Posts tagged google

How Important Is Bounce Rate As A Metric?

Bounce Rate, or the number of web visitors you have that visit just one page – the first one they land on, can be a vital metric to consider when current overall success and conversion rates of your organization’s site.

Bounce Rates can be especially important if:

– You have a sales or conversion process which requires the user to follow through multiple pages on your site.

– Exploration of your site is important to your goals.

– You are trying to turn new visitors into loyal readers or customers.

– Yours is a retail site and you want people to shop around and make purchases.

– Your homepage is not inducing further clicks, particularly if it contains blog excerpts or other ‘teaser’ content.

So what are some causes of a high Bounce Rate?

Your keywords and content could be mismatched. In cases where visitors are coming from search engines, a high bounce rate may mean that the keywords they used and the content they found when they arrived on your site aren’t aligned – so the page they landed on doesn’t meet their expectations in some way.

The best way to address this is to take the time to analyze your keyword traffic and make sure your pages are optimized for the keywords you want and that the content is closely aligned with keywords and not misleading in any way.

Another problem could be that the next step in your goal or conversion process is not obvious enough for visitors to follow. Look at your landing pages with a more critical eye and make sure the next step clear and easy to take. If it would typically take more than one more step to complete the conversion process, and visitors can’t find the necessary additional content they need for the decision making process, re-evaluate the navigation and see if there are ways to streamline or simplify. Also double-check for browser compatibility – perhaps the page is not displaying correctly under some conditions.

High Bounce Rates could also indicate your offer or product is not presented in a compelling or easy to understand way. Look at your sales copy or offer details and see if you can refresh it or make it more appealing. You could try split-testing different versions to see which performs better.

Another issue could be technical problems with your site. Particularly if your bounce rate suddenly spikes or displays an unusual trend, it could be an indication of technical issues, such as broken images or links, or something on the page not loading correctly.

In this case, check for compatibility and broken links. Test the load speed of the page and generally make sure your code is as clean and functional as possible. Check for server outages and other issues that could have temporarily affected the functionality of your site.

High Bounce Rates don’t always indicate a problem

If you have a blog homepage containing all your recent posts in their entirety, and many blogger sites are notorious for this. If all of your posts are presented up front, there is little reason for someone to click to any other pages. And if you have a loyal blog following, resulting in a higher proportion of returning visitors compared to new ones, your subscribers may just want to read the newest post and have no need to visit other pages. Blogs also typically have higher bounce rates compared to other types of sites so the same benchmarks do not apply.

If a landing page contains the call to action within it, such as submitting an email address, that single page can do its job effectively without requiring further clicks, and similarly a call to action or conversion that takes your visitor off-site – to an external shopping cart or email sign up, would look like a bounce without actually be so.

You should also realize that Bounce Rate is not the only metric that matters, so this data should not be analyzed in isolation. Look at the overall picture of your website and how it’s performing according to the metrics that matter to YOU. Take the time to distill exactly what you DO want your visitors to do when at site. And then ask if you’re making it easy for them to do that, and are you measuring it?

Look for trends and other data that give you a fuller picture of what the Bounce Rate really means:

– Is the bounce rate much higher or lower for certain keywords? If so, refocus the content on your site to address the better keywords.

– Does it vary according to how people found your site? If those that find your site via search engines are higher or lower vs. social media, for example, you once again know more about where to focus your energies going forward.

– How does it vary with New vs. Returning Visitors? As noted, Returning Visitors are less likely to take further steps with some sites (like blogs), and are expected to do the opposite on others (Bank or Credit Union site). Which of these types of sites is more applicable to you?

– Which particular pages or types of content on your site have higher or lower Bounce Rates? Spend more time on the style on content or pages that are producing for you.

– Especially important for a blog, looking not only at Bounce Rate but also at the length of time spent by individual visitors on the page can help indicate to you whether or not they are reading what they find once they arrive.

14 Ways To Promote Your Company Or Brands Online – Conclusion

Top Web Promotion Methods #8 – #14:

8. Bookmarking/Tagging

Social bookmarking has become a popular method to share, organize, search and manage bookmarks of web resources. Some of the most popular social bookmarking websites: Delicious, Digg, Diigo, Fark, Mixx, MyBlogLog, Newsvine, Propeller, Reddit, Slashdot.org, StumbleUpon, Yahoo!, and Buzz.

9. Discussion Forums and Boards

Participating in online forums can be a great way to market your products and services, and interact with your audience and other professionals. Engaging your audience in a niche forum can bring high value to your website and brand, too.

10. Content Aggregation

Content aggregation offers you the chance to bring all news and feeds around your online community accounts in one place. Some would argue this is the future of social media. Emerging content aggregation websites are: Bloglines, FriendFeed, Lifestream.fm, Lijit.

11. Brand Monitoring

Social networks are also offering a variety of tools that can help businesses understand the positioning of their brand. Popular examples are: Buzzlogic, Radian6, and ReputationDefender.

12. Ratings and Review Sites

Another great way to find out where your website stands, or how your brand is perceived by others, is through ratings and reviews. The two most popular are Yelp and GetSatisfaction.

13. Widgets

For those trying to promote their own brands, they can create personalized badges, using interesting widgets on Facebook, Twitter, and other networks by using WidgetBox or SpringWidgets.

14. Wikis

Wikis are like an online encyclopedia. The most well known is Wikipedia.org, but many other wikis exist, including: Citizendium.org, AboutUs.org, Pbwiki/PBworks.com, or Wetpaint.com.

Along with all the new ways of publishing your content on networking sites, it is important to publish your articles on publishing sites like EzineArticles, eHow, Google Docs (docs.google.com), IdeaMarketers, Yahoo Articles Group (groups.yahoo.com) and submit your press releases on important specialized sites like i-Newswire, PR.com, PressReleasePoint, and PRLog.org.

Social Media Marketing can be very confusing at times, since there are so many networks and channels to choose from. Creating a presence on all the channels is quite time consuming, and randomly choosing a network or networks is not a very good social media strategy either. Many companies have struggled to understand what social media marketing mix they should use to make their brand successful online.

That is why it’s vitally important to identify which channels are suitable for your business depending on your target audience. Businesses should plan a step-by-step onlíne marketing strategy, and brainstorm ideas with their onlíne marketing representative(s) that will work to promote their products and/or services.

Can Google Overcome The Dominance of Facebook?

It seems that Google recently put everything on its main homepage, except for Google Buzz. What’s up with that? They even put the PacMan game in their logo for two days running for heaven’s sake…so you would think that some of the brightest minds on the planet would have figured out by now that if Google truly wants to be the winner on the new web, they simply have to fully integrate all their programs into one homepage – or at least place Buzz right there side-by-side with the Gmail button.

Google wants to be your one-stop center on the web – as does Facebook – and Buzz has all the ingredients to finally make that happen. It could be THE place for sharing not just your conversations, but photos, videos, and everything else. Will it ever live up to its full potential, and become a true Facebook killer?

The main reason Facebook is such a serious threat to Google is not just because of the massive amount of users it has – but the amount of time those users stay on Facebook. If you look at only an Alexa comparison alone, Facebook users spend over 30 minutes on the site, which is three triple the time users stay on Google. Facebook also beats Google in pages viewed per user and bounce rate. Could all the recent changes to their SERPs be not only their answer to the upcoming marriage of Yahoo and Bing, but a strong way of presenting a real challenge to Facebook’s overwhelming statistics?

Truth be told, most web users are lazy, and they want a one-stop solution to meet all their needs. They want to connect with friends and family, they want to broadcast to the world, they want to search for something to purchase, they want to be entertained… Google could be that solution, but not until Google Buzz becomes a force.

The main problem with Google is that it has no well-defined center which users could call their own. I don’t think that most users have fully bonded with iGoogle. Putting any privacy issues aside, I don’t think they have embraced it in the same way most web users have embraced their Facebook pages. There needs to be one rallying point on Google, which seems to be a disjointed collection of undoubtedly fantastic services right now, and all the elements that are present in Google Buzz could be the answer.

For many web users, Facebook is the starting point of their web day. In many cases it’s probably the only place they go online religiously each day. Why? Because all their friends and family are there, and they don’t want to miss out on any news or gossip. In the new, evolving social etiquette, not checking your Facebook page has become the ultimate faux pas.

But before you say that no one is going defeat or compete with Facebook, not so fast! Even empires come and go; and a web site is even more fickle, especially when something more convenient comes along. Does anyone remember MySpace, which is still a very popular site, but has now assumed a completely different niche (music, entertainment) and no longer has the near the same numbers it once had. Facebook, or even Google could suffer the same fate if something better comes along.

Google’s main business has been and still is online search. It is Google’s bread and butter, which may have blinded those in charge from seeing the bigger picture. And a bigger payday.

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