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





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