Site icon The Digital Marketing Agency

Web Site Statistics: Are your users coming via the front door?

Understanding Entry Pages.

In our previous article we discussed some basics on understanding the traffic coming to your web site; visitor numbers, page views and traffic sources. We still have to cover entry and exit pages.

Again let’s be generic so it does not matter if you are using statistics software like, Webalizer, AWstats or Google Analytics the concept is roughly the same.

Entry and Exit pages are just that: the page that a user enters your web site and the page that a user exits your web site. Ideally they won’t be the same page, or you have just lost a visitor without impressing them!

When constructing a web site a lot of focus is usually placed on the Home Page, web developers still consistently make this a very big focus during the design process. Sure it needs to be slick and do all the things that a Home Page does, but the reality is not everyone is going to visit your site via the front door.

A user will only enter via the front door when they type in your domain name – sampledomain.com.au and then visit your site, or perhaps when you have a link to your site from another.

The longer your web site is on the Internet, the more it will be indexed by search engines, hopefully you will have many interesting pages that a search engine will spider through and display in the results when people search for keywords relevant to your site.

Here’s the catch. The search engine won’t always show up your Home Page. More often than not Google or Yahoo will display an internal page within your site in the result set that it shows a user. The user clicks on that and they enter your site directly at that level, not the Home Page.

Let’s take a practical look at this.

Go to your Web Site Statistics software that you use and look specifically for Entry Pages.

Most good software will show you for a given period (eg a month) what the top Entry Page was followed by perhaps the top 10 Entry Pages? Your Home Page may be on the list, don’t be surprised if its not at the top of the list.

Now use these results to retrace your user’s experience. Work out from the results what the entry page was, get that URL and visit that first up. See your web site from the perspective of a user coming off a search engine.

When looking at this page, ask yourself this.

If the answer to all of the above is positive then you don’t have a problem, if not you perhaps need to consider the layout of the internal pages of your site to rectify the problem(s)

Exit mobile version