What Are Hits?
While Dictionary.com defines "hits" as: "a
connection made to a website over the Internet or another
network." * this definition is actually quite vague. A
"hit" is actually a "successful request to your web server from
a vistor's browser for any type of file, whether an image, HTML
page, an MP3 file, or any other type. A single webpage can cause
many Hits -- one for each image included on the page, etc." ^
This is actually quite vague. A "hit" is
actually a "successful request to your web server from a
visitor's browser for any type of file, whether an image, HTML
page, an MP3 file, or any other type. A single web page can
cause many Hits -- one for each image included on the page,
etc." ^
If a single web page contains 20 images,
that's 21 hits -- 20 images plus 1 for the page itself. If one
single person looks at 10 web pages which each contain 20
images, that individual is responsible for 210 hits.
Some internet websites will say things like
"our site gets 2 million hits per month." That sounds
impressive, but it's completely misleading.
A website could have an average of 50 images
or other elements per page, while another website could be all
text-based. Or worse, a particular website could have hundreds
of tiny 1x1 (pixel) transparent graphics that are invisible.
Fifty people in one month could easily accumulate 2 million hits
if they visited just 5 pages on that website every day.
Traffic reported as "hits" should be open to
skepticism. However, the problem is when someone uses "hits" as
a phrase to talk about real people visiting their website
(a.k.a. "unique visitors" or "sessions"). In these cases, you
don't know if they are really talking "hits" or actual
"visitors".
"Unique visitors" or "sessions" is the best
method of measuring traffic.
Urchin defines "sessions" as "a series of
clicks on your site by an individual visitor during a specific
period of time. A Session is initiated when the visitor arrives
at your site, and it ends when the browser is closed or there is
a period of inactivity." ^
This method is a good way to know how much
real traffic your site is getting. If a website says "We get
2,000 sessions per day," that's impressive. But if they say "We
get 2,000 hits per day," you just can't be sure.
"Pageviews" is another great method of
gauging your website traffic.
Urchin defines "pageviews" as: "... a
request from a visitor's browser for a displayable web page,
generally an HTML file... In general, images and other embedded
content, such as style sheets and javascript, are not considered
to be Pageviews." ^
If a site says they receive 2,000 "pageviews"
per day, that's pretty good.
*
Dictionary.com
^ from Urchin 5 Site Statistics software
Eight Reasons Why
You Need A Website
Getting A Website Started
Search Engines & Rankings
Pay-Per-Click Advertising
Website Ownership Rights
What Are
Hits?
Choosing a Domain Name
Marketing Your Website
Be Aware
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