Understanding Website Traffic

Are you confused when you look at your traffic statistics? What does it mean that you’ve had six visitors and 540 hits? Yes, understanding your website traffic can be very confusing if you don’t know what all the technical terms mean. Once you understand the basics, your stats will be far easier to read.

First of all, you will need to have a good stat counter installed on your website. Some web hosts come with a counter already installed, but if you are not happy with the information it provides, you will want to find a new one. Most counters are quite easy to install, using copy and paste HTML. While a host-based counter will provide you with all your stats right there on your site, you will need to visit the website of an outside counter. There, you can set up projects for each website or blog that you own and monitor your stats.

Now that you have a good statistic counter, you need to know what all those graphs and numbers mean. The best way to do this is to first understand the terminology used. Then you can start looking at the numbers.

Hits: These are the number of objects that have been loaded onto a browser. This means that if you have ten objects on your page, plus the HTML file, you will register 11 hits every time someone looks at that page. An object can be anything from a picture or graphic to a widget or text box. Most webpages have several objects, some have hundreds! So, hits are not an indication of how many people actually visited your site.

Visitors: A visitor is someone who looks at your site and receives a cookie to mark them. That way you will know if they are a return visitor (someone coming back to take a second look) or a unique visitor. Computers that don’t allow cookies will register as a unique visitor each time the person returns to your page.

Visits: These are how many times people have arrived at your site. They may be visits from returning visitors or unique ones. For this reason, the visits number can be much higher than your visitors, especially if you have a blog that is frequently updated.

Page Views: Page views differ from hits in that they only register the page as a whole. So if someone looks at your home page which has 24 objects, it would only appear as one page view, whereas it would register 24 hits every time someone looks at your home page.

There are a few more terms that are useful to know, if your stat counter gives them to you.

Referral Page/Site: This will let you know how people are finding your website. Are they clicking through from a forum that you posted on or a search engine? It is handy to see if your back links are working.

Entry Page: Your stat counter may tell you what pages your visitors arrived on. Although we commonly think of the home page as the entry page, it is not always so. Many times, when an interior page is indexed on a search engine, a relevant search will turn up only that page and send visitors directly to an article or catalog page. Knowing where people are coming into your website allows you to adjust the pages accordingly.

Exit Page: This is obviously which page people are leaving your website from. Are they running for the hills when they reach your sales page? Maybe you will need to tweak it. Changing the pages that people usually click away from is a good way to keep your visitors longer.

Now that you understand the basics of your web traffic, it will be easier to tweak your website. Knowing when and where visitors are entering and exiting will help you make your site more efficient and useful, and in the long run, earn more money.

For more information contact us.

Monetisation
video production london uk
Do you need video production done in London UK? Omni Productions will deliver exactly what our clients need and more!
Marketing Software...
Looking for marketing software for your company? Click on the above site.
epsom ink
Get your Epson ink cartridges online with us. We have a comprehensive range for you! Great value, great quality and great service.