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What does a “hit” to your website really mean?

December 12, 2012 by Peter Mahoney

What does a "hit" to your website really mean? Wordpress SEO ExpertHits are regularly touted as a good way to measure how well your website is doing.

The opposite is true—it’s generally a terrible metric to use in this regard!

Most people misunderstand what a “hit” in your website statistics really means. Quite simply, anytime a file is served up to a visitor, it’s a hit.

If you have a simple, one page website, here’s how the “hits” might be calculated by your webstats package. Let’s say it’s called “britney.html”, and contains a nice big header image, and six photos of Ms. Spears doing what she does best (whatever you imagine that to be).

The .html file itself is used, so that’s one hit. The header image is called up, that’s another. Add six photos and you’ve got eight hits right there. From one page loading.

Now let’s think of a slightly more realistic website, much like the one you’re looking at now. Even this single page you’re looking at references over 40 other files—think of that over the course of the entire website and a single person visiting my site would easily report hits in the hundreds.

There are web developers out there who try to “wow” their client’s by telling them they’ve had millions of hits, when really they might have had a few thousand users.

It’s also true that some people just misunderstand the terminology, they say, “hits” when they mean “visits”. And that’s generally the more useful metric.

Most of the time you’re going to want to know how many people looked at your site, or perhaps how many pages were looked at, rather than how many files were involved.

“Hit me baby one more time.” – Britney Spears

Filed Under: Hints & Tips

How do I write thee? Let me count the emdashes.

December 11, 2012 by Peter Mahoney

It's true, I use emdashes a LOT. But I like to shake up my tone so — makes a lot of sense!

— Purple Web Marketing (@purpleweb) December 10, 2012

Filed Under: Tweets

Know your stats

December 10, 2012 by Peter Mahoney

There are all sorts of metrics we can use to measure our online success. Certainly the bottom line is return-on-investment (ROI) but there are all sorts of markers that can help guide us to that final success.

It’s so easy to get bogged down by it all. How many people signed up for your mailing list? Are you split testing? Does Google Analytics need to look so complicated?

All these things are worth knowing, and learning.

But then you need to use those to plan and strategise. And that’s an art-form unto itself—I’ll post more about that another day.

In the short term though, start looking at your web statistics. See if they’re going up or down—the first step really is that simple. And if you start by looking at the simple stuff, it will lay the foundation for you to understand the seemingly more complicated bits later.

Personally, I do use Google Analytics, and a few other metrics, but the one I check most often is the simplest, I have AWStats installed. I can see very quickly if visits are up or down, and therefore if I’m building or breaking my online community.

Ultimately I want to see a good return on ROI, but I know what I need to achieve to get that—and the first step is—are people coming to my website, are they reading it, and are they coming back for more?

If you’d like some help understanding your web stats, or what to do with that information, let me know.

But at the very least, know not to be fooled by “hits”—they can be the most misleading metric around. More on that later.

Filed Under: Hints & Tips, Tools

How do you annoy a web developer?

December 9, 2012 by Peter Mahoney

This is the briefest of posts, because the content is entirely thanks to the wonderful xkcd comic, and it’s pretty damn nerdy.

First person in the comments to exclaim that they get it, and can give some sort of rationale, gets a prize.

via xkcd: Tags.

Filed Under: Code, Hints & Tips, Nerd-stream Tagged With: comic, humour, tags, web development, xkcd

10 Youtube URL tricks worth knowing

December 5, 2012 by Peter Mahoney

So often when I’m embedding a Youtube clip on a website for a client, I’m asked to customise it somehow. Now there are a variety of ways this can be done, from removing the “related videos” at the end (which I always do for schools, at the American School in London we must have done this a hundred times a month!) to overlaying images on top of the video entirely, (see danielwagner.com for an example).

But like so many things online, as long as you know the basics yourself, there’s a lot you can do with those.

Just adding little bits of code to the Youtube URL for example can have a big effect.

Example:

4. Hide the search box

The search box appears when you hover over an embedded video. To hide the search box add ‘&showsearch=0′ to the embed url.

Here’s a great list of 10 tricks worth knowing.

Filed Under: Content, Hints & Tips, Tools, User experience

Saving a search engine ranking

December 3, 2012 by Peter Mahoney

A couple of weeks ago I noticed a Google UK search for “Peter Mahoney” no longer had me in fourth place. I wasn’t even on the first page.

Second page, fifth down. This sort of thing is normally an absolute disaster for an SEO expert, the sort of thing that gets them mocked on Twitter and thrown out into the void that exists somewhere between success and scrambling about in the pit of people who pretend they know what they’re talking about, but really don’t.

It’s a very full pit.

But since I’d done it on purpose, I wasn’t too worried.

There is so much information online about search engine optimisation (SEO); what works, what doesn’t, what used to but some people still does, what you get penalised for now that most people haven’t cottoned on to—basically a lot of misinformation that can harm your ranking.

This site is my sandpit. It’s where I play with things to find what works, and what doesn’t.

I can now confirm:

  • You’re best to have you’re tags on a WordPress site set to “nofollow”.
  • Have categories scanned sparingly, and certainly not by all pages.
  • Your Twitter feed is better off in your footer than your sidebar (right/left hand column).

I managed to get my ranking back of course, but not just by undoing all the tests I’d tried—I applied an optimised set of tweaks I’ve been working on, and got back the very next time Google spidered my site.

Let me know if you want me to send you up the rankings to, regardless of where you are right now.

Filed Under: Search Engine Optimisation (SEO), Wordpress

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