Log Analysis - a Tribute To Success
By Aaron Turpen of Aaronz WebWorkz
A completed website that is listed in search engines, hosted
on a reliable server, and ready for action is a great thing.
It holds nothing but promise and potential for greatness.
A new site owner will look at the site with pride. Eventually,
however, that pride turns to worry. Why? Because questions
start to arise.
*Did I do something wrong that is turning customers away?
*How many people view the site and versus how many actually
buy something?
*What can I change to improve my sales?
These questions, and more, can be answered by analyzing
the log files kept by most web servers and hosts. You may
or may not have access to these files, depending upon your
host's setup. Here at Aaronz WebWorkz, your files are located
on the /log directory of your website space. You can access
them through FTP. Better yet, if you're a newsletter subscriber
and hosted by Aaronz WebWorkz, ask how you can get your log
analysis done once a month for FREE.
If you do not have access to your log files because of your
current host's restrictions or setup, then you have the alternative
of setting up a "free" tracking service. Be careful,
however, as the statistics shown there can usually be viewed
by anyone and are not always as in-depth or accurate as they
could be. Plus they usually involve adding a new button or
logo to your website to advertise for the free service provider.
If you have access to your raw logs, you can use software
which will analyze these log files for you and give you a
breakdown of statistics for the site. These programs are
not always cheap. Generally, you get what you pay for. I
have tried several "free" or very inexpensive ones
and found them all to be lacking in some way or another.
I finally spent the money ($100) and bought software that
does the job efficiently and very well. I use "Open
Web Scope" software, which can be found by going to:
http://openwebscope.com/Default.asp?vid=258
As a quick run-down of what can be seen in your Web logs
and the power they will give you, here are a few basic features
of most web log analysis:
"Unique Visitors"
This is the number of visitors which have accessed the website
each day, week, and/or month (depending on your software).
This tells you how many visitors have accessed your site
and does not include people who visited more than once
during the time period measured. This is an important number
and, by itself, is enough to set you on fire as you begin
seeing how many visitors versus sales you're making. Most
logs measure unique visitors per day by default.
"Hits" & "Unique Hits"
This term should not be confused with "Unique Visitors" (above). "Hits" are
a measure of how often something has been accessed, regardless
of who accessed it when. So someone accessing your site several
times a day will be counted each time they access each file
and page of your site (a page could include fifteen or more
images, all counted as hits!). Similarly, a "Unique
Hits" measurement records the same number, but only
once per visitor per time period (see "Unique Visitors" above).
These numbers are nearly useless except as a basic measure
of your site's activity. If you are worried about page loading
times, however, this number for each page can tell you where
you could possibly optimize to limit the number of "hits" per
page (the more hits, the longer it takes for the page to
load).
"Referring Sites" or "Referral URLs"
This is a great piece of information. Some logs give the
last ten while others track all of them. The best ones
give you the top ten followed by a complete list. The top
ten are, of course, of main interest because these are
the sites or IP addresses (if they cannot be resolved to
a website address) that refer to your site most often.
Usually they will be search engines, affiliate sites, or
similar places. Most of these links refer directly to the
web page the users were sent from so you can visit them
yourself. Additionally, this will give you an idea of the
keywords being used to access your site.
"Errors Reported"
This is another great tool for site optimization. These errors
are usually nondescript and mean nothing to you - especially
server-type errors such as "Cached reload" or
similar. However, if you notice a lot of "Page Not
Found" or "404" errors listed, you may need
to double-check your site's links as something may be wrong!
"Days of the Week"
This is another useful tidbit of information as it tells
you when your site is accessed most often. It usually includes
the time of day as well. This also tells you the best day
for updates (the day before the most popular day, obviously)
and the best day to include incentives or promotions on
your site.
These simple tools and bits of information are the basics
of what you need to analyze your website's statistics and
really begin focusing your marketing efforts towards realizing
higher profits for you and a better user experience for your
site visitors.