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As written earlier, in my post, Is A Hit, A Visit? we found out that a hit is not a visit.

So, is a visit a visit? It all depends on which stats program you’re using.

Today, I’m analyzing five different blogging statistics platforms. It’s going to get confusing. What you think is a visit, may be a page view. What you think is a new visitor, may be a returning visitor.

This is what I can determine, from my analysis.

WordPress.com, counts page views, not visitors. One visitor could view 20 pages, and you would see a spike in your graph. Not a true test to your visitor count. However, WordPress.com stats, does list other important information.

Google Analytics counts visitors and page views, and also shows the percentage of new visits. On their graph, it shows your visitors for the day (and last 30 days). Below the graph, it shows the page views, and the percentage of new visits. However, ….much has been written about Google Analytics, and if visits are recorded if a visitor has their cookies and/or javascript disabled. If this is the case, some visits may not be counted.

AWStats counts unique visitors and visits. The unique visitors are calculated by using an IP address. Visits would tell you how many times your “unique” visitors visited your site. So, if you had 100 unique visitors, and 300 visits, that would mean your unique visitors visited your site, an average of three times each. AWStats, separates visits from spiders, crawlers, and bots. AWStats also counts your feed traffic.

Webalizer counts visits, unique sites, and unique URLs. Webalizer does not segregate the visits from spiders, crawlers and bots, but appears to count feed traffic.

Sitemeter counts visits, but doesn’t differentiate between new, and returning visitors. Therefore, if one reader visits your site five times in one day, it will show as five visits. It doesn’t appear that Sitemeter counts feed traffic.

To confuse it even more, I’ve read that if a person is visiting on your site, at the same time your stats are being updated, (say at midnight), that visitor will be counted as a visit for each day. So…..in actuality, that’s really not a new visit.

Now, add to this, to the fact that all stats are not updated at the same time of the day…..and the numbers can get even more confusing, not to mention conflicting.

Compare all five of these, and you will get five sets of numbers.

So, what’s a blogger to do?

Watch the trend. Look for growth in your numbers. Peaks and valleys are very common to blog traffic. A popular post, or a compelling comment on another site, can create a spike in traffic, whereas, some blogs see a natural drop in traffic, on weekends. Learn the trends in your own blog.

If you’re going to learn anything from your “visit” stats, it should be:

1) What are my popular posts?
2) What keyword phrases are bringing in traffic?
3) Where is my traffic coming from? (That will be the topic of my next post)

4) But most importantly, are my number growing, based on “monthly” statistics?

If you are seeing a steady growth in your monthly numbers, this should tell you, you are doing something right.

So, are you confused now?

Let me know how you have determined if your blog is growing, or not. What stats are you relying on?

BTW: I have been comparing statistical programs for the last six months. I rely on AWStats, to chart the success of my blog.

With blogging, the language is: CSS, HTML; XHTML, links, pings, trackbacks, URL’s, posting, stats, addons, widgets, plugins, SEO, page rank, RSS, and much more

When I was “blogging without a blog”, a month or more before I actually had a blog, the language of blogging, made my head spin. To top it off, many years ago I had read that if you’re reading something, and come onto a word you don’t understand, the remaining text,  is difficult to comprehended. That held true for me, as I would stare at a page, and it all looked like a foreign language to me.

After five months, the blogging language, is making sense to me.

To put some of the blogging terminology into perspective, I am creating simple definitions for newbie bloggers.

1) “Post” – this is what you’re writing. Your post contains words. These words are considered the “content” of your post. You’ll often hear, “A good blog contains great “content”. That just means that your post, is a well written article, with many words.

A site which is filled with flashing banner ads, Google ads, etc, and only a few words, would be a site with poor “content”.  From what I’ve read, a search engine can’t “read”graphics or images.
2) “Publish” – When you send your “post” out into the world wide web (WWW), to share your thoughts and/or opinions with others, you are publishing your post. This is no different that a newspaper publishing a daily issue, or a magazine, publishing a monthly issue. You’re publishing an article, on the internet, to share with the world.

3) “Publishing frequency” – This is how often you choose to publish a post. Some bloggers claim to publish up to a dozen posts a day. Others, publish once a month. Consistency in publishing is important. If you publish several posts one day, and don’t publish again for several weeks, you may confuse the search engines.

4) “Search Engines” – These are Google, Yahoo, Ask.com, ……………..there are dozens. After you have published your post to the www, these search engines are notified by a “ping”, that you’ve updated your blog. The search engines come to “visit” your site. To do so, the search engines use what are often referred to as “crawlers”, “spiders”, “bots”. etc…. These are actually the computers of the search engines, and they nose around your site, making a record of what your wrote. Your post then gets “indexed”.

5) “Indexed” means that your post now has a home on the world wide web. If someone is searching for the same subject which you wrote about, they may find your post in the pages that are indexed by the search engines. Hopefully, your post ends up on page one, of the index, but oftentimes, it’s buried much deeper. With indexing, you’ll often hear the term, “search engine optimization”, or SEO, for short.

6) “Search Engine Optimization” (SEO), is writing your posts to try and gain “top billing”, or to be indexed on the first page (i.e. for a Google search), and the best, is to be in the first position. You can find many articles on the internet about SEO, and how to gain a higher position.

One way of gaining a higher position, is by using “keyword density”. For example, if you’re writing about fly fishing, and you want to try and get a “higher billing”, you would incorporate your keywords “fly fishing”, not only in your title, but also repeat the words several times in the first paragraph, and throughout your post. If you repeat the words too many times, this could be considered “spam”, and if that’s the case, you probably won’t get indexed very high. Plus, you want your post to read smoothly, and make sense to your readers.

Writing only for search engine optimization, can stifle your writing style. My belief is that if you consistently write good articles, your site will be found. But…..I do think it’s important to use keyword density….to a degree.

So…….there’s your lesson for today.

Stayed tuned, for Part 2 of the blogging language.

If you have a new blog, and want to get indexed by Google, Yahoo, plus other search engines, thus improving search engine optimization, it’s apparent that a site map is imperative to install.

What is a site map? Think of a site map as a blueprint of your site. When you first generate a site map, it sends a message to the search engines, and the spiders, crawlers, and bots, “come and take at look” at what your site “looks like”, and what it includes. Each time you write and publish a post, a new site map is generated, and a new message is sent to the search engines, that you’ve “changed your blueprint”. This generates another visit from the search engines. In turn, your site gets updated in the search engine “files” and getting indexed, is the result.

Some reports claim, if you’re already getting indexed, a site map may not be necessary. However, why take a chance that a new post may not get indexed in a timely fashion.

Here’s a link to the site where I got my Google Site map Generator: Google Site map Generator by von Arne Brachhold

It’s free, easy to download, and a cinch to activate. After you have activated the plugin, and are looking at the “options”, if you’re not sure which boxes to check, just leave them the way they are. You can always make changes later.

I downloaded the 3.0b7 version, which includes the latest updates.

Thank you, von Arne Brachhold, for this great plugin.

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