Sunday, August 26, 2012

Where is my traffic coming from?


Half the battle of any e-business is the traffic to your site. After all, you can not convert a visitor into a customer, subscriber, faithful reader, or to obtain qualified leads that the first visitor of the site. Whether you depend solely on organic search or pulling out all the stops with a combination of research, paid affiliate marketing, link building campaigns and the like, you need to know what methods work - and what methods are not.

Maybe you need to write HTML web site using the keywords more effectively. Perhaps you need to work harder to build links between them. In fact, it could be any number of things. We do not know where to start, however, to find out where the traffic is (not) coming from. Here's how

With the control panel open

1. Click the link AWStats Stats.
2. Click the link for Origin. Look in the list of options in the left column. Towards the end of the list
is the Referrers section. The link is there.
3. Review the referrer.

In the Connect to Site From section, you will find four or five key categories. You can view your referrer website examining these four sections. The section breaks Origin visitors in terms of visits, pages, and percentages. The following directions, we briefly each section. For detailed information on where traffic is coming

Direct addresses / bookmarks

The first source is the list of referrers site addresses direct and bookmarks. Visitors who have typed the URL by hand in response to some external application (usually an ad online) and the loyal visitors who have bookmarked your site are counted in this section. If you already have a sequel or if it makes a lot of offline advertising, a large percentage of organic traffic, falls under the direct address / Favorites section of your site referrer report.

Links from a NewsGroup

This section records the number of visitors found your site through a newsgroup. A newsgroup is a Usenet newsgroup that is related to a topic. Internet users can subscribe to many different newsgroups. Perhaps one of the strategies of traffic volume and construction is to position yourself as an expert on real estate in a newsgroup. You could put your URL at the bottom of your signature, and who sees you can see online. Google and Yahoo!, among other powers in the field have newsgroups, but are not as powerful tool for generating traffic as they once were. Some have blamed the decline of group discussions on blogs and social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook. If you are spending several hours a week posting on news groups and have little to no traffic to show for it, the weather could be better spent on some other traffic-building initiative (such as blogging or social networking).

Links from an Internet search engine

A quick look at the link from a search engine records section of the search engines that send traffic to your website. Chances are that if your website is listed in a particular search engine, will lead at least somewhat 'traffic. You will notice that the graph breaks down the percentage of traffic coming from all search engines put together so you can compare it with other referents of the site. A motor drive probably the most traffic. This could be because you are using paid advertising on this engine or that engine spiders more active. Also known as Web crawlers or robots, spiders are programs or automated scripts that browse the web. Sometimes you can hear where spiders like ants, automatic indexers, bots, and worms. Search engines use spiders to gather up-to-date data in the index of the web.

Look for every niche search engines that drive traffic to your site. This is an area that you might want to exploit. These niche engines, or other search engines that have the potential to drive more traffic to your site, could be hidden beyond the Top 10. Along the routes to the title of Internet search engine is a blue link that reads the complete list. Be sure to click on that link to see all engines are sending traffic to the road.

Links from an external page

This section shows contact on site that are not search engines. In other words, these sites are references to other Web sites beyond Google, Yahoo!, MSN, and others. These external sites are listed first, second, third, and so on, depending on how many visitors you referred to your site. The chart analyzes the percentage of traffic coming from all pages on external sites put together so you can compare with other referents of the site. Be sure to go beyond the Top 10 referrals external page to see who else is sending traffic your way. You can do this by clicking the full list on the right column under the heading of the section. It may be that the quality of traffic from blog sites is more valuable than traffic from exchanges content .......

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