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If you own or manage a website, you are probably already aware of the importance
of your log files or site statistics. Such data can give you insights about
your site's usability, errors in your HTML code, the popularity of your site
pages and the type of visitors your site attracts. But did you know it can also
highlight the success or failure of your search engine optimization campaign?
There is specific data about your web site that you should be looking at in
your log files on a regular basis. Several variables should be examined monthly
or even weekly to ensure your site design and page optimization is on the right
track:
1. Entry Paths
Most sites can be developed and analysed around the concept of visitor pathways.
If, for example, your site is a Business to Business (B2B) site and you service
small, medium and large businesses, there should be pathways through your site
designed
for each class of visitor. An extremely simplified example would be:
Clients coming to the site through an optimized home page:
home page ---> small business page -@@END_COMMENT order page -@@END_COMMENT
order confirmation page
home page -@@END_COMMENT medium business page -@@END_COMMENT order page -@@END_COMMENT
order confirmation page
home page -@@END_COMMENT large business page -@@END_COMMENT order page -@@END_COMMENT
order confirmation page
The site entry pages for these pathways are often optimized home pages or optimized
content pages. The final page of this route is often the action that you want
clients to take on your site (e.g., sign up for your newsletter, buy your products
online or contact you for further information). You can easily determine how
effective your pathways are by tracking the entry paths on a regular basis via
your site stats.
You should have some idea of the main pathways that clients take through your
site, both for monitoring the effectiveness of your page optimization and conversions,
and for the purpose of subsequent site redesign(s). A good starting point to
track the pathways through your site is via the graph or chart called "Entry
Paths" in your log files / site statistics.
2. Top Exit Pages
These are pages from which most visitors click away from your site. Why is
it useful to track these? Because exit pages can tell you:
a. If there is a technical problem with the page that is causing visitors to
leave your site. For example, if there are broken links, or the form on the
page is not working properly etc.
b. If your site design is breaking the strategic pathway, for example, you
may have links to external sites that are inducing clients to click away before
buying your product or signing up for your newsletter.
c. If there is something on these pages that is encouraging visitors to leave
your site. For example, an unprofessional design or confusing layout.
In your log files / site statistics, the graph or chart called "Top Exit
Pages" is the place to learn why visitors are leaving your site.
3. Single Access Pages
These are entry pages that are viewed once before the visitor clicks away from
your site. Similar to Top Exit Pages, Single Access Pages can tell you a lot
about why people are not staying on your site for long.
Have a close look at the search terms used to find your site. Single Access
Pages can often indicate that your target search terms are too broad. For example,
you may be getting a lot of traffic by targeting "printer cartridges"
but if you only stock a particular brand of cartridge, then people seeking other
brands are not going to find what they truly seek when they arrive at your site
so they will leave immediately. This can be resolved by narrowing down your
search terms to be more targeted and focused on your niche products and services,
for example, by changing "printer cartridges" to "HP printer
cartridges" and so on.
To see what pages of your site are viewed once, look for the graph or chart
called "Single Access Pages" in your log files / site statistics.
4. Most Requested Page(s) and Top Entry Pages.
Tracking these pages is key to measuring the success of your SEO campaign.
If your optimization is effective, the Top Entry Pages and Most Requested Pages
should be those that you have optimized for target keywords. The Top Entry Pages
are particularly relevant as you consider the pathways through your site. Do
the most popular entry pages have any relationship to the start pages for your
plotted visitor pathways? Or are visitors entering and navigating your site
via ways you didn't intend? You can use this information to continually tweak
your page optimization to guide visitors to the right pathways.
To see your most requested pages, look for the graph or chart titled "Most
Requested Pages" in your log files / site statistics. Also look for "Top
Entry Pages".
5. Page refreshes
Why are visitors refreshing pages on your site? Are the pages not loading properly?
The "Page Refreshes" variable is another one to monitor on a monthly
basis via your site stats to ensure that there are not site usability issues
for visitors.
6. Referring Domains and Referring URLs
Where are your visitors coming from? Are they coming from sites that are linked
to yours? Are blog authors or forum members talking about your site? Referring
Domains will tell you what sites are linking to yours, while Referring URLs
will list the actual pages where the links are located. These can be little
gold mines because you can often find valuable sources of traffic via links
to your site that you didn't even know existed.
In terms of an SEO campaign, these links can all add to your site's overall
link popularity, an important factor in the ranking algorithms of many search
engines, particularly Google. Monitoring these metrics can tell you if your
site requires a
link-building campaign or help you measure the effectiveness of various online
and offline advertising campaigns.
In your log files / site statistics, Look for the graph or chart titled "Referring
Domains" and "Referring URLs".
7. Search Engine Referrals
How many of your visitors are coming directly from search engines? What percentage
of overall traffic does this represent? This is a good variable to track to
help you keep up with how many search engines are listing your site (both free
submission and paid submissions), how much traffic they bring and whether to
renew your paid submissions. It can also tell you whether you need to increase
the number of search engines your site is submitted to in order to build on
your link popularity. As a a very rough guide, you should be receiving at least
30 percent of your site traffic via search engine referrals.
To see search engine referrals, look for a chart or graph called "Search
Engines" within your site statistics.
8. Search Phrases
This topic is related to search engine referrals generally, but gives added
insight into what terms you were actually found for in the search engines. Do
these terms match what your site was optimized for? Are there any surprising
terms that you might want to develop site content for? Some log file analysis
programs will even break down what specific phrases your site was found for
in which particular search engines. The more detailed the data you have, the
more closely you can tweak your optimization campaign to your precise market.
To see the search phrases your site was found for, look for "Search Phrases"
or "Search Phrases by "Search Engine".
9. Landing pages for PCC Campaigns, etc.
If you run a pay-per-click campaign or dedicate specific pages to advertising
product specials, you may use special landing pages or tracking ids to monitor
your traffic and conversions. Your site logs can help you track these by showing
you how many visitors they each had and what they did after they visited those
pages.
10. Metric values that show a radical change from developing trends
Any site metrics that show a dramatic change from one month to the next could
pin-point a problem with your site or with your optimization campaign. For example,
if your search engine referrals have dropped dramatically, it could indicate
that you have been penalized in a search engine (or more than one). Noticing
changing trends early gives you the chance to investigate problem areas and
make adjustments if necessary.
Please note that all log file analysis and site statistics programs are different
and use slightly different terms to describe the metrics listed above. If you're
confused, ask your site admin or hosting provider to highlight these for you.
Remember, your log files are gold mines filled with nuggets of information
about your optimized web site. If you keep digging on a regular basis, you'll
eventually strike it rich with success.
About the Author:
Article by Kalena Jordan, one of the first search engine optimization experts
in Australia, who is well known and respected in the industry, particularly
in the U.S. As well as running her own SEO business, Web Rank, Kalena manages
Search Engine College, an online training institution offering instructor-led
short courses and downloadable self-study courses in Search Engine Optimization
and Search Engine Marketing subjects. |