So you finally created your blog and spent hours setting it up and adding content. How can you tell how well you’re doing compared to the rest of the web? There are a handful of ways that are industry accepted, one of them being Alexa. If you haven’t met her yet, oh you will; what a love affair you must have with her.
Alexa markets herself as a web information company and provides “Free web traffic, metrics, top sites lists, site demographics, hot urls, and more…” but why do you need to care about all that? You might not need all that just yet. But even if you don’t use any of Alexa’s free offerings, you want to, at a minimum, know your rank. Just go to Alexa and type in your URL. You’ll get a results page and without going into great detail, you’ll want to look at your Alexa Traffic Rank, which I’m sure will be in the high millions if you show up at all, depending on how new your blog is.
One way to look at it is that the internet is popularity contest. If your Alexa Traffic Rank is 20,000,000, that means you are the 20 millionth most popular website on the planet! Alexa basically combines your average daily visitors and your average pageviews over the last three months. The website with the highest score will be have Alexa Rank: 1, which is currently held by Google (2 is Yahoo and 3 is Facebook, if you’re curious).
Whenever I tell people about Alexa, they immediately start entering every website they can think of off the top of their heads just to see Alexa Ranks. To save yourself the trouble, just add an Alexa add-on for Firefox so you’ll see Alexa Rankings and much more right on your status bar. So while you’re web surfing, all you have to do is look down and see the Alexa Rank for that particular website.
There are other ways to measure the relevance of your blog but what Alexa gives you is a good gauge of where you stand. It’s fun watching your blog move up the rankings and hopefully, Alexa will be a motivator for you to chip away at improving it.
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I am a business professional
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I’m all about Alexa for helping determine your page popularity. It also has a few other cool features too. Once you break the top 100,000 alexa will start keeping track of your demographics which can be helpful for tuning your content.
One thing about Alexa that should be noted is that it only counts traffic from people with the Alexa toolbar, so tech savvy sites tend to rank slightly higher for their given amount of traffic than say, dating sites…
Good points there, Blake. I can’t wait to hit that magical 99,999 mark one day!
[...] easy enough. This site, in two short months, is about to break the one million Alexa rank mark (learn more about Alexa rank)! To be honest, I can’t say for certain how much credit I can give to TrafficSwarm since I [...]
[...] If we used hits as a measuring stick, that would skew the data, wouldn’t it? That’s why Alexa uses pageviews, not [...]
Thanks for the information. It is really valuable!
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This post was mentioned on Twitter by Buildify: Alexa rank: what you need to know as a new blogger http://bte.tc/h-w #RTW…
oh man thanks.
I think that alexa ranking is not working properly due to the fact that you can scam it easy using their status bar.
Recently I found an alternative to Alexa addon for firefox, it is called Search Status and it is showing both Alexa and Google PR.
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From my own experience I can tell that getting your Alexa rank decrease up to 1 million is the easiest part, the hardest is to get in the first 100k.
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I like Alexa rank more than Google PR only due to the fact that it can be counted easier, plus it shows me more useful information.
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