Home / Blog / Tech Tips

Archive for the ‘Tech Tips’ Category

Understanding Unique Visitor measures in Webtrends

Monday, June 6th, 2011 by John Wood

How all the different terms relate together I find it easiest to work through a simple example, so let us consider three people that have never visited before (I have put an X on the day they visit):

Mon

Tue

Wed

A

X

X

X

B

X

X

C

X

New

1

1

1

Returning

1

2

So

· Monday there was just one Visitor (A) and they were a New Visitor

· Tuesday both A and B came, B was a New Visitor, but A had come the previous day, so they were a Returning Visitor

· Wednesday, C was a New Visitor, but both A and B were a Returning Visitors

Hopefully that makes sense so far?

Then it starts getting more complicated!

For the week, we have the following:

Visitor Summary

Visitors

Visitors

3

A, B and C

Visitors Who Visited Once

1

C

Visitors Who Visited More Than Once

2

A and B

Avg Visits per Visitor

2

(6 Visits / 3 Visitors)

New vs. Returning Visitors

Visits

New Visitors

3

Visits from a New Visitor were A (Mon), B (Tues) and C (Wed)

Returning Visitors

3

Visits from a Returning Visitor were A (Tues and Wed) and B (Wed)

6

Note that New vs. Returning Visitors report is actually counting Visits (not Visitors) and segmenting them by whether or not they were from New or Returning Visitors.  The total is the therefore the total number of Visits (not Visitors) and matches the total in the Visit Summary table.

To make sense of it you have to look at each number in isolation e.g.

· Visits by Returning Visitors = 3

· Visitors Who Visited More Than Once = 2

· (Unique) Visitors = 3

In a Campaign Report what is the difference between Visits, Page Views and Clickthroughs?

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010 by John Wood

                This is a question that we are often asked as the numbers that appear in the reports do

                not always appear to make immediate sense…

 

            Firstly – from the notes at the top of the Campaign report:

 

This report shows activity occurring during the report time period segmented according

to the campaign ID of the most recent campaigns. For the report time period, all conversions

and other activities are tracked and attributed to the last campaign to which visitors

responded. Thus, even if the conversion does not happen on the first visit generated by the

most recent campaign, the appropriate source is “credited” with the conversion.

 

                i.e. it will attribute later visits to the campaign as well, regardless of whether or not they

                click through a second time.

 

                To answer the question about the difference between Visits, Page Views and Clickthroughs,

                from the Help Card at the bottom of the report:

 

·         Visits - A visit is a series of actions that begins when a visitor views their first page

        from the server, and ends when the visitor leaves the site or remains idle beyond

         the idle-time limit. The default idle-time limit is thirty minutes. 

·         Page Views - A hit to any file classified as a page. (i.e. it does not include

        downloads etc.)

·         Clickthroughs - A single instance of a click on an advertisement link.

        (More accurately whenever the visitor looks at any URL which includes the

        WT.mc_id parameter on the end)

 

                I thought this would be explained best with a short example:

 

        Consider 3 people who click on a link including the campaign id:

 

1.       Fred – arrives on the site and goes on to a second page

2.       Bert – arrives on the site, goes on to a second page and then either:

a.        Presses the browser back button

b.       Clicks through again

(we can’t tell which)

3.       Tom – arrives on the site and goes on to a second page which he bookmarks

        in the morning.  Returns via the bookmark in the afternoon

 

 

In a table:

 

Visitor

Time

Page

Visits

Page Views

Clickthroughs

Fred

09:00

/Page1.html;WT.mc_id=campaign1

09:01

/Page2.html

1

2

1

Bert

09:00

/Page1.html;WT.mc_id=campaign1

09:01

/Page2.html

09:20

/Page1.html;WT.mc_id=campaign1

1

3

2

Tom

09:00

/Page1.html;WT.mc_id=campaign1

09:01

/Page2.html

14:00

/Page2.html

2

3

1

 

So:

 

1.       Fred – is straightforward

2.       Bert – has 1 Visit (no gap of greater than 30 minutes), but 2 clickthroughs because

        the WT.mc_id parameter appears twice

3.       Tom – has 2 visits (there is a gap greater than 30 minutes), only 1 clickthrough

        (because the WT.mc_id parameter appears only once), but this second visit is still

        attributed to the earlier clickthrough from the campaign

TIP 1. How to Create Unlimited Templates

Thursday, September 10th, 2009 by Mary Hayes
WebTrends Analytics gives you the flexibility to create an unlimited number of dashboards, templates and IP address filters at no extra cost, allowing you to tailor your reports to your business needs, not the other way around.
Follow these simple instructions to create your own templates in WebTrends Analytics:
Step 1: Create the template in the administrative console. Click on the Templates button in the left-hand column of the Marketing Lab 2 administrative console. Choose a name for your new template, and select the template type from the list below. Click here for larger view Create the template in the administrative console
Step 2a: Customise your template. Click on ‘Add Report’ to customise the template. Click here for larger view Customise your template
Step 2b: Select which reports should be added to the template. Use the checkboxes to select the reports you wish to add to your template. Click here for larger view Select which reports should be added to the template
Step 3: Select the style for your template. Once you’ve finished adding reports and chapters to your template, you can choose from different style settings to configure the appearance of graphs and tables for all reports in the template. Click here for larger view Select the style for your template
Step 4: Determine which users can access your template. You can grant access to all or a limited number of WebTrends users to view your template. To set these access rules, select from the list of users as shown in the graphic. Click ‘Save’ to retain your work. You can access your templates in the administrative console under Web Analysis > Report Designer >Templates. Click here for larger view Determine which users can access your template

Copyright © 2012 Matraxis. All Rights Reserved. | Privacy Policy