, that’s what all those Bar Mitzvah and wedding pre-invitations always tell me, so I’m just stealing that line, no?)
Anyway, we’re bringing our famous one-day, two-track Google Analytics training back to Washington DC on May 12, 2009. Once again we’ll be in the amazing American Institute of Architects building. You would expect architects to have a great building themselves, and they do – awesome stadium seating, fast internet, you name it. Plus you get breakfast and lunch and all the handouts, not to mention just about unlimited access to the LunaMetrics staff and our time. (And then after the training, I write everyone to see if they have an outstanding question or two…)
We have a track for non-techies and another one for techies, and you can go back and forth if that works for you. We ask attendees to volunteer their sites for live use, and we always get a couple of people who agree to, ahead of time. Those people get the most out of the session, but of course, they have to share their data… When we taught in NYC in December, the UN let us use their data (nice, eh?)
Oh wait. I need some testimonials. Here is what Alec from Greenpeace wrote about us:
The GA training was great. It definitely answered a lot of my questions and gave me some cool tools to use in the future. More importantly though it gave me some solid direction to go in with my GA work. Sorry we didn’t get to meet, I actually had to leave a little early so I wasn’t around for the meet and greet at the end. I’ve been checking out your blog for a while now. It’s definitely given me some useful stuff over the past few months, and I definitely plan on staying up on it.
And you can check out this post about someone who attended another training and decided that Google Analytics is “so much fun, it should be illegal.”
So here’s the first page of the registration for our DC Google Analytics Training. There are also FAQs, and don’t be afraid to send me email. Address it to my last name at lunametrics.com.
Robbin Steif

