The fields of digital marketing and analytics have introduced a  host of web analytics terms that we have to understand to fully  comprehend the metrics we measure daily. A complete grasp on these terms  helps us better evaluate our website performance and make strategic  decisions for our businesses.
Whether you are a marketing professional  that’s been tasked with implementing fully integrated, data-driven  marketing, a small business owner looking to boost the visibility of  your site on the web, or just dipping your toe into all this web  analytics stuff, there is a basic understanding you need to possess to  progress.
This complete glossary serves as a firm foundation for your growing  web analytics prowess, and can continue to provide great reference any  time you find yourself asking, “What does that mean again?”
BUILDING BLOCKS
Bounce rate – The percentage of visitors to a particular website who navigate away from the site after viewing only one page.
Data – facts and statistics collected for reference or analysis.
Hit – also called a page hit, the retrieval of any item (image, page) from a web server
Impression – the number of times a piece of content (like an online advertisement) is seen; the views.
Keyword – in search engine optimization, the  particular word or phrase that describes the contents of a web page.  Keywords serve as clues or shortcuts that summarize the content of a  page and help search engines match pages with searches.
New visitor – visitors who have  reached a site for the first time. This is important in comparison with  return visitors as an indication of loyalty and site value.
Organic search – describes search that generates results that are not paid advertisements
Pageviews – the instance of an Internet user  visiting a particular page on a site. A pageview is recorded whenever a  full page of your website is viewed or refreshed.
Pageviews per visit – the average number of pageviews per visit over a given time period
Returning visitor – a visitor who can be identified with multiple visits, through cookies or authentication
Unique visitor –the number of  distinct individuals who request pages from a website during a specific  period, no matter how many times they visit
Visitor – also called a unique visitor; an individual visiting a website during a period of time
Visits – the number of times a site is visited, no matter the number of unique visitors that make up those sessions
Web analytics – the measurement,  collection, analysis, and reporting of web data for the purposes of  understanding and optimizing web usage; the study of web usage behaviors
Conversion – the point at which an activity or  response to a call to action fulfills the desired outcome (i.e.  subscribing to a newsletter or purchasing a product)
Data visualization – a form of  visual communication that represents data in forms that is easy to  understand (often charts or tables) and allow for analysis and reasoning  about said data; visual representations of data
SITE PERFORMANCE
Load time – the average amount of time in seconds  that it takes a page to load from initiative of the pageview (i.e. click  on link) to completion of load in the browser window
Uptime – the measure of how long a site is viewable  and useable. Downtime on a site may translate into poor customer  experience and lost revenue.
SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION
Anchor text – text that appears highlighted in a  hyperlink that can be clicked to open a webpage. Search engines use  anchor text to help decide what the linked page is about. Links on a  website should have a descriptive, keyword rich anchor text that  describes the destination page in order to improve search performance.
Broken link – a broken hyperlink that no longer  points to its original destination. Broken links undermine user  experience, waste resources of search engine crawlers, and can affect a  website’s placement in search engines.
Cookie – a text file placed on a visitor’s computer while browsing a website. Cookies are used to track returning visitors.
Crawler/spider/bot – a crawler is a program that  visits websites and reads their pages and information in order to create  entries for a search engine index
Crawler error – the inability of a crawler to view or index pages on a website
Dead end page – pages that include no links and  require a visitor to click the back button in order to stay on a  website. Dead end pages make is difficult for visitors to navigate a  website and, as a result, visitors may be more inclined to exit the  site.
Duplicate content – when multiple URLs serve the  same page. Duplicate content across different URLs on a website leads to  poor placement in search results because they waste search engine  resources by collecting and processing identical content. Common types  of duplicate pages are printable or text-only versions of the main page,  or redirects to login pages intended for your site’s visitors that also  return a “You must log in” page to crawlers.
Low word count – when a page has little or no text. Low word counts often receive poor placement in search results
Meta tags – a tag (a coding statement) in the HTML that describes some aspect of the contents of a webpage.
Pay per click (cost per click) – a model where a  company that has place an advertisement on a website pays a sum of money  to a host website when a user clicks on the advertisement.
Redirect – making a web page available under more  than one URL address. Redirecting too many of a website’s pages to other  pages wastes crawler resources and can result in lower search engine  performance.
Robots.txt – the name of a text file that is  uploaded to a website’s director and linked in the HTML code of the  website. Used to provide instructions about a website to crawlers and  spiders. A robots.txt file can also be used to restrict access by  crawlers to your entire website or areas of your website. It can prevent  search engines from indexing forms, duplicate content, and other pages  that shouldn’t be indexed and may compromise the performance of a  website.
Search engine optimization – the process of  maximizing the number of visitors to a particular website by ensuring  that the site appears high on the list of results returned by search  engines
STRATEGY
Benchmark – measurements that indicate a specific  performance metric and allows comparison of metrics between like  applications, websites, or companies
Reachability – a measure of how easy it is for  visitors and search engine crawlers to find that they are looking for on  your site. A well-linked, well-structured site has great reachability,  and will be evaluated as important by search engines.
Stickiness – a website’s ability to retain visitors,  measured as a number of pages visited per session and minutes per visit  (time on site). Stickiness can be achieved through unique, quality  content that visitors find valuable, well-structured pages, and  appropriately linked resources.
Competitive intelligence – In general, the act of  defining, gathering, analyzing, and distributing intelligence about  competitors in order to make strategic decisions that ideally lead to  competitive advantage in the marketplace.
ONSITE ANALYTICS
Click through – a click on a link which leads to another website or section of a website
Click through rate – the percentage of people who  access a hyperlink (usually an ad) online. The click through rate is  calculated by taking the number of clicks your link/ad receives divided  by the number of times your link/ad was shown (impressions).
Direct referral – visits to a site by visitors who  typed a website’s URL directly into their browser. This also refers to  the visitors who clicked on links saved as bookmarks or untagged links  within emails.
Entry page – the first page that a visitor arrives at on a website from another domain
Exit page – the last page that a visitor accesses during a visit before leaving a website
Landing page (from Digital Analytics Association) – the page intended to identify the beginning of the user experience  resulting from a defined marketing effort. In other words, a landing  page is a standalone web page that has been designed for a single  objective.
Link referrals – a count of all referrals from links  on other websites (that are not search engines or social networks)  during a selected time period
Minutes per visit (time on site) – the average length of a visit to a website during a selected time period
Referral – visitors referred by links on other websites
Session – a record of a single visitor browsing a  website during a given time period. This can include multiple screen or  pageviews, events, or ecommerce transactions. Sessions end at midnight  on the day a session was initiated or after 30 minutes of inactivity.
Social referrals – a count of all referrals from social networks during a selected time period
Top viewed pages – pages that were most viewed during a selected time period
Visits by country – visits to a website over a selected time period, broken down by the country of the visitor
Via : Blog Alexa  by Jennifer Johnson 
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