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When you visit a web site an entry is made into a file
exposing just about everything you can imagine. Your TCP/IP address
is recorded, as is your browser type, JavaScript version and monitor
resolution. Even the URL of where you came from is recorded in these
log files!
No, this is not some insidious plan of Orwellian proportions
aka 1984. In spite of what the newspapers would have you believe,
this information is not being maintained in some East German, cold
war style database. The purpose is much more mundane, and much more
innocent. Believe me, very few webmasters have the time or inclination
to look or care about what you personally have done on their web
site.
This tracking is simply a function of every decent web
server on the planet. It is essential to the management of any credible
web site. In fact, if you are a webmaster who has access to your
server logs, you can determine exactly what's going on with your
web site at any time. If you cannot get to your server logs (and
few free hosts will give you that access) then you are stuck with
counters and such, which are a poor substitute for the real thing.
What kind of data can you get from your server logs?
(Note that Hitbox and other similar services provide many of these
functions as well.) How many visitors do you get for each page of
your site? - This is very important so you can determine where to
concentrate your efforts. For example, if page A gets 100,000 visitors
and B gets 10, then you might want to sell ads on A and somehow
improve B (or eliminate it entirely).
How long are visitors staying on each page? -
A very useful piece of information which can tell you if people
are actually reading your pages or just surfing past them. What
pages are your primary entrance pages? - In spite of popular belief,
visitors gain access to your site in every way possible. It's often
true that the majority of your visitors may never even see your
home page. This kind of statistic allows you to determine which
pages your visitors are landing upon. Armed with this information,
and you can determine areas of your site which deserve your attentions.
For example, if the majority of your visitors are entering your
site on page NNN instead of your home page, perhaps you want to
include very obvious links to your index on that page.
What are your exit pages? - Even more important
is the pages that are causing people to leave your site. You can
examine these statistics to see if you are losing visitors needlessly,
perhaps due to slow loading, bad content or other reasons. You can
correct these and keep your visitors longer. Which paths are your
visitors following? - For example, your visitors enters your site
on page A, then surfs to B, then D, then Z, then exits your site.
This can help your determine where to place ads and how to restructure
your content.
Where are your visitors coming from? - A very
critical piece of information, especially if you are running ad
campaigns or link exchanges. You can use this statistics to determine
if your promotional methods are actually working. In addition, I've
found it useful to determine if our site is featured in articles
and recommendations.
Which browsers are they using? - A very useful statistics,
which can guide you in which HTML tags you use and how you code
your web pages. What are their screen resolutions? - If most of
your visitors are running 800X600 and your site is 1024X768, then
you've got a problem. This statistic can help you fix that. How
many unique visitors did you get? - Different than page views or
hits, this statistic helps you determine if you are getting many
people visiting your site. This is most useful in determining if
an ad campaign is actually working.
What search terms got your visitors here? - Useful
if you are optimizing your pages for search engine placement. I've
found it very interesting to find out what search keywords are getting
people to my site, and how these often bear no resemblance to my
own concepts of how people search.
Using these and other statistics, you can optimize your
web site. For example, you may find that people are often leaving
your site after visiting page XYZ. You can then test that page,
and you can determine why it is driving people away. Perhaps it
loads slowly or has offensive banner ads? Once you know the cause,
you have a chance of correcting the issue.
Using these statistics intelligently, and you can create
a better experience for your visitors. If you are selling something
on your web site, the statistics will tell you areas that you can
improve, and areas that you shouldn't touch because they are working
well. Without the statistics, you are running blind.
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips And
Secrets. This website includes over 1,000 free articles to improve
your internet profits, enjoyment and knowledge.
Web Site Address: http://www.internet-tips.net
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Daily Tips: internet-tips@GetResponse.com
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Sometimes cheap, sometimes for free, always getting the job done.
If you can find them, maybe you can hire them....just like the A-Team..grrrr
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