November 20, 2008

What are pages per visit?

If you’re track­ing page views, vis­i­tors and visits then you can cal­cu­late the next impor­tant metric in our jaunt down jargon lane… pages per visit.

This one is just what it sounds like — the aver­age number of page views gen­er­ated by your vis­i­tors during an aver­age visit.

It’d be easy to assume that more pages per visit would be better? After all, more can quite often be better.

But you have to think about the goals for your site. Take Google — they want to get you to the infor­ma­tion you’re seek­ing as fast as pos­si­ble. So they’d prefer a low pages per visit. But since they’re hoping that the expe­ri­ence will tempt you back for more, they’re prob­a­bly also hoping for a high number of visits, with a low pages per visit.

If your site makes money from (dis­play) adver­tis­ing, and you’re not an aggre­ga­tor like Google, then you prob­a­bly do want to con­cern your­self with pages per visit.

Why? Because if your design and con­tent can tempt folks to linger and “turn” more pages after they start their visit you can make more money.

Snag­ging users can be costly, build­ing and retain­ing a size­able audi­ence on the Inter­net is difficult?

Why? Because, if I can para­phrase the Hitch­hik­ers Guide to the Galaxy:

“The Inter­net is big. Really big. You just won’t believe how vastly hugely mind­bog­glingly big it is. I mean you may think it’s a long way down the road to the chemist, but that’s just peanuts to the Internet.”

Filed under: Journalism, Management, Technology

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[...] Pages per visit: 2.09 [...]