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Bucaro TecHelp Newsletter
Maintain Your Computer and Use it More Effectively
to Design a Web Site and Make Money on the Web. ~ ~ ~ September 8, 2004 Volume 4 Number 31 ~ ~ ~
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There's Gold in Your Website's Server Log : Part 1 Hits
By Stephen Bucaro
Many Webmasters have never bothered to view their website's server log. Ignoring your
server log is like flying with a blind pilot. You may still be cruising along, but
you have no idea where you are or where you're headed. If your website is on a free
host, you probably don't have access to the server log. However, if you pay for your
web host, or if you own the server, you almost always have some access to the server log.
In this three part article, we'll learn what kind of information a typical server log
provides, how to analyze that information, and how to use that information to steer
your website in a direction for growth and success.
The actual data in the server log is just that, data. Data is of little use without an
application to compile, categorize, analyze, and turn it into useful information. The
power of server log analysis software varies depending upon the web host, and it's not
related to how much you pay for hosting service. I have seen some very low budget web
hosts with powerful server log analysis software, and some expensive web hosts that
provide only a limited utility.
The importance of the server log analysis software is second only to up-time reliabilty
when it comes to web hosts. A web server log can tell you who is visiting your web site,
where they're coming from, what operating system and web browser they're using, what pages
of your website they are viewing, and much more. A smart webmaster perorms a regular
monthly analysis of the valuable information contained in the server log.
Hits
Some webmasters brag about the number of "hits" their website receives, but hits themselves
are not important. For example, when a search engine spiders your website, it generates a
hit for every page it visits. There are ways to generate millions of hits on a website
without anyone ever actually viewing a single page.
The important statistics are "page view hits" and "unique visitors". Server log analysis
software should tell you how many times each page was viewed. Anaylyzing the popularity
of individual pages tells you where to place your most important advertisements, and what
kind of new content you should add to your website.
The king of all statistics is the number of unique visitors your web site receives. When it
comes to selling advertising or joining the most exclusive affiliate programs, a high
number of unique visitors each month is the statistic that gets respect.
Good analysis software will tell you how many pages each visitor viewed and how long they
stayed on your website. The goal is to develop content that gets your visitors to stay
longer, a quality sometimes referred to as "stickiness".
A statistic related to hits is "bandwidth". This is a complicated statistic because you
want more visitors and that causes bandwidth to go up. On the other hand, high bandwidth
consumption makes your website repond slower (and most web hosts charge extra for bandwidth
beyond a certain limit). What you want is to design your web pages so they use bandwidth
efficiently, and you want to be on the lookout for people who are stealing your bandwidth
(usually by linking to images on your web site).
As valuable as the above information is, there's a lot more gold that can be mined from the
server log. In Part 2, you'll learn about more server log nuggets, and I reveal a secret
usually known only by expert Search Engine Optimizers.
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