Analyzing Traffic -
Visitors v. Hitsby: Halstatt Pires
A key component to every web site is traffic analysis. When
analyzing traffic, it is important to understand the difference
between hits and visitors…and why both are important.
Be One With The Log
To analyze traffic to a site, you should be looking at your
server logs. Server logs come in very raw data, but most
hosting companies have interpreting programs that summarize the
information into readable form. From these programs, you should
be able to analyze who is sending you traffic, the number of
hits and visitors among other information.
Hits v. Visitors – The Game Is On…
Many people, myself included, are lazy when it comes to
discussing traffic results. We tend to use “hits” as a catch
phrase for traffic hitting a web site. This isn’t entirely
true. Traffic should always be analyzed in two categories, hits
and visitors.
A “visitor” is a click from someplace on the net to your
site. In your server logs, a visitor will be credited with
visiting the site one time regardless of the number of pages
the visitor views. For example, a person entering a brick n’
mortar bookstore is only one potential customer regardless of
the number of books the person looks at.
A “hit” is a click on any page of the site and represents a
multiple of the visitors. When you review server logs, the hits
represent how many times visitors clicked site pages. Going
back to our bookstore example, every book viewed by the person
in the bookstore would be a hit. So, which information is more
important?
Hits v. Visitors – An The Winner Is…
The simple fact is both visitors and hits are important
statistics to analyze in your server logs. Obviously, the
information on the number of visitors is important because you
want to know how many potential customers are coming to your
site. That being said, you should never focus on visitors
without contemplating hits as well.
Hits are important because the number of hits tells you very
important information about your site. Since hits represent the
total number of pages viewed by all visitors, you can use the
information to determine the effectiveness of your site. I call
this by the very original and sophisticated name “hits to
visitors ratio.” Let’s go back to our bookstore example.
Assume a person walks into a bookstore and only looks at one
book. This may mean the person knew what they wanted, found it
and bought it. Obviously, this is an ideal result. But what if
a thousand people walk into the bookstore and only look at one
book each? The bookstore would have a problem and start trying
to figure out what it is. The hits statistics on your server
tell you the same thing.
If your site has multiple pages, you need to find out if
visitors are clicking into the internal pages. This is
generally known as determining the depth of your site. The
simplest way to do this is to divide the number of hits by the
number of visitors for a particular time period. This figure
will tell you if people are seeing one “book” or taking a look
around.
Analyzing your server stats can be a real eye-opening
experience. The information can be good or bad, but at minimum
you will know if any corrective steps need to be taken.
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About The Author
Halstatt Pires is an Internet marketing
consultant with http://www.marketingtitan.com - an
Internet marketing firm in San Diego.
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Relevant
Resources
ClixSense Advertising that pays
IloveHits Free web traffic
and effective advertising

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