
Hits, Clickthroughs, or Unique Visitors?
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Traffic Statistics
by Michel Fortin
There are a lot of misconceptions regarding Web site
traffic -- particularly in the way it is measured -- and hopefully
we can dispel some of them here. Tracking visitors is often done with
many different yardsticks, which vary tremendously from person to
person, site to site, and marketing effort to marketing effort.
However, these differences can often be quite misleading,
especially for the would-be advertiser and aspiring Internet marketer.
And today there is far more involved in the process than that to which
most would tend to give credence.
The web is evolving at breakneck speeds along with
the way we measure it. First, it is not enough to know how many "hits,"
"clickthroughs," or "unique visitors" a web site receives. For instance,
banner ads that draw a lot of clicks are no longer considered important
-- at least not as important as those from which these clicks are
translatable into sales. What's important nowadays is the quality
of those clicks -- or the number of qualified "interactive visitors"
a site receives.
A case in point is an interesting article published
in this month's "Business 2.0 magazine". Titled "Web Metrics," writer
Steven Vonder Haar provides some fascinating insights into the erroneous
perceptions of Internet traffic. And the most common is the fact that
hits were -- and still are -- considered to be the measurement of
choice.
But with today's super-explosive Internet population
and the hypercompetitiveness of online business, added to the fact
that netizens are now drowning in an impetuous sea of promotional
messages, traffic measurement has significantly evolved.
According to Vonder Haar, "Some banners that draw downright
horrible click numbers can actually wind up with more sales than vague
online ad messages that get users to click but not buy." And while
statistics have shown that click-rates overall are decreasing, Rosa
Aguilar of CNET Radio,
pointed out in a recent piece on "Banner Blindness" that "clickthroughs
are becoming higher in quality."
In essence, visitors are no longer measured by quantity,
but by their quality. Although traffic has been long touted to be
the key to Internet marketing success, today that's no longer true.
What's more important is the conversion rate. In other words, today's
Internet marketer must focus more on the percentage of curious browsers
that turn into serious, long-term buyers.
Consequently, basing one's traffic upon mere hits is
really a "hit-and-miss" approach -- and no longer enough. According
to Vonder Haar, "Once users click, you want to know where they go."
And that's what needs to be measured. Less than five years ago for
instance, hits, pageviews, and clickthroughs were the popular measure
of web site activity. But today the tracking process has shifted to
include audience activity and behavior.
In other words, Webmasters are slowly realizing the
importance of isolating the typical curiosity-seeker from the more
important interested prospect who is looking at developing a relationship.
And subsequently, they are realizing the necessity in tracking their
visitors' level of interest, loyalty, and activity.
Simply put, all pageviews and clickthroughs are not
created equal. For example, if one web site is geared toward financial
investments and has 1,000 visitors, that number can be made up of
teenagers looking for the latest gimmick versus prospective investors
requesting stock quotes for a $10,000 trade. Thus, the goal is not
to simply advertise or to put money into advertising, but "to reach
those would-be investors," says Vonder Haar.
It is no longer important to advertise anywhere and
everywhere but to advertise in specific places where targeted, prospective,
long-term customers are -- that's the key. The successful Internet
marketer's bottom-line is to get the biggest bang for every marketing
dollar -- let alone every droplet of blood, sweat, and tears -- invested.
If you're only counting the number of hits your site receives as well
as the number of eyeballs in front of which your site or ad appears,
and not the quality of the people behind them, you're wasting money
and energy.
"Niche" marketing is the new buzzword -- and with reason.
People are now drowning in data. And their resources -- including
this rare commodity we call "time" -- have also been cut short. Therefore,
specializing, targeting, converting web site visitors into customers,
as well as relationship marketing are now part of and essential to
the traffic measurement process.
Here's a mini-lexicon of web site traffic terms, which
also includes a quick look at the evolution of traffic measurement:
Hits
Hits are pieces of data (or files) requested from a web host's server.
However, this primitive measurement includes not only the web page
but also every other file that makes a page possible -- such as graphic
files, plugins, scripts, text files, style sheets, and so on. In other
words, a single web page can easily translate into multiple hits.
Therefore, when one says that one has received over 1,000 hits, that
could very well mean that the site received only 100 actual visitors
if not less.
Pageviews
Similar to hits, pageviews are files requested from the server but
are limited to the web pages themselves (i.e., HTM or HTML files,
or Hyper Text Markup Language files). While a little more concrete
than hits, pageviews do not give specific information about surfers
or their behavior -- as, for example, the length of time that they
remained on a specific page.
Clickthroughs
Clickthroughs are the number of clicks -- or responses -- to an online
advertisement. Again, while it's definitely a better measurement than
the previous two, clicks do not provide in and of themselves enough
information regarding the quality, the subsequent activity, as well
as the level of interest of the people responding.
Unique Visitors
Unique visitors are tracked not according to the files they have requested
but by their unique IP (or "Internet Protocol") addresses, which are
much like online fingerprints. However, not only does this process
fail to include specific data about the visitors but it can also be
tremendously misleading. For example, many Internet service providers
use DHCP (or "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol") -- like AOL, WebTV,
and cable modem providers (which are becoming more and more prevalent
these days). DHCP uses a different IP address for every file requested,
thus making one visitor look like many. In other words, a single IP
address may not necessarily reflect a single and truly "unique" visitor.
Reach
A site is said to have a certain reach, which is the percentage of
visitors randomly surveyed that have visited a specific page in a
given month. Similar to the TV's Neilsen ratings, this measurement
is very broad and nonspecific. For example, if 50% of randomly sampled
netizens have visited a specific page, the site is then said to have
a 50% reach. It is much like a poll where the numbers are extrapolated
and speculative. While vague, this measurement is often used as a
tool for selling advertising space, particularly with the larger portal
sites.
Interactive Visitors -- The New Breed
This is the type of web site traffic in which surfers are measured
multifariously to determine their quality and not just their quantity,
which at the same time helps to measure the quality of one's marketing
efforts. Elements such as length of stay, conversation rates, registrations,
subscribers, repeat visits, referrals made, and so on are now part
of the tracking process.
For one, interactive visitors give better clues to
their demographic data as well as a site's return on investment. Items
tracked include visitor loyalty, site behavior, and registrations
(such as with opt-in mailing lists, email requests, contests, and
e-zines).
While defining specific tactics on how to increase
the number of interactive site visitors is far too complex, there
are, however, two important key areas. First, niche marketing is definitely
at the top rung. As Ludwig Mies van der Rohe once said, "Less is more."
The more competitive the Internet becomes, the narrower your focus
should be. And the more specialized your online business becomes,
the more visitors let alone the more pre-qualified, loyal, long-term
prospective customers your site will receive.
Second, you must enter into a relationship with your
visitors. If you plan to increase your sales, you must provide your
visitors a way to subscribe themselves to your mailing list -- be
it a community, an announcement list, a discussion board, a contest,
or -- the commonest method -- an ezine. In essence, you have to start
thinking in terms of being interactive with your visitors instead
of merely being a silent billboard in cyberspace.