Ah, one of the most-asked questions re: Web stats like Google Analytics. Bounce rate is the percentage of visitors that leave your website after viewing one page, i.e. they come to your site then “bounce” (bounce bounce come on bounce). So, a bounce rate for any given page means that X% of people who landed on that page left without going to any other pages.
So that’s bad right?
Not necessarily. You’re right, it could mean that the page didn’t appeal to the visitor. But, it could be that the page answered all their questions and the visitor left satisfied. A good companion metric is “time on site”, like this:
If it’s reasonably high, then people are reading the page, whereas a low time probably means it’s not what the visitor was looking for.
Blogs are great examples of potentially misleading bounce rates. With most blogs you can read 7-10 posts without leaving the home page, so the bounce rate could be high, but that doesn’t mean people are just “bouncing” away. This is where time on site comes in handy.
So there you have it, bounce rates. Analyzing what they mean really depends on the situation and other metrics. Feel free to ask any question below.
What’s a websites rake rate rattelsnake?
Thanks for your question Butch!
Our rate for raking is of course the standard $20.00 rate for small yards, and $35.00 for larger lawns. Let us know how we can fulfill your landscaping needs!
Please address my rattlesnake query in the context of websites.
Holy shizint, this is so cool thank you.
Well that’s a very interesting point, Butch.
Websites are often like rattlesnakes because websites rattlesnakes websites rattlesnakes webnake rattlite. snake.
Frankly I think that’s abteulsoly good stuff.
Excellent, I am satisfied and educated. Yet another customer becoming a better human by the hands of SayHitHere
What’s a bounce rate?
Thanks to have consulted for you, new business contact!
Quick fix though: We’re actually Say Hit, the here was added in the url because we couldn’t get the right domain.
Bounce