Hopefully, many of you with a website have at least a few primary goals set for it. You may be trying to sell a product, get subscribers, educate, and the list goes on. Do you have goals set for those goals though? If you want to improve your website, having performance goals for your primary goals is a required step. Continue reading »

 

Working on increasing my average page views per visitor this month I decided to take a look back on how things are going comparing these 30 days to the prior.

The Big Ouch

Before looking at my stats I believed my initial outlook was good. I expected more page views per viewer. Unfortunately, this was not the case. I had a big OUCH.

A month ago today I did something that I thought would help my site out by complying more with Google’s SEO suggestions. Google suggest that you do not have more than 100 links on one page. A month ago and a day I averaged about 150 links on my home page. For every post, I had links to their categories and tags. I decided to delete those links, and only display them on the specific post pages. Continue reading »

 

I haven’t actually put this into practice, but I am pretty sure I will not be posting my best articles on the weekends. Every morning I read a ton of other blogs. I have two groups, my favorites, and those that I find through Google Alerts. After reading several really bad blog articles that were posted on this Monday, I got to thinking. Is Monday just a really bad day for blogging? Continue reading »

Aug 312008
 

Go to this freelance web design site, and find something on their site to click on. When you find something, click on it. Don’t forget to come back here! I forecast that it will take you about 21 seconds to click one of their links. Don’t worry, there are no ads on the site, it’s just another webmaster site like this one. It’s just a simple example for you to do. Now find out why I said it will take you 21 seconds.

It’s Hick’s Law

If you want, you can find the technical definition of Hick’s Law on Wiki, but basically it is T=hk. Time (T) equals the volume of information (h) times roughly 150 miliseconds (k). The freelance web design site I mentioned had fourteen links, all were visible on my screen at least, so 14*1.5 (I use 1.5 because it equals 150 miliseconds), and the answer is 21 seconds. This is an extremely generalized way to use this, but it will work as an example. Using Hick’s Law, I am guessing you will take about 21 seconds to click on one of their links. Try it on a site that you are not familiar with.

Best Web Image has bout 70 links on the home page. I counted my Tag Cloud as one, because I think it is seen as one option. 70*1.5=105 seconds. When I looked into my stats for August my average visitor moved on from the home page somewhere between the 1-3 minute bracket. I looked at the stats from several of my sites for August, and many of them seemed follow Hick’s Law. For those of you interested, the average visitor on this site initially spends 1-3 minutes on the home page, and spends over five minutes per session.

Keep Things Moving

So why is Hick’s Law important? You might think, hey I could put a thousand links on my site, and my visitors will stay on the site for twenty-five minutes. The longer they stay on my site, they more they must like it right? Well, obviously that doesn’t work.

Hick’s Law is important to know, because it’s a great reminder. The more stuff you have on the page, the longer it will take your visitor to figure out. The longer it takes them to figure out, the less likely they will complete that desired visitor action. You have to keep your visitors moving, and not let them die of old age on your site.

What did Freelance Web Design do? They considered that time is precious on that first visit, and made the options limited and obvious. Now I just wish they would add a little text description to those main menu buttons:)