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Tracking Your Visitors
by Anthony Stai
Once you've got some visitors, the chances are that you want to know
more about them. How many are there? Where are they from? What web
browser do they use? Luckily for you, there are plenty of ways to find
out.
Server Log Analysis.
Most web servers keep a log of every file they send, with information
about the request they received. These request headers contain all the
information a user's web browser sends to the server when it asks for
pages, images or other files. The information includes the user's IP
address, their web browser's name and version, and the kind of files
their browser can handle.
Out of this information, the IP address is probably the most useful.
Each block of IP addresses is allocated to a certain ISP in a certain
country, meaning that you can use them to tell roughly where people are
from. There are plenty of free databases out there that map IP address
to physical location, letting you break down your visitors by country
or even, in many cases, by state.
The other thing IP addresses do for you is let you identify how many
unique visitors you have – that is, how many actual people saw
your site as opposed to how many pages were loaded overall. This lets
you figure out things like the average number of pages each visitor
sees, or the number of times the same visitor comes back.
You can get software that will take this information from your server
logs and turn it into easy to view tables and graphs – in fact,
most web hosts will have already installed some software like this, if
you look under the 'statistics' section in your hosting control panel.
Cookies.
IP addresses can be influenced by all sorts of things, notably ISP
proxies making a whole ISP full of visitors look like just one. As well
as crude IP address tracking to find unique visitors, then, you might
also consider using a cookie. All you do is leave a cookie on each
users' computer with a randomly-generated ID number, and then check
each visitor for cookies to see if they've been to your site before.
If you log how many ID numbers you give out and how times each ID
number appears in return visitors' cookies, you can get a better idea
of just how many visitors there were overall, and how many times each
one came back. You should consider, however, that many users have
cookies turned off in their browser, or ask their browser to prompt
them to accept or decline each cookie individually, so while they're
generally more reliable than IPs alone you can't depend on them
completely. A mixture of the two methods is best.
Registration.
If you want to know more detailed information about your visitors, you
can ask them to register and log in to use your website. This gives you
an opportunity to collect their email address, their exact location,
and pretty much anything else you dare to ask.
You have to understand, though, that many people will be unwilling to
associate detailed demographic information with their identity. Also,
it's difficult to get registration right: ask for it too early and
people will just leave without seeing what you've got to offer, ask too
late and they've already got what they came for.
Surveys.
As an alternative to registration, you might try including random
surveys. This is the technique favoured by most big companies: simply
pop-up some kind of message saying 'would you be willing to participate
in a survey to help us improve our website?', and then pop up the
survey questions if the visitor says yes.
The advantage of this is that surveys can clearly state that they're
completely anonymous: you don't know the person's name, where they
live, or anything else like that. This gives you the opportunity to ask
more personal questions that you would otherwise be able to,
establishing a solid demographic and preference profile for different
parts of your audience.
About
The Author:
Anthony Stai invites you to
take your
website to the next level. Get one of the best Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) books on the market for Free! Learn the techniques
that differentiate the amateurs from the pros. Get your book at http://www.makemoneyonline4you.com/seo.html
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