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What's the
Score?
Basic Web Analytic
Terminology
By Scottie Claiborne (c) 2004
Successful-Sites.com
Web stats. Site statistics. Don't run away... you need to read this!
The very thought of deciphering site statistic programs sends many
site owners running to do all kinds of tasks that are less painful
and tedious, like going to the dentist or cleaning the tile grout
with a toothbrush.
If you know what you are looking for, site stats are not that
painful and can be a real motivator to improve përformance. They are
the scoreboard that allows you to benchmark your përformance and
challenge you to find ways to make your site convert at a higher
rate; more salës, more signups, more participation.
Let's review some of the basic terminology you will find in most web
analytics program and demystify it so that you know what to measure,
what to ignore, and what it all means.
Hits
Hits are the most overused and misunderstood measurement in web
analytics. In the early days, people would brag about how many hits
their website got... today most people know that hits are not a
reliable measurement.
A hit is any element called by your browser when it requests a page.
A single page may register a single hit or hundreds of hits based on
how it has been built. Images, external style sheets, external java
scripts, and other elements that require the server to pull a file
to build the page register as hits. Since every page has a different
number of elements, hits are not a reliable measurement.
Files
A file is a hit that actually returned data from the server. Not all
hits return data. Cached elements and errors are examples of hits
that are not counted as files. This measurement is not likely to be
helpful to you either.
Pages or Page Views
A Page or Page View is a measurement of the pages requested from the
server. This is a good measurement to keep up with. You can get a
rough idea of the number of pages the average visitor views by
dividing this number by the number of visitors.
Page views can give you an idea of whether or not visitors are
finding what they need on your site and progressing through it or
viewing a single page and leaving.
Sites, Unique Visitors, and Repeat Visitors
Sites and unique visitors increment your visitors by recording their
IP address. This gives you an idea of the number of visitors to your
site in a given time period. It's not entirely accurate as people
visiting your site from the same IP address (such as people on an
office network or on dial-up where IP's rotate) will be counted as a
single site or visitor.
Repeat visitors simply takes that IP address and compares it to see
if the same IP address has visited more than once. Again, a margin
of error for multiple users on the same IP address will skew this
number.
Session and Visit Duration
This metric tries to measure the amount of time a user browsed your
site. While it seems like a good idea to measure this, it's not a
very accurate measurement. People may not be actively browsing your
site, but they may have it open. A visit may "time out" at different
intervals, and a new session is started for the same visitor.
One thing to note would be a large number of very short visits; it
may indicate your search terms are not very well targeted and people
are not finding what they expect on your site.
Referrers or Referring Sites
The link a visitor clicked on to arrive at your site is counted as a
referrer or referring site. A large number of your referrers will be
internal pages, the rest will be other sites or search engines. You
may also see some web-based e-mail programs in your referrer logs.
Bookmarked pages and urls typed directly into the browser will not
show a referrer.
Referring sites is definitely something you want to watch- you can
tell who is linking to you and how much traffïc they send, including
the search engines. When checking referring sites, don't clïck the
URL in your web analytics program... copy and paste it into a new
browser window. Otherwise your stats page will then appear in their
referring sites!
Search Terms and Search Strings
Search terms and search strings are pulled from the referring url
from traffïc sent by search engines. Search strings are more useful
than search terms...just because single words are listed in the
search terms does not mean a visitor found your site by typing in
that one word. It's simply every word in the search strings listed
separately.
Search strings can tell you a lot about your search engine traffïc-
Are there phrases there you didn't expect? What phrases that you did
expect are missing?
Browsers, User Agents, and Operating Systems
Browsers or user agents and operating systems will tell you what
type of browser and operating system your visitors are using, often
detailing it to the version number. You may want to double-check to
see how your pages render in the browsers your visitors are using.
Don't get lulled into a false sense of security by a small
percentage of users for a specific browser... translate that
percentage into actual numbers. You may want to chëck again for
browser compatibility!
This information will typically show you the search engine robots
traffïc as well; you can see how often they are visiting your site
and how many pages they are viewing.
Entry and Exit Pages
This is an interesting metric- it details the top entry pages (the
first page a visitor arrives at) and the top exit pages (the last
page they view before leaving or timing out). This can help you
identify the high interest pages and the pages where you are losing
visitors.
If you can combine this metric with top pages viewed, you can get an
idea of how people are progressing through your site.
The Basics
There are many, many things a web analytics package can tell you
these days that are truly amazing. Once you grasp the basics of
these measurements that are included in any web analytics software,
you will understand better what you want to measure and why. Then
it's time to trade up to a full-featured package that can give you
that finely detailed information in the way you want to see it.
Most hosts these days have frëe web analytics programs installed-
chëck your control panel for your sites and see. It's probably
labeled as "web stats" or "statistics". The most popular ones are
Webalizer, Analog, and AWStats. If you don't have a web analytics
program installed but you do have access to your raw logfiles, try
Funnel Web, a frëe log analyzer.
If you don't have built-in stats or access to your logfiles, get a
new host! You really do need to review this information monthly or
quarterly to see how your site is doing with traffïc and visitors.
Put it on your calendar now- start benchmarking! You need to know
the score.
About The Author
Scottie Claiborne is the owner of RightClick Web Consulting and the
facilitator of the Successful Sites Newsletter. She is a speaker at
the Search Engine Strategies conferences and the High Rankings
Seminars as well as the Administrator of the High Rankings Forum and
a moderator at the Cre8asite Forums .
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