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Posted by Steve Pugh on 10/17/06 09:43
richard wrote:
> "meltedown" <asdf@fake.com> wrote in message
> news:%2FYg.508845$Jn2.418507@fe10.news.easynews.com...
> >
> > If I visit your site and then come back 4 more times you should see one
> > Unique visit and 5 visits from me. So it is normal for the Visits to
> > exceed the Unique Visitors. But if the Unique visitors are more than the
> > Visits, how how did that happen ?
>
> Those extra unique visitors are only visiting one page then leaving.
> If you have page visits, find out which page is being visited the most, the
> numbers should nearly match.
As ever, richard is talking rubbish.
A one page visit is still a visit so should be counted in the total
number of visits.
richard, in web analytics a visit is normally a visit to the site and
will include one or more page views. Even if it was a page view, how
could, for example, 100 people looking at 1 page each only add up to 70
page views?
It's conceivable but unlikely that the analytics software being used
has been configured to not count a one page visit as a visit. There may
be some cases where that's a valid analysis choice but it should not be
a default setting.
Steve
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