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Taking the Bounce out of your Home Based Business Website
by Stephen Wright
More homebusiness Articles

Published on this site: June 15th, 2007 - See
more articles from this month

Unless you are talking about which brand name of laundry
dryer sheets are the best, when it comes to managing a home
based business website – "bounce" is not a good thing.
Sadly, in the world of online internet marketing it happens
more times than not.
If you have one of the mega-websites with tons of traffic,
revenue and sales, perhaps you will not care as much.
Likewise, if you have a quick hit single page website for
marketing and sales of a single product, bounce does not
affect you. But for the rest of us, bounce is a critical
flaw in home business activities.
Bounce occurs when someone finds their way to a page on our
website and leaves immediately from the "landing page"
without going anywhere else on our website. Internet
marketing trends clearly show an ever increasing rise in
the amount of traffic which falls into this pattern.
The common or typical term for indicating this is "bounce
rate". And as you might have guessed - it is not a good
thing. Bounce rate is shown as a percentage amount. For
example a bounce rate on a website home page of 80%-90%
(which is quite common) is not good. On the other hand a
bounce rate of 30%-40% (or lower) is a good thing. In this
case the lower the better. Personally, I use 35% as a
realistic goal for the majority of websites I manage.
Unfortunately, this can happen due to a number of factors
and situations. The search engines for example continually
review (crawl) web pages for content and relevant keywords.
Those keywords are reported back and used to send people
searching the web to your site. Problem is -- this does
not mean that traffic landing on your website is looking
for what you have to sell. Say you are selling jelly beans.
If I am searching for "pinto beans" the search engines pick
up "beans" from your website content. My search sends me to
your website. You can bet I'll be leaving your business
website in seconds. Your bounce rate just went up! If you
paid for my "click", you lose. My visiting your website
with no chance of a sale, you lose again.
For a home based business entrepreneur this even worse.
This can be especially hard if you paid for traffic with
the pay-per-click search engines (such as Google, MSN, or
Yahoo). Or if you have worked hard like many of us to keep
current content through articles and popular products
flowing through your website. Either way, high bounce rates
can have a devastating impact on you home business.
Fortunately, there are some things that you can do about
the problem.First up, make sure you are tracking and
carefully monitoring your bounce rates. Most web hosts now
include statistical information on websites hosted on their
servers. If you are not using their reports, you need to
start.
Another good source of stat data (if you use pay-per-click
advertising such as Google adwords) is the "analytics" and
reports provided as a part of these programs. They are a
wealth of information, including bounce rates (even down to
the individual keyword level).
And finally, there are a whole host of software and online
applications that give you traffic and statistical
information on your web traffic. Do a few searches, you
will find lots of possibilities.
Once you have a method in place to track and monitor your
progress, you need to establish specific goals and
activities for reducing your bounce rates. No matter how
good, or bad your current bounce rate is you should seek to
improve it. It is an area of improvement that potentially
can and will drive up revenues and profits. Tracking,
monitoring, taking action, then tracking and monitoring all
over again should be an ongoing practice.
A future article will cover specifics about actions and
activities you might undertake to reduce bounce to your
business websites. This article was intended to be a primer
to make you aware of the issue and hopefully compelled to
do something about it!
We can not make this problem go away. It takes awareness
and proactive actions to carefully manage. What is
important to note is that keeping your bounce (bounce rate)
as low as possible is an ongoing battle. You must closely
and continually monitor the stats for your website and take
appropriate action as necessary. You will be glad you did.
The reward for your efforts will be increased revenues and
profits!

Stephen Wright: Is President and CEO of
InternetMarketing USA.com
Every home based business website needs guidance and advice
on improving revenues and profits. Visit us today for
information, tools, and techniques and proven to make you
successful. Get Started today!
http://www.InternetMarketingUSA.com


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