Understanding Your Blog Traffic and Analytics

by WebSuccessDiva · View Comments


With everything bloggers have to do to stay competitive, it’s often the most confusing tasks that get set aside. Important things like traffic and analytics often get overlooked. Understanding your traffic and the important numbers behind your analytics can help you become a much better blogger, while helping you be smarter about marketing your blog.

Understanding Your Traffic

All numbers are not created equal. Relative importance will depend entirely on your specific blog objectives and how you’ve determined most appropriate to measure success (or lack thereof). Unless you have a team of traffic specialists, focus your efforts.

Benchmarking and trending are important. Most bloggers I’ve worked with tend to “spot” check their blog analytics, whenever it crosses their mind or they have a big launch. If you do this, you’re missing important trend information that can help you spot problems and opportunities in your traffic sources and more.

Keep everything in perspective. You won’t get the whole picture from any one metric alone. Understanding your audience and your blogging effectiveness will require that you use a set of numbers, comparing and making intelligent inferences from the group of metrics you choose to focus on.

The numbers can be intimidating. Take it all in strides. Let your goals guide the numbers you focus on. Browse the others, get familiar, and build your knowledge slowly. There’s no need to get obsessive about it :-)

Be consistent. Be faithful and timely in your analytics review. Slow and steady wins the race. At least once a week, make a plan to really learn from the numbers. You’ll be a better blogger for it.

Important Traffic Analytic Numbers

Returning Visitors

Whether or not a user returns to your blog, can tell a lot about your marketing efforts and even more about on-page factors, like usability and relevant, quality content. You need to have a decent number of returning visitors, or those that are not registered as new.

New Visitors

You’re going to need a consistent flow of new, targeted traffic. You also need loyal readers. It takes both to be successful over the long-term. This is a good number to watch with a trend perspective.

Page views

This number has a lot to do with usability. Blogs are funny creatures, without effort your blog will likely have a low page views per visit number, because of their nature. You promote, people come, read a post, and move on. Good bloggers will be creative in getting readers to dig deeper into the content.

Time on Page and Site

These two sets of numbers will tell you general information on how long users are actually staying on a particular page or the site as a whole. Shorter times indicate readers are skimming and not digging deeper or finding an interest in what you have to offer as far as content. For most bloggers, you’ll want to engage your reader enough to ensure they spent adequate time on your content. It also can be an indication of the quality of your content and whether you’re targeting the right audience.

Number of Subscribers

Obviously this is an important number. The best way to view subscribers is not in their sheer number, but from the perspective of trends. Unsubscribes in a large number or trends that show a slowing in subscribers can both be cause for further research.  This information can be found using FeedBurner (Google Account) or your RSS Feed service analytics.

Referring Sites

You obviously need to know where your traffic is coming from, and where it’s not coming from. Referring sites information can clue you into missed opportunities, marketing activities that are not paying off, strategic opportunities with other bloggers who are sending you traffic, and much more.

Bounce rate per referring site

You could be getting a thousand hits from a social bookmarking site, and perhaps thats a good measure for your make money blog. For a business, if the bounce rate of those hits was over 50%. Another referring site sent 400 hits with a bounce rate of 20%. These are things you need to look at as a blogger. You’ll understand better what to make time for and what to leave aside in marketing — and beyond.

Average time spent, per referring site

Again, you’re looking at the kind of traffic a referring site is sending your way. What’s the point in getting traffic if it doesn’t serve a purpose. There are instances when any traffic is good traffic. In blogging and business activities, it’s not likely one of those situations.

Keywords

You’ll want to know what keywords sent you traffic. Not only will this information help guide your SEO and search marketing efforts, but it will also highlight opportunities for traffic. What your getting traffic for, how that traffic is behaving after they arrive, and much more can be learned from this information.

Say you’re pulling in a ton of traffic with an extremely high bounce rate. This may indicate you’re not pulling up in a space of relevance or timing for those terms. Are they intentional rankings? If so, was your keyword research a little off? If not, is there an opportunity for more traffic you can exploit with targeted research?

Or, you have a major unintentional jump in traffic from specific keywords. Can you trace how it happened? Can you duplicate the results? Is there an opportunity to build more traffic from the derivatives of those keywords?

Content by Title

In Google Analytics, and most analytic programs, you can see information specific to your blog post pages. Great information to look at frequently. Naturally, you want to spot traffic opportunities in content, like those posts that had the most hits and time spent, with a low bounce rate. Is there a content area that consistently brings in useless traffic, because readers either bounce or leave soon after?  This information can help guide your future content focuses.  You’ll also learn more about what your readers really care about.

Google Analytics Video

Sorry, the rest of this content is for Smart Marketing Vault members only.

Gain access free by joining our growing community of 1250+ smart people who have joined the Smart Marketing Vault >>


Smart Marketing Vault

The Smart Marketing Vault is packed with free online marketing resources to help small businesses, online entrepreneurs, and bloggers leverage the power of blogging, social media and SEO. Access includes the acclaimed 30 Days 30 Ways program, DIY Marketing Mastery Series, Blogging and Wordpress Success guides, Facebook and Twitter Marketing guides, and all future releases.

Join 1250 people (and growing) in the Smart Marketing Vault >>


Share

  • Great article, but do I really need to register to red it all? C'mon....
  • No, you simply need to register to gain access to the detailed video tutorials :-) The content itself is free to all :-)
  • Job
    I think Google analytics is simple and can understand easily.This article gives all the information about google analytics.I think referring this article will help to master in Google analytics. Thanks for sharing
  • Thank you for your feedback, I appreciate it :-)
  • i like this site, fully valuable articles...
  • You'd be surprised how many people don't know anything about their analytics numbers. I'm surprised you didn't mention the ubiquitous "bounce rate" though...
  • Had to cut it short, actually have a second post coming as a follow up with that and details about conversions, etc :-)
  • Had to cut it short, actually have a second post coming as a follow up with that and details about conversions, etc :-)
blog comments powered by Disqus

Previous post:

Next post: