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Analyzing Your Website Traffic
Understanding what your visitors do on your site is crucial
information. If your visitors proceed to purchase a product
but then a large majority leaves the site when they get to a
specific page in the order process, you need to know about it.
It could be that this page is confusing or hard to use. Fixing
it could increase your sales by 200%. This is just an example;
there are many reasons why you want a detailed analysis of
your site visitors.
Most website hosting services offer a stats package that
you can study. If you're not sure where this is, call up your
hosting service and ask them. Statistics are a vital part of
tracking your marketing progress. If you don't have access to
website statistics get a package that can help you in this
area. Do not get a counter that simply shows how many visitors
you've had. You'll be missing out on vital information that
can help strengthen weaknesses in your site.
A good website hosting service offers traffic logs that
provide an invaluable insight into the traffic being referred
to a web site from various sources such as search engines,
directories and other links.
Unfortunately traffic tracking provided by web hosting
services is often in the form of raw traffic log files or
other difficult to understand cryptic formats. These log files
are basically text files that describe actions on the site. It
is literally impossible to use the raw log files to understand
what your visitors are doing. If you do not have the patience
to go through these huge traffic logs, opting for a
traffic-logging package would be a good idea.
Basically, two options are available to you and these are:
using a log analysis package or subscribing to a remotely
hosted traffic logging service. A remotely hosted traffic
logging service may be easy to use and is generally the
cheaper option of the two. WebTrends Live and HitsLink are two
good, remotely hosted, traffic-monitoring services worth
considering. However, WebTrends Live is a more complicated
system and is suitable for larger ecommerce websites. "SuperStats"
is another recommended traffic logging service.
These services do not use your log files. Typically a small
section of code is placed on any page you want to track. When
the page is viewed, information is stored on the remote server
and available in real time to view in charts and tables form.
Log analysis packages are typically expensive to buy and
complex to set up. Apart from commercial packages there are
also some free log analysis packages available, such as
Analog.
A good traffic logging service would provide statistics
pertaining to the following:
- How many people visit your site?
- Where are they from?
- How are visitors finding your site?
- What traffic is coming from search engines, links from other
sites, and other sources?
- What keyword search phrases are they using to find your
site?
- What pages are frequented the most - what information are
visitors most interested in?
- How do visitors navigate within your web site?
Knowing the answers to these and other fundamental
questions is essential for making informed decisions that
maximize the return on investment (ROI) of your web site
investment.
The most important aspect of tracking visitors to your
website is analyzing all the statistics you get from your
tracking software. The three main statistics that will show
your overall progress are hits, visitors and page views. Hits
are tracked when any picture or page loads from your server on
to a visitor's browser. Hits, however, can be very misleading.
It is quite an irrelevant statistic for your website.
The statistic that is probably the most important for a
website is Page Views/Visitors. This gives you a good
indication of two things. First, how many people are coming to
your site, and secondly how long are they staying on your
site. If you have 250 visitors and 300 page views you can
figure that most visitors view one page on your site and then
leave. Generally, if you're not getting 2 page views per
visitor then you should consider upgrading your site's content
so your visitors will stay around longer.
If you see the number of visitors you have increasing as
well as the number of page views per visitor increasing then
keep up the good work! Always look for this stat as an overall
barometer of how your site design is going and if your
marketing campaigns are taking hold. Also, a good stat to look
for is unique visitors. Once a person visits your site they
will not be added to the unique visitors' category if they
visit again. This is a good way to track new visitors to your
website.
Page views are a good indication of how "sticky" your
website is. A good statistic to keep is Page Views divided by
the number of Visitors you have. This statistic will give you
a good idea if your content is interesting and if your
visitors are staying on your site for a long time and surfing.
Some people are intimidated by web traffic statistics
(mostly because of the sheer volume of data available), but
they shouldn't be. While there are many highly specialized
statistics that can be used for more in-depth web traffic
analysis, the above areas alone can provide invaluable
information on your visitors and your website performance.
Remember- this data is available for a reason. It's up to you
to use it.
Alden Smith is an award winning author who has been
marketing on the internet for over 7 years. His site,
http://www.for-the-record.biz, is loaded with
articles and information for the beginning blogger and
internet marketer. |