Find a Hidden Fortune in Your Website 'Stats'

Written by Jim Edwards


Most people never bother to look atrepparttar statistics program that comes with virtually every website because few realizerepparttar 132804 goldmine of information it contains.

Your website statistics holdrepparttar 132805 key for understanding your traffic, improving sales and increasingrepparttar 132806 overall effectiveness of your online selling. Whether you realize it or not, your website has 'critical numbers' that enable you to measurerepparttar 132807 overall success of your Internet presence.

Any serious website operator should understandrepparttar 132808 four most important numbers: Hits; Unique, Targeted Visitors; Leads; Sales.

Hits - Hits are typically page views, whether byrepparttar 132809 same or different visitors, and indicate overall activity onrepparttar 132810 site.

A lot of hits shows activity (usually a good thing), but doesn't necessarily mean you've had a high number of visitors. Search engine 'spiders' and surfers hitting their back buttons also uprepparttar 132811 hit count.

Research has shown that, depending onrepparttar 132812 size of your site,repparttar 132813 ratio of hits to visitors will range anywhere from 2 to 1 allrepparttar 132814 way up to 12 to 1.

Unique, Targeted Visitors - people surfing to your site who have not been there before within a certain period of time. Depending onrepparttar 132815 statistics program you use, a unique visitor may be someone who hasn't been to your site in a day or a week, while in other programs a visitor remains unique until you resetrepparttar 132816 stats.

You must understand how your stats program classifies unique visitors so you don't mistakenly believe your site is getting 30 unique visitors a day only to find out it isrepparttar 132817 same 30 people coming back day after day!

Web Accessibility. . . Making your Pages Friendly to People with Disabilities

Written by Robin Nobles


Did you know that nearly 20 percent of all Web users have some form of disability?

“Making your site accessible for all is a matter of courtesy, is good business practice, and is not difficult,” explains Robert Roberts, a professional SEO who ownsrepparttar SEO Toolbox (http://www.seotoolbox.com).

In fact, Roberts believes that Web accessibility issues are so important that he’s been having monthly chat sessions onrepparttar 132799 subject for students atrepparttar 132800 Academy of Web Specialists (http://www.onlinewebtraining.com/courses.html). He’s also created a special section of his Web site that’s devoted to accessibility issues (http://www.seotoolbox.com/htmlchat/accessibility.html).

Roberts states that disabilities can be anything from “simple” color blindness to more severe disabilities.

The Use of Alt Text to Solve Accessibility Issues

“Let's start with image alt tags. You can userepparttar 132801 alt tag to your advantage, not just for SEO purposes. The alt description tells those users with assistive technologies whatrepparttar 132802 image is about.

“There isrepparttar 132803 issue of lots of clear images meant to be used as spacers in layouts. Should you use an alt tag for every one of those? Yes, in a sense, you use what's calledrepparttar 132804 Null Alt, meaning an empty alt tag, like this: alt="". Notice that there is no space betweenrepparttar 132805 quotes, which means that assistive devices will bypassrepparttar 132806 image and not try to explain it. But if you don't use it, assistive devices will show a blank whererepparttar 132807 image would be or cause other display issues.

“The alt tag for navigation images is critical. Actually, you should use text navigation wherever possible, as good SEO’s, but there are times whenrepparttar 132808 layout uses buttons, which brings up another issue - that of navigation preceding content.”

Solvingrepparttar 132809 Problem of Navigation Preceding Content

Roberts continues, “When a person using an assistive device opens a Web page, he or she is usually greeted by lots of navigation before getting torepparttar 132810 content. Furthermore, an assistive device like a screen reader will read ALL ofrepparttar 132811 navigation every single time. One solution is to include a "skip navigation" link that allowsrepparttar 132812 person to jump torepparttar 132813 page content. This can be inrepparttar 132814 form of a tiny hidden clear image linked to an anchor tag.

“If you would like to see an example, take a look atrepparttar 132815 source code for any page at SEO Toolbox (http://www.seotoolbox.com). The logo atrepparttar 132816 top ofrepparttar 132817 page is linked torepparttar 132818 menu, becauserepparttar 132819 menu markup is actually atrepparttar 132820 bottom ofrepparttar 132821 HTML code. You would be able to use this strategy with any assistive device or in a text browser like Lynx.”

Why Accessibility Issues Are So Important These Days

“One ofrepparttar 132822 reasons all of this is so important,” says Roberts, “is because of a lawsuit in progress that looks like it may get torepparttar 132823 Supreme Court. A blind man in Florida is suing Southwest Airlines because he is unable to complete normal transactions on their Web site."

By means of explanation,repparttar 132824 Americans with Disabilities Act provides provisions onrepparttar 132825 accessibility of public accommodations torepparttar 132826 disabled, and this isrepparttar 132827 Act that is being referenced inrepparttar 132828 case.

The plaintiffs inrepparttar 132829 case claim that Congress wroterepparttar 132830 ADA so broadly thatrepparttar 132831 Internet is covered, meaning that it 'applies to Internet Web sites just as it does to brick-and-mortar facilities like movie theaters and department stores.'

The defendants (Southwest Airlines and American Airlines) have takenrepparttar 132832 position that Congress never meant to includerepparttar 132833 Internet, because cyberspace was in its infancy atrepparttar 132834 timerepparttar 132835 law was written. So,repparttar 132836 argument is whether a Web site is a 'public accommodation' under Title III ofrepparttar 132837 ADA.

“But," continues Roberts, "there is a precedent that will surely influencerepparttar 132838 outcome. In Australia, a similar suit was brought a couple of years ago by a blind person againstrepparttar 132839 Olympic Committee because he could not get tickets online. The suit resulted in a win for him: a $20,000 damage settlement.

“What all this means is that sooner or later, any Internet site offering goods and services will have to comply with accessibility standards.”

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