What Do Your Site Statistics Mean, Anyway?
by
Karyn Greenstreet
Published on this site: February 11th, 2004

The purpose of analyzing your web site statistics is to look for trends and to
research the success level of your marketing campaigns. The numbers themselves
can be misleading, as statistical packages count "hits" in different
ways. If someone visits a page on your site doesn't mean that they read it completely.
The
idea with web site statistics, then, is to look for trends. Instead of looking
at the numbers a concrete items, look at them over time to see if they're increasing
or decreasing. For example, if you do an internet marketing campaign, then look
at your web site statistics to see if the campaign increased the number of hits
to your site.
With that said, here are some numbers you should look at:
Visitor
Information
There are three areas that are important to review each
month and during each marketing campaign. The number of unique visitors will help
you to determine whether your site is receiving more or less visitors each month.
The location tells you what country, and sometimes what State, the visitors
are coming from. This is important if you're concerned about your global reach
to other countries, or if you've done a marketing campaign in other States. Note
that this is the State of the ISP where they connected to the Internet. Because
AOL is in Virginia, you will have an inordinate amount of Virginia visitors, even
though these people are actually all over the USA.
An important distinction
is the concept of "visitors" versus "hits". Each person who
visits your site is considered a "visitor". Each time a visitor looks
at a page, that page and its contents are accessed, including the graphics on
the page. As example, say that your home page has two graphics on it, plus some
text. That is considered THREE elements on the page. When a visitor visits that
page once, your statistics will show ONE visitor and THREE hits.
Time
of Day Activity
This area of your statistics helps you to determine
which days of the week have the most activity, and which time of day is the most
active. This can be helpful to know when to schedule chats and teleclasses. For
instance, if Wednesdays at 3PM are popular times for your site, they may be popular
times for teleclasses. It's important to note here that one of the most popular
times for people to search the web is weekdays after lunch. (People are at work
and having a sugar low after digesting their lunch and are surfing the net instead
of working.) If this is a popular time for people to be surfing the net, then
this might also be a popular time for an internet chat on your web site.
Referrals
This
section of your statistics will tell you who is sending people to your web site.
It lists which search engines people use, as well as which keywords or key phrases
people use to find your site. In addition, this section will also list what other
sites are linking from their site to your site. (When someone links from their
site to your site, it's called an "inbound link" or "incoming link".)
Pages
This
section of your statistics will help you to determine which pages are visited
most often, how long people stay on a page (presumably to read it), and which
page people exit your site from. Again, trends matter here more than the concrete
numbers. Are certain pages more popular than others? Are
people only spending
5 seconds on a page that should take 3 minutes to read?
Error reports
This
section tells you where people had problems accessing your site. If people try
to access a certain page and can't, it will be recorded here. If your site has
been unavailable, you'll see these numbers rise.
For a list of all internet
error message numbers and they're corresponding meaning, check out this website:
http://www.webopedia.com/quick_ref/error.asp
Conclusion
As
you can see, there are many number to look at in your statistics, and many ways
to interpret them. If you pay more attention to trends and problems, and less
attention to actual numbers, you'll be ahead of the game!

© 2004 Karyn Greenstreet.
Karyn Greenstreet is a Self Employment
expert and small business coach. She shares tips, techniques and strategies with
self-employed people to create and grow their businesses, stay focused and motivated,
and perform at their peak. Visit her website at www.PassionForBusiness.com.

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