I've been blogging about the dearth of experiments into methods for tracking. It can be hard to do when there are big differences in costs and effectiveness among steps. But when at least some are close in cost, it's more difficult to assume that one order is better than another. I liked the paper by Koo and colleagues since it actually experimented with which service to use for searching and found a specific order that worked better.
I'm now working on a project that uses tracking. We decided to use different orderings of the steps with different groups. Not a perfect experiment, but the grouping are relatively homogenous so it won't be a huge step to infer from the results to a broader population. We'll have some results.... in a few months.
I'm now working on a project that uses tracking. We decided to use different orderings of the steps with different groups. Not a perfect experiment, but the grouping are relatively homogenous so it won't be a huge step to infer from the results to a broader population. We'll have some results.... in a few months.
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