Post by account_disabled on Dec 20, 2023 10:34:13 GMT 5.5
Taken into account by the tools that crawl the web. This is the only traffic that is measured by the tools I use. Direct traffic is not measured: What is direct traffic: You know the site address and you type it directly. Example: you type directly into your browser without using a search engine. Shortcut traffic is not measured: You are used to going to a site and you have created a shortcut in your browser. So you can access it quickly by clicking on a link or an icon in your browser. Traffic from social networks is not measured: You are on Facebook. You see content that links to LinkedIn via a link. You click on the link to go to LinkedIn. This traffic is not measured. Traffic from third-party sites is not measured: You are on a site (blog, media, forum, etc.)
You read an article in which there is a link to content on LinkedIn (article, company Email Data page, author profile, etc.), this traffic is not taken into account. Traffic from ads is measured, but I did not take it into account: Traffic from various advertisements (Google advertisements or on social networks, advertisements on sites) is measurable. I did not take it into account for this study. Traffic from ads is measured, but I did not take it into account: You view your LinkedIn profile, your bank or mobile account from an Android or iPhone application, this traffic is not measured. Finally, newsletter traffic is not measured: You receive an email or newsletter to which you are subscribed. You click on a link to go to a site. This traffic is also not measured. I just listed 8 different sources of traffic to a website.
I only used one for my study: is it representative? According to expert sites on the subject (abundance for example), this part can represent up to 80% of a site's traffic . The author of this blog strongly encourages ensuring that this traffic does not exceed 50%. According to the Journal du Net, this traffic represents on average more than 50% of a site's traffic . Which sites did I select to get an idea of what French people are doing on the Internet during the coronavirus crisis? I analyzed the sites of several industries: Automotive: Renault Peugeot Citroën Volkswagen Dacia Banks BNP (my bank) Agricultural credit Société Générale (individuals) Merchants / e-commerce Amazon Baker Castorama Cdiscount Darty Decathlon Fnac.
You read an article in which there is a link to content on LinkedIn (article, company Email Data page, author profile, etc.), this traffic is not taken into account. Traffic from ads is measured, but I did not take it into account: Traffic from various advertisements (Google advertisements or on social networks, advertisements on sites) is measurable. I did not take it into account for this study. Traffic from ads is measured, but I did not take it into account: You view your LinkedIn profile, your bank or mobile account from an Android or iPhone application, this traffic is not measured. Finally, newsletter traffic is not measured: You receive an email or newsletter to which you are subscribed. You click on a link to go to a site. This traffic is also not measured. I just listed 8 different sources of traffic to a website.
I only used one for my study: is it representative? According to expert sites on the subject (abundance for example), this part can represent up to 80% of a site's traffic . The author of this blog strongly encourages ensuring that this traffic does not exceed 50%. According to the Journal du Net, this traffic represents on average more than 50% of a site's traffic . Which sites did I select to get an idea of what French people are doing on the Internet during the coronavirus crisis? I analyzed the sites of several industries: Automotive: Renault Peugeot Citroën Volkswagen Dacia Banks BNP (my bank) Agricultural credit Société Générale (individuals) Merchants / e-commerce Amazon Baker Castorama Cdiscount Darty Decathlon Fnac.