Understanding your Website's Performance:
The analysis of your main page.
One of the most under-rated aspects of any Website business
is in its statistical data, or more accurately, its owner's
ability to interpret that data.
Among the myriad of information that your web host (or
stats manager) can provide you with, none of it actually
provides real value at all given times.
Let me explain.
Here is a real life example of one local accommodation
website and their statistics as of the time of writing this
article. It's a relatively new website, and has had some
modifications progressively done to it over the past few
months.
First up, the one piece of data that almost everyone knows
about is Page Views.
Page Views provide you with a quick picture of your overall
traffic. When you compare this information with previous
weeks or months it's a good snapshot - nothing more.
However, Unique Visitors are more important because they
represent the actual number of different people who have
viewed your site's pages, rather than repeat visitors,
within the same day, same week, and with disregard to how
many pages any Unique Visitor visits on your site.
In practical terms, the Demo Site that I am using here has
had 2610 Page Views so far this month, but only 1171 Unique
Visitors - which means that each visitors has viewed an
average of 2 - 3 pages each.
What does that mean?
This Website only has five pages, so based on these numbers
we can ascertain that only its visitors view half of those
pages. With this information at hand, before we do any work
on the site, we need to first see which pages are being
viewed.
Using the Entry Pages report we are able to see that 85% of
all visitors this month so far arrived on the main page.
This alone is an interesting fact as it tells us that the
site is receiving search engine traffic to the other pages
because there is simply no other way to find them
otherwise. It also tells us that the content of the main
page may need to be modified if people are not going deeper
into the site.
So how do we find that out? We go into the Exit Pages
report. Here (in our demo site) we find that 73% of
visitors are leaving from the main page. First up, that
does not look too good. Could it be that once people arrive
on this site that they don't like it at all?
Finally, to determine this, we need to view the Single
Access Pages report - and it this case - yes, it is bad
news. 68% of all visitors to this site are arriving on the
main page and then leaving again.
Here is the question that we need to ask: What is it about
the main page that people don't like? (And the question I
ask to you - Do you even know how many people arrive on
your main page and then leave again?)
The next tactical piece of information I would want to know
here is, what is bring them to the site. Are they qualified
customers, or are they kids looking for games to play?
Checking the Search Engine Keywords report, we were able to
ascertain that just over 25% of all their traffic this
month had come from 15 different search engines, through a
combination of over 100 different keyword search phrases.
That alone is not enough to determine the problem here. All
of these people were targeted customers. However, also
using the Referring Website Domains report we could see
that a whopping 68% of all visitors came from a recent
email marketing campaign advertisement.
Ah Ha! Now, we are getting to the meat of it. Speaking with
the owner I was able to determine that in the previous week
they had placed an ad about a few limited available rooms
they still had available for let January, at the end of the
School Holidays. The ad had gone out to almost 1200 people
(opt in subscribers of a local tourism Website) and 673 of
those people had clicked on their URL (a massive 56%
response), wanting to look over their available holiday
dates.
And guess what was on the main page? Yep - the details of a
limited offer 7-night package.
So right now we've gone a complete circle. We knew that
there must have been something wrong with the main page (in
fact we actually knew exactly what it was in advance), but
the exercise had allowed me to explain to you in finer
details just how you should be looking to evaluate and
interpret your own Website statistics.
What if you were not running a targeted campaign for a
special offer? How about if these were the results on any
normal given week? Then what?
As a closing thought - the first thing I'd want to know is
this: Time Spent on Site.
Before making major changes to your website content, you
need to determine if people are reading / viewing it or
not. Using the above example, 51% of visitors to this site
in the past two weeks have stayed between 1 - 5 minutes.
Good or bad?
A bit of both. We'd like people to stay onsite for more
than five minutes, but with only five pages, that's not
going to happen unless you have a very long sales letter up
front. So that's the good part. The bad part is only 38% of
these visitors invested the time to actually read the home
page sales information. The rest just left.
If this were your website, you'd now have to decide how
best to service those 38%. Do that, and you'll strike gold.
So back to the title: How well do you understand your Websites performance?
About author: Paul Barrs is the owner of many successful websites, including his latest "How-To" video series, the "eBusiness Mastery Video and Audio Learning System".
http://www.paulbarrs.com/