Again, I doubt that there will be 3k of messages per app, a day.
That would mean your "ESPN Sports News" app would send you 3k messages - joy, he?

I wonder how the charts would look on more realistic data:
500.000 devices
1 push message a day (delivered to all 500k)
opened by 250k, same day


Now if I sent two messages: Breaking news A, Breaking news B
How would I see how many directly opened "Breaking news A" (or the other one)?



On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 5:44 PM, Andres Galante <agalante@redhat.com> wrote:
Good idea! take a look:




On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 12:24 PM, Sébastien Blanc <scm.blanc@gmail.com> wrote:
I wonder if a bar chart (even maybe stacked bar) would not be more clear to show this data ? 
Wdyt ?

Envoyé de mon iPhone

Le 8 avr. 2015 à 15:44, Andres Galante <agalante@redhat.com> a écrit :

Yes, you are right, it should be something like:

5 message sent
3k delivered
2k open
4k devices.

Just change the example. Also the x-axis should be dates.

Thanks!




On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 10:32 AM, Matthias Wessendorf <matzew@apache.org> wrote:
One thing: I think the numbers on the chart are confusing, and incorrect.
It's usually not a ton of messages that are sent. that's more like 5 or 10 per day (speaking of vanilla marketing pushes). If more, I'd UNINSTALL the damn app.
Therefore the "app opened due to receiving push" numbers are also not 100% correct here.

On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 2:59 PM, Matthias Wessendorf <matzew@apache.org> wrote:
:-) I like that too.

But Andres, again, awesome UX ! 

On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 2:46 PM, Sebastien Blanc <scm.blanc@gmail.com> wrote:


On Wed, Apr 8, 2015 at 2:37 PM, Lukáš Fryč <lukas.fryc@gmail.com> wrote:
Looks good so far, Andres,

you are right, we want to show time-aggregated data, not particular events.

Idea:
My perspective might be very technical rather then marketing, but a pie chart with Push Network split would be interesting to me.
+1 (or Donut :) ) 

st 8. 4. 2015 v 14:12 odesílatel Andres Galante <agalante@redhat.com> napsal:

Hi,

With the new data we have I've compared sent vs open messages on a chart for each App:
(the x axis should be dates)

I am wondering if we can generate a ratio that's useful for a marketing person and show a benchmark comparing with other UPS users to know if the users campaign is successful or not. Something like: open/sent or device/open

I believe that to show the first and last time a message was open is not very useful. Maybe I am wrong, but, If we want to show an over time chart for each notification we should collect periodical data, for example # of open messages per hour to generate a linear graph that represents a day.

What do you think?


On Mon, Mar 30, 2015 at 5:00 PM, Sébastien Blanc <scm.blanc@gmail.com> wrote:


Envoyé de mon iPhone

Le 30 mars 2015 à 21:31, Daniel Passos <dpassos@redhat.com> a écrit :

On Mon, Mar 30, 2015 at 12:29 PM, Sebastien Blanc <scm.blanc@gmail.com> wrote:
Folks ! 

For AGPUSH-969[1] and to kick off the discussions,  I started a small POC mainly focused on the backend. To sum up quickly : we want to know how many installations/users has  opened the application after that a Push Notification has been touched. 

Let me see if I understood. UPS will send a message to the client and when the message be *read* (instead of delivered), the client will send a message back to the UPS saying: "The message was read"?
 
Yes , but let me be more specific here : us when the app is in the background or not running and that the user "tap" the notification 
So, the very first thing that had to be done was to give the Push Notification a unique identifier, so that we can track it and do the metrics on it.

+1. Not only us (UPS) but also the backend app
 
For that, I have been using an existing model object that we have , the PushMessageInformation[2], and that is currently used to provide information for our dashboard.
This object has now some extra fields, like a appOpenCounter etc ... 

The ID of this PushMessageInformation is now passed into the payload of the Push Message, just before we send it,  this way the client library can use this ID to pass extra information to the UPS when a notification is touched. 
For this POC, I hijacked the cordova-helloworld, so that it extracts the ID from the payload and pass it as header when registering.

The message back (from client to UPS) will be send every time the user _read_ that?
Well normally that will only happen once per installation per Push message 
 
When the UPS receive the request, it looks for the header and if it exist it updates the existing PushMessageInformation instance. 

Please note, that for this POC, all is happening on Application level and not on Variant level but that can be easily changed. It depends on how fined grained we want to have these analytics.

I did a small screencast that shows this in action : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PseBBJZLz6s&feature=youtu.be

The UPS branch containing the changes is here (the 2 latests commits are relevant) : https://github.com/sebastienblanc/aerogear-unified-push-server/tree/analytics

The client app is not really relevant since I really hacked badly the app (and the push plugin) ;) , however if interested I may share it.

Now, let's discuss :)

Sebi


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