It would be nice if you could know how many people were attending your blog daily. How would you like it if you can do the following for free:
It would be nice if you could know how many people were attending your blog daily. How would you like it if you can do the following for free:
a. What were the visitors to the site to look?
b. How long they spent reading each page?
c. How many repeat visitors vs. new?
You know, all you need is just a Google Account. Just go to www.google.com / analytics and sign in. Once logged in, Google will give you a simple Java script to include on your site. If you use WordPress, you just put your plug-in code and it is for the analysis of the site within 24 business hours.
Let’s start
Once connected to Google Analytics, the dashboard would be a prominent place.
1. The graph shows the number of visitors per day come from your blog. At first glance, it seems that if your website or blog traffic is increasing or decreasing.
Having an idea of where the trend is directed traffic, you need to focus on the specific dates for the micro image. Go to the top panel and right click the period of time, for example, from yesterday to today’s date.
2. Move the bottom right of the screen is the preview of the content. This panel displays the pages of your blog are most active. This finding could help determine where to place your ad or an affiliate on your site for maximum effect.
Also, trying to figure out how to increase blog traffic for the least-visited pages. If visitors do not come to this site via search engines, you may be able to market these sites are using social media like Twitter, Facebook or LinkedIn.
3. Pay attention to the navigation bar on the left. For example, click Content, then exit pages. This point of view, it is said that readers of the pages visited just before leaving your blog.
Chances are, you can identify the model of why people go through some of the pages. You can do some optimization of the page, like adding more links, tweeting, stumbling, digging, or write an ezine article that could redirect the traffic to it?
4. Click on Traffic Sources navigation bar.
This tool can tell a story in which the search engines and websites are getting traffic to your blog. Pay attention to the average spent by visitors from different venues. What kind of visitors will spend more time reading one of your pages? What causes customers to leave so early? Is it because of the misleading nature of the title?
Search engines data might include the keywords that lead to your site and how often it works so well. This will tell you if you’re optimizing the right keywords for your website.
5. Last but not least, the Content tab has a small link called Site Overlay. Considered one of the best tricks of Google Analytics “, launched a blog with the click through rate stuck at the top. This gives a visual impression that users click when viewing the page.











Thu, Nov 24, 2011, by sitjar89
Search Engines