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07 Nov 09 Why the Heck Should I Look at Traffic Stat?

Well, if you think everyone look at their traffic log then you are sadly mistaken. Not everyone and every company that owns a website is web savvy. Most of the people do not understand the importance of analyzing website usage statistics. In this post, my goal is to help them understand how critical it is for the success of their business that website traffic log is analyzed.

Reason 1: To know from where the traffic is coming and why

Is it Google or Yahoo or Bing that is sending you the maximum traffic? Or is it the social media sites like Facebook or twitter? Is Digg or StumbleUpon working for you or not? What kind of posts or articles is getting more traffic? Is your effort to get qualified sales lead paying off well or not? These are some of the questions you need to answer in order to make an informed decision about the course of action for your website.

Reason 2: To Track the website usage behavior

The information you get out of your website stat does not just tell you about how many people visited your site and from where. It also tells you about the visitors’ behavior: what they did, which pages they visited, which element got most attention and which caused them to leave, etc. You can use this data to fix the pages that cause the visitors to leave, and use more of the elements that interest visitors.

Reason 3: To know how effective your marketing is

You need to know how effective the dollar you spent on marketing are, and for that you will need to analyze the data. Use Google Analytics or any other analysis tool to figure out which keyword and which search engine is fetching you more traffic. When you are buying keywords from programs like Google Adwords then this information will save you money. This information will also help you drop the useless keywords and purchase the ones that work.

Reason 4: To know what visitors like and what they don’t

The analysis of traffic data will also tell you what is the common entry point to your website and what works as an exit gate. This knowledge will help you amplify the things that work and remove the page from where maximum people leave.

Reason 5: To know the problem in your site

Web monitoring and analysis tools will also tell you which browser, operating system, screen resolution, and color depth your visitor’s computer has. This information will help you understand how your visitors see your website. You can use this knowledge to tweak the site accordingly.

Reason 6: You will get to know your faceless visitors

Every marketer wishes to know its target audience in and out, and it is the privilege of online marketers that they can know their audience if they wish to by analyzing the traffic log of their websites. The understanding of your visitors will help you target your marketing effort much better.

There are many analysis and monitoring tool that you can use, but my personal favorite is Google Analytics and Google Webmaster tools.

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10 Sep 09 SEO Simplified: What to Do to Rank in Google, Part – III

In this article, we will see what technical guidelines have been set by Google for the webmasters to follow in order to help Google properly index and rank their web pages. For the first time reader, I must add here that, in What to Do to Rank in Google mini-series, I am trying to help SEO aspirants in making sense of technical guidelines set by Google. If you are new to the series, click the link that appeared in the previous sentence to go to the beginning of the mini-series.

Technical guidelines

  • Use Lynx, the text-based web browser to see how your website looks in it. This will help you understand how the search spiders will see your website. Consider redoing your website if JavaScript, Flash  or AJAX content, DHTML, frames, session IDs, etc., are stopping your website from appearing as you wanted it to for the search engines.
  • Give the search spiders a freedom to crawl. Do not use session IDs or codes to track the spiders’ path on your website. These techniques will do nothing except confusing the spiders. They are not capable of differentiating one URL from another URLS, which in this case is the tracking URL. This can hamper the indexing process.
  • Make your web server support If-Modified-Since HTTP header. This feature, if enables, tells Google about changes made to the website since it was last crawled. If there be no changes, there will be no crawling. This will save bandwidth and overhead cost.
  • Place a proper robot.txt file in your server to guide the crawlers through your site. This will tell which all page to index and which to leave. Use robot.txt analysis tool to see if robot.txt has been configured properly. The tool is available in Google Webmaster Tools.
  • Use robot.txt to instruct the spiders about the pages that you do not wish to be indexed. Visit http://www.robotstxt.org/faq.html to know more about robot.txt.
  • If you are using CMS (Content Management System) then make sure that the pages created by the CMS can be crawled.
  • Test your web page in various browsers to see how it looks in it. This will save you from unexpected surprises. Check at least in Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox, and Google Chrome.
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