| HowTo
Dump That Free Counter and Start
Tracking
It seems that every other web
site we visit has some sort of hit counter on the main page, supposedly
telling us how many people have been there before us. This week we're
going to address this popular trend, explain why you don't need one, and
what you should be doing instead.
Most Internet marketers will normally
implement a hit counter on their site for one or both of two reasons --
to give them a rough estimate of the number of visitors, and/or to give
visitors the impression that their site is popular and thus worthy of a
good look.
Let's consider the first reason. There
is nothing wrong with wanting to know how many people have visited your
web site, in fact it's something that you really do need to know. But
putting a visible hit counter on your home page is not the answer,
especially not one of those free services.
For one thing, the free services require
you to in some way promote their site. For another, they are normally
slow and increase the time it takes for your pages to load. But most
importantly, a hit counter doesn't provide you with all of the
information you need.
Just look at any of the top web sites on
the Internet. We promise that you will not find a visible hit counter on
any of them! That alone should tell you that the common hit counter is
worthless. If a visible counter was worthwhile, don't you think Yahoo or
Infoseek would have one?
You just can't win with a visible hit
counter. If your site does not get many visitors, all it's going to do
is make sure that the visitors you do get know that they are not
visiting a popular site. If anything, all this will do is discourage
them from exploring your web site in detail.
On the other hand, maybe your site gets
50,000 visitors a day and you think that letting people know this via a
hit counter is a good idea. Not really. If your web site gets lots of
traffic it is because you are doing something right, and having a hit
counter isn't going to affect this.
Unfortunately, what normally happens is
that the misguided Internet marketer will set up a visible hit counter
on their home page and then artificially inflate their visitor count.
This is done in the hopes that it will impress people, but it's a
terribly bad idea and does not work.
In the early days of the web it was
"cool" to have a hit counter on your home page, but they are
so commonplace these days that no one pays them any attention anyway. No
matter what your reason for using a visible hit counter, we say dump it
and start tracking!
Tracking Visitors' Footsteps
While Yahoo and Infoseek don't have
visible counters on their pages, rest assured that they know your every
move. No other advertising medium allows you to do the things the
Internet does, and it amazes us that more marketers do not take
advantage of serious site tracking.
Part of the problem seems to be that
many Internet marketers are only concerned with promoting their web site
and getting more people to visit. More visitors equals more sales right?
Well yes that is true, but only if your web site leads visitors through
the sales process.
Before you even begin promoting a web
site, you should have in your mind the path that you want visitors to
take through your site. Sales is a process. One step leads to the next,
until finally the end result is hopefully that what was once just a
prospect is now a customer.
Tracking your visitor's footsteps
throughout your web site is the best way to determine why they didn't
take the action that you wanted them to take. Who knows, maybe 80% of
your visitors aren't even making it past your introductory page? You'll
never know unless you track them.
Consider this another Internet marketing
rule that is written in stone. If you're not tracking your entire web
site and tweaking it on a regular basis, you're throwing money down the
proverbial drain. From a profit standpoint, it is critical that you know
the answers to questions like:
- How do visitors find your site in the
first place?
- How many of them make it past the
main page?
- Which page of your site is the most
popular?
- How long does the average visitor
stick around?
- What is the average number of pages
viewed?
- What path do visitors take through
your site?
- What links do they use to leave your
site?
If you don't know the answers to these
simple questions, here's an easy way to increase your profits starting
immediately. And the good news is that it may not cost you anything
other than some time. We're going to show you how to use free CGI
scripts to ultimately increase sales!
While you don't really need to learn
anything technical to use the scripts we're going to suggest, you do
need to be able to run CGI scripts on your web server. If you have no
idea what CGI scripts are, ask your ISP. If they say no, we strongly
suggest that you find a new ISP.
If you haven't realized it by now, we
are a big fan of CGI scripts because they are what allows you to add
interactivity to your web site. But CGI scripts can also help you do
many other things, like track your visitors' footsteps. Let's see what
we can get for free at CGI-Resources ...
- Go to http://www.cgi-resources.com
- Click on "Programs and
Scripts"
- Click on "Perl"
- Click on "Logging Accesses and
Statistics"
You'll be presented with no less than 30
CGI script packages which will help you gather valuable information
about your visitors, and believe it or not, most of them are free! We
looked at all of them, so we'll save you the time and suggest the two we
like best to help you get started.
One of the first scripts we tried, and
still one of our favorites, is AXS by Fluid Dynamics. It's one of the
first scripts listed and you can't miss it. You can download it for
free, and with a minimal amount of effort you could be tracking your
entire web site within the next few hours.
The direct URL to the AXS script is http://www.xav.com/scripts/axs
-- rather than going into detail about it here, we'll let you discover
it for yourself. It's a great system and the only thing we don't like
about it is that it creates it's own log files, and they get huge if
your site is busy.
The alternative is to use something like
Darryl Burgdorf's WebLog. The direct URL to this great script is http://awsd.com/scripts/weblog
-- and it does everything AXS does, but it runs off of your existing
server logs which makes it easier to set up for most. It's also more
efficient.
Both AXS and WebLog will give you all of
the information you could ever want about your visitors, and both
display this information in a way that is easy for you to interpret
using graphs, etc. We encourage you to download and set up one of these
scripts to track your web site.
My Site Is Being Tracked, What Next?
The point of tracking your site is to
act on the information you gather and use it to improve your web site's
effectiveness. If you discover that 80% of your visitors aren't making
it past the first page, or that the average person leaves within 2
minutes, you now have your work cut out for you.
The real value of tracking your
visitor's footsteps is that it will help you determine why they did not
take the action that you wanted them to take. Once you see how most
people navigate your web site, you can then make changes until the path
they take is the one you want.
Spend some time implementing a good
tracking system on your site, because if you can increase your
visitor-to-sales ratio even just a few percentage points it will be more
than worth your time. Remember, it doesn't matter how many hits you get
if your site doesn't do its job.
Originally published in IMC's Internet
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