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LED Digest 2252: Testing Web Metrics Accuracy? Print E-mail
Shaun says, What is the gold standard for traffic analysis? I pay for
web metrics. Wanting to check on its data I realized there is nothing
to compare it to. Is there any independent check on web metric accuracy?

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List Moderator:                     Published by:
Adam Audette                          LED Digest
adam, led-digest.com     http://www.led-digest.com
..............................................
September 22, 2006                     Issue no. 2252
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            .....IN THIS DIGEST.....
                

====== NEW ======================

        --== Testing the Accuracy of Web Metrics Data ==--

                ~ Shaun Johnston
"Is there any independent check on web
metrics accuracy?"


==== CONTINUING =================

        --== Creative Linking ==--

                ~ Marty R. Milette
"...the real problem is having long, nasty,
parameter-filled URLs."

        --== Are Meta Tags Unnecessary? ==--

                ~ Roy Williams
"The Title tag is a meta tag, and the title tag
is not a meta tag. Confused?"

                ~ Ivan Jimenez
"...there IS a 'title description' within the meta
tags but you shouldn't use it."

                ~ Bob Sheridan
"I recently re-created our company Home page..."

                ~ Mike Banks Valentine
"Convinced yet that keyword meta tags are
pointless?"

        --== Small Biz & Search ==--

                ~ Mark Whitman
"...you can also get top 10 index placement
without a single HTML character..."


==== BILLBOARD ===================

        --== Update: Site Hijacking ==--
                ~ Peter D'Aprix


========== NEW ===================================

From: Shaun Johnston
Subject: New Topic - Testing Accuracy of Web Metrics Data

What is the gold standard for traffic analysis? I pay for web
metrics. Wanting to check on its data I realized there is nothing to
compare it to. It claims to be more accurate than log file analysis
because it avoids the possibility of caching. Dispatch of a graphic
should match very closely the viewing of a page by a real person.

This issue matters to me because I charge my customers for visitors
delivered, PPC. The question arose because I have log data for two
ends of a single stream of visits. So I can compare visits to the
sending page on one site, and referrers of visits to the receiving
page on the other site. The web metrics figure for referrers of
visits received is greater than that site's log files show, which is
OK -- that's what you'd expect if that page was being cached
somewhere, those visits wouldn't register on the hosting server. But
the web metrics figure is also greater than the number of visits
apparently being sent -- visits to the dispatching page recorded in
the dispatching site's log files.  Conceivably that page could be
cached, too. But that is a PHP page that is fed a string of
parameters from which the address of the receiving site's home page
has to be compiled.

What I'm counting is number of visits to that PHP page with the
correct parameters. Could more visits be actually sent from that
page than are recorded in my log file as visits to it having the
right parameters?

Can you help me with this aspect of server behavior? For a PHP page
that has to compile a destination address from parameters, can such
a page be cached? My web metrics service says it can, and guarantee
that their data is right, even though their figures range from 85%
under to 130% over what log file analysis shows for visits.

Is there any independent check on web metric accuracy?

Shaun Johnston


======== CONTINUING ===============================

From: Marty R. Milette
Subject: Spidering Database-Generated Pages

> I have a client who got a link from a company
> with a high pagerank site that is very relevant.
> The problem is that the link is on a page that
> is accessed through a database query...
        - Dave Roberts, LED 2248

Database-generated pages aren't a problem -- the real problem is
having long, nasty, parameter-filled URLs.

Many content management / page generation systems will generate URLs
in links like:

http://www.mysite.com?sec=123&pg=456&session=4BDE1234545A3D3893A

The parameters tell the spider the page is database-generated and it
can easily be ignored. The real killer is the session ID which is
different every time the page is viewed.

The solution is pretty easy (get your favorite geek onto this) --
store session IDs in session cookies, and use a rewrite function to
get rid of the parameters from the URL string to make it look
something like:

http://www.mysite.com/hotels/grand-hotel-europe/

This not only gets the site spidered, but also puts your keywords in
the URL -- never a bad thing for humans OR spiders.

I have many sites that use this technique and all the pages are
spidered regularly.

Regards,

Marty R. Milette


-------- new post - new topic --------

From: Roy Williams
Subject: Meta-tags

> Don't forget that title tags aren't meta tags...
        - Nathan Holley, LED 2251

The Title tag is a meta tag, and the title tag is not a meta tag.
Confused?

<title> the good one<title>

<meta name="title" content="blah blah">

Best forget the 'meta' one, then....

Real gone,

Roy Williams

Nervous Records
www.nervous.co.uk


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Ivan Jimenez
Subject: Meta Tags

> ... implementing meta tags - more specifically the keyword
> meta tag - is not going to have any affect on your rankings.
        - Jill Whalen, LED 2248

To add to Jill's post and possibly answer a few follow-up questions,
there IS a 'title description' within the meta tags but you
shouldn't use it. I used to use it but some search engines now view
it as over saturation and may penalize you if they find it within
your code...

Ivan Jimenez

Smarter Clicks : Search Marketing Solutions
http://www.smarterclicks.com


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Bob Sheridan
Subject: Meta tags

> ... implementing meta tags - more specifically the keyword
> meta tag - is not going to have any affect on your rankings.
        - Jill Whalen, LED 2248

Hi Jill,

I recently re-created our company Home page using a Template I use
for new pages (no title, description, etc.).

After creating the new Home page I published to our website. A day
went by and I searched Google for "Restaurant Software" and instead
of seeing my site listed in its usual 5th position, it had moved up
to number 4, with Google substituting "RestaurantPlus" in the Title.
MSN has me in top 10 with Title "Template".

I immediately made fixes to our Home page Title and Description
coding but thought it was interesting. Apparantly "content" rules!

Bob Sheridan, Webmaster

RestaurantPlus
www.restaurantplus.com


-------- new post - same topic --------

From: Mike Valentine
Subject: Meta tags

> ... implementing meta tags - more specifically the keyword
> meta tag - is not going to have any affect on your rankings.
        - Jill Whalen, LED 2248

Both Kym McLaughlin and Cynthia Copenhagen quoted Jill Whalen's
above comment suggesting they believe that keyword meta tags still
have an effect on ranking. But then both backpedal on that statement
by saying other factors are more important to ranking well - but
meta tags still matter? Title tags still matter critically,
description tags may, sometimes matter ... a little, but keyword
meta tags?.

It's long past time to stop wasting energy on that tag and I hope
you'll both spend your energies elsewhere in the future. It's old
news that keyword tags are worthless.

I wrote a keyword meta tags tutorial article in 1999 or 2000 listing
the top 8 ingredients to ranking well in the search engines.

http://website101.com/metatags.html

I went back today to review it and found that remarkably few things
have changed. So I massaged and edited a few things, added a small
type disclaimer ;-) and linked to some online tools from that page,
including a "Search engine simulator" tool and an "HTML source code
viewer"  and a previous article I'd written  in 2002 called "SEO
Keyword Voodoo: Invisible Meta Tag Mumbo Jumbo" because, as you
might guess from the title, I am 100% with Jill Whalen on this one.

http://website101.com/Search_Engine_Positioning/keyword-voodoo.html

Keyword Meta tags went south in about 1998 or so when webmasters
began keyword stuffing. They are not used, nor are they trusted at
all by any search engines. If they are not purposely abused, they
are completely misunderstood by webmasters still. Don't waste your
time fussing with them or tweaking them. They're an old and badly
abused element of HTML code that no longer does a thing for ranking.

To further prove my point, I've created a Rollyo search tool (at the
bottom of both articles pages linked above) which allows you to
search only the top 25 top SEO bloggers, and includes the Official
Search Engine Blogs, for the search phrase "keyword Meta tags".

At the time of this writing, only 9 results came back on that
search. After visiting each of them, I discovered that most of those
results are either derisive comments about "keyword meta tags" from
the SEO blogger or are derisive comments left by visitors about the
folly of meta tag massaging!

My favorite blog post from among the results of that Rollyo SEO
Bloggers and Search Engine Blogs search are from Aaron Wall of
SEObook (sorry another guru) when he said,

"an old client wants me to rewrite their meta tags. A total waste of
time, but if it makes them happy, oh well...Meta tags? ... hehehe"

Convinced yet that keyword meta tags are pointless?

Mike Banks Valentine
http://realityseo.com


-------- new post - new topic --------

From: Mark Whitman
Subject: Small biz search

> ... creating a web page that is graphic only or
> Flash only is instantly a rather poor judgement
> to make when considering the WWW.
        - Rick Gortatowsky, LED 2250

As your long summary of website design 101 indicated, a site should
be targeted to a specific purpose and sometimes demographic group.
Using graphics only and Flash only has gotten excellent results when
used for the purpose of being viral marketing tools.

Viral marketing techniques, for certain products, are great (if
successful) since you don't have to bow down to SEs but you can also
get top 10 index placement without a single HTML character on a
page. How? Well, that's something I had to figure out myself and
leave to you to do the same however I've seen plenty of other people
using what appears to be the same or similar techniques.

The point is, poor judgement regarding website design would be
dependent on whether a site meets or exceeds its goals, period.
Conforming to simplistic design dogma for it's own sake can be
limiting and counterproductive which in my opinion is a matter of
poor judgement.

M.Whitman


==== BILLBOARD ===================================

From: Peter D'Aprix
Subject: Update - Site "Highjacking"

Conclusion to the "Porn Parasitic Attack" LED 2225:

I know this thread has been overlaid by many other threads since I
posted my problem back on 15 August this year. Essentially, the
space I had with my host server, seanic.net, was hacked or entered
by someone who had either used a password cracking program or had
gotten my user ID and Password illegally (not from me) and placed
several folders of many hundreds of porn link pages (no images) on
my servers space. Some in upfront folders, other tucked deep in the
recesses of my own folders for my site gourmetvoyageurs.com, a food
and travel site - sensous, yes; porn, no.

I had cleansed the host server of all files replacing the entire
site with an FTP upload of my reworked site files (I chose this time
to restructure my site since I had disappeared from Google anyway).
I notified seanic.net about the problem and received a tepid reply
that my site was hacked (definitely not an inside job they said) and
I should remove all the unwanted files and folders, change my
password to a random collection of characters and sit and wait for
Google to come back again. They did not keep access logs for more
than 2 weeks; it had been 6 weeks when I discovered the problem. I
had already removed the porn folders, re-uploaded my entire site and
had changed the password. But Google did not come back for a visit.

I posted this experience on LED and received sympathetic and very
useful suggestions from many LEDers like Cheryl Berry, but the most
fruit bearing was from Janell Vasquez (thank you Janell!) which was
to go to http://forums.searchenginewatch.com/showthread.php?t=12924
and post my story, which I immediately did. A Google guy, Brian
White, replied. You can see his reply at this link. He had checked
and saw that while Google still had my site indexed, it was blocked.
He recommended applying for "reinclusion" with Google. The first
time I tried that (it is deep in member only section of 'webmaster
tools" of Google AdWords or AdSense account pages) I got nowhere. I
waited a month and nothing happened. I remained blocked.

One day I was uploading some new stories (I was still listed with
Yahoo and the other search engines, but Google has been responsible
for 85% of my traffic) and discovered that when I uploaded a folder
/ directory filled with pages and images which should have replaced
the older folder / directory contents, it only added the new or
changed content leaving all the rest. This was new to me since in
the past on the same server, same account, uploading a folder
replaced all contents of that folder on the server. So having
thought I had replaced all the old, possibly invaded / hacked
folders / directories on my server, I had the uncomfortable feeling
I had lost control of my server space. I dug as deep as I could into
the maze of folders and sub folders but could not find anything
lurking. But I was convinced that Google had found something it did
not like when it came back to re-spider.

During this time, I received an email from another small company who
had seen my post on www.searchenginewatch.com and said they were
with seanic.net as well and had also been hacked just like myself
but a month earlier in May. Now what are the chances of that?

So I took the loss (I had paid a year in advance with seanic.net)
and switched the site to a different host server (www.addr.com).
Then re-applied for "reinclusion" and within 2 days my site was back
up with Google. Hmmmm!

I am not technically trained enough to search the internet and
access logs to prove that my host server had someone who gained
entry to my space to place the porn. Actually I can't prove anything
about anything. Like the other party who had the same experience
with the same host server, we are both in publishing in niche
markets and neither of us has the time to spend digging or to train.
With the help of a WISIWIG site builder, we can design and publish a
site, do some modest SEO (thanks to all the tips on LED I might
say!), but we are working 7 days a week now and cannot train to do
the technical things. Actually our minds do not work in that
direction anyway.

I have a lot in common with the post from the store front owner who
makes the time, but does not have the cash to pay the experts. I too
do my own plumbing and remodeling. When I don't, I always have to
finish off what the pro's did wrong regardless. Anyway, how can you
pick an "expert" out there when the bloody battles here on LED show
that there are as many opinions on how you should do things as there
are "experts" to express them?

One wonders, especially with this debate in Congress that has been
slightly referred to on LED, whether the little guy with shallow
pockets may be pushed out of what has been an equal opportunity
virtual space for almost 10 years. It will be a shame if small,
specialized niche sites are squeezed out.

But for the moment, I guess we should make random passwords, no
whole words. Then we have to store them on our computers where some
hacker can find them. But we will need to change all of them every
few weeks. Hang out at frequent searchenginewatch.com to keep up on
the latest goings on. I suppose we can do that instead of watching
CSI.

Then if we have a problem, make sure we frequent
searchenginewatch.com again to find solutions. Brian White of Google
sure helped me and there are others!

I hope my experience can help anyone else who is unfortunate enough
to have this happen to them. One person who posted had had his
sitemap hacked and links to porn pages inserted. At least that is
what I understood the post to say. And then I think I understand a
variety of people to say that whoever it is that "attaches"
themselves to other peoples sites or hosting, then visits blogs,
forums etc. and posts links to their "parasitic" hack pages and
these links on long after the affected sites have corrected the
problem(s) thus continuing to victimize the person who thinks they
had done what they needed to do. Do any of you have ideas or
experience with this? Can you shed more light on the subject?

OK. Enough. You are probably wanting to get back to Click Fraud or
Tags, far more interesting subjects. But thanks for bearing with me
here and for your valuable advice.

Peter D'Aprix


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