The bounce rate debate continues… Bounce rates and how they affect a website’s ranking on Google has been discussed, dissected, and dismembered over and over again. As fully transcribed on this site, a conversation between Rand Fishkin, CEO of Moz, and Andrey Lipattsev, Google’s search quality senior strategist, led to a surprising discussion on click and bounce rates affecting search rankings.
Bounce rates don’t have to wreck your Google AdWords campaign. Do you have other suggestions on combating bounce rates in AdWords
The searcher lands on your website. Browses through your content and leaves. No clicks, no conversions
If you’re going to make it your mission to track corporate metrics, churn rate is a great place […] Author information Sujan Patel Sujan Patel is a passionate internet marketer and entrepreneur. Sujan has over 10 years of internet marketing experience and started the digital marketing agency Single Grain. Currently Sujan is the CMO at Bridge U.S
When the iPhone was first released, everyone marveled over its amazing simplicity and user experience. The world fell in love, and the mobile industry was changed overnight. Other phones, if they weren’t smartphones, were suddenly viewed as cheap and not very useful
Seeing the traffic to your website increase is a great thing, but what if your surge in new site visitors doesn’t come with a corresponding increase in reader engagement rates? The truth is, raw traffic numbers don’t mean all that much when it comes to your website’s success.
With some simple analytics in place, you can pretty easily establish the ideal frequency of your B2B email campaigns. Based on the results from this experiment, we confirmed that we should be sending email more frequently. You will probably come to a similar conclusion.
The bounce rate of a site is the percentage of users who leave without going to another page on your site before the analytics session times out, with the length of a session being dependent upon your specific analytics package (I’ve heard that 30 minutes is the average.) Usually listed as Bounce Rate in your *** Read the full post by clicking on the headline above ***