Tag

Bounce Rate

Browsing

By

Bounce rate is a scary thing for people that don’t know the ins and outs of this particular vanity metric. I consider it as a vanity metric since there are a variety of reasons, both good and bad, that can skew the numbers. However, bounce rate is still a metric that can help diagnose what’s wrong with your pages and even your site. How do visitors interact with your pages? Do they find what you’re looking for? Are they not satisfied with what you’re displaying? All of these can be answered by diving deeper into your bounce rate metrics. So, here’s what you need to know about bounce rate and how do you use it to deepen your understanding of your site.

What is Bounce Rate?

A website’s bounce rate is the percentage of users that left the page/site that did not take any further action after entering such as opening a link, clicking a CTA button, filling out a form, etc.

Users that exit immediately without taking further actions are aptly called “bounces”. Since they only opened your page/site then bounced immediately away. 

Where Can I Find My Website’s Bounce Rate?

Your website’s bounce rate is easily viewable in your Google Analytics account. You have to own or at least be able to view our website’s Google Analytics Property. 

Once you’ve opened your site’s GA property, easily maneuver to the Audience dropdown and click on Overview. You’ll immediately see your site’s bounce rate.

Where to find bounce rate in analytics

You can further refine it by checking a specific page’s bounce rate. You can even check the specific bounce rate of the devices used by your site’s visitors. 

What is a Good Bounce Rate?

A good bounce rate differs based on the industry your site is in. That’s why a single study about bounce rate won’t always apply to your website. So, here’s a helpful resource made by Custom Media Labs on benchmark bounce rate averages for different industries:

  • 20% – 45% for e-commerce and retail websites
  • 25% – 55% for B2B websites
  • 30% – 55% for lead generation websites
  • 35% – 60% for non-eCommerce content websites
  • 60% – 90% for landing pages
  • 65% – 90% for dictionaries, portals, blogs, and generally websites that revolve around news and events

You need to remember that these are the industry standards, so if your site’s bounce rate is either higher or lower than the average then there might be something to improve or fix on your site and/or page. So, what are some of the common causes for having too low or too high of a bounce rate?

Why Your Bounce Rate is too High or Low

There are a variety of factors that affect your bounce rate – most of them include on-page factors that you can easily fix, improve, or change. They include:

Site Speed

A slow-loading page or site can be a definite reason for visitors to bounce. Aside from negatively affecting your bounce rate, a slow loading speed will also affect your site’s rankings. Why? Because Google has stated the importance of better page loading speed since it will be a part of the Page Experience Update that will be rolled out in 2021. 

So, not only will you improve your bounce rate by speeding up your site, but it will also help you adjust to the upcoming algorithm update. To help you start, here’s a complete guide on optimizing for the core web vitals – an integral part of the page experience update. Additionally, there is a multitude of resources that you can use to check your site’s current loading speed.

Title Tag and Meta Description

Maybe the problem isn’t what’s on your page, but what the users see before they enter your page. Your page’s title tag and meta description is the introduction to your page – it sets the expectations of the user, and it’s their first impression of your page. This means that what is contained in the title tag and meta description will be the one dictating what they expect to see inside your page. So, if your page does not align with what your title tag and meta description says, that’s an automatic bounce. 

Misleading title tag and meta description is a simple problem to fix since you have direct control over these factors and you can search for a keyword that the page ranks for to check how it looks in the SERPs. Either align what is contained in the content with your title tag and meta description or adjust the meta tags to better fit the content of the page.

Low-Quality Content 

Aside from having misleading meta tags, another possibility is that your page’s content is not up to par with what the user wants to see or it simply does not contain the answer they were looking for. 

This is where search intent and proper content optimization comes into play. Why? Because when you have a proper understanding of these two facets, it will help you create specialized content that users would want to see. 

Mobile Optimization

On a more technical aspect, it is possible that your website is not properly optimized for mobile. This is especially alarming in this day and age where most of the searches are made through mobile devices. 

So, if your site is not mobile-optimized, this means that the design is low-quality, text may be hard to read, and gives an overall bad experience to the visitor. 

Work with your developers to avoid this particular instance since this is much like the slow loading speed wherein it does not only lead to a negative bounce rate, but it also affects your site’s rankings.

UI/UX

Another technical aspect of your site is its UI and UX. Is the site’s design pleasing to the user’s eyes? Is navigation to specific pages easily achievable? Do the design elements not interfere with your visitor’s experience in your site? 

Those are just some of the things that you have to take note of when it comes to understanding bounce rate since there will always be times where you won’t be able to determine which factor negatively affects your bounce rate until you think about the page or site’s design at the end. 

Google Analytics or Google Tag Manager

Lastly, bounce rate is calculated by Google Analytics. This means that proper implementation of the GA or GTM tag is essential to having an accurate bounce rate. There are multiple instances where the improper implementation of your GA or GTM code can lead to skewed analytics data, such as:

  • The tag was installed multiple times in the site’s source code which leads to multiple hits being fired when only a single user entered your site. This significantly lowers your bounce rate which is, simply, skewed data.
  • Not all pages have the tag installed in their source code. This means that the data you’re seeing in your Google Analytics account is skewed as well.

Key Takeaway

Bounce rate is not the metric you want to be using to measure the success of your website and even your SEO. But that does not mean that it has no potential uses. A bounce rate is a metric that will help you gain deeper insights into how users interact with your site. How your content fares, your new design or pop-up, etc. All of these can be measured using bounce rate, among other data. 

It’s up to the SEO and webmaster how they gain those important insights and how they use bounce rate as a stepping stone to improve their site’s performance and search success. What’s your experience with bounce rate? Let us know in the comments below!

By

is a Filipino motivational speaker and a Leadership Speaker in the Philippines. He is the head honcho and editor-in-chief of SEO Hacker. He does SEO Services for companies in the Philippines and Abroad. Connect with him at Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter. Check out his new project, Aquascape Philippines

Sourced from SEO HACKER

By Jasmeen Gagnon.

The success of your website highly depends on users visiting more than one page and a low bounce rate will definitely increase the probability of more conversions and sales. In this article, we’ll discuss some tips and tricks on how to reduce bounce rate of your website.

 

What is bounce rate?

Before explaining the term bounce rate, we should first understand what actually Google calls a bounce. Whenever a user closes your website after visiting only one page, a single request is sent to the Google Analytics to record that session. Bounce rate refers to the total number of these single page sessions divided by the total number of sessions. The success of your website (not a blog) highly depends on users visiting more than one page and a low bounce rate will definitely increase the probability of more conversions and sales. In this article, we’ll discuss some tips and tricks on how to reduce bounce rate of your website.

Designing Your Website

Google highly recommends and encourage businesses to use internal links on their website either in the form of texts or images. It doesn’t only help in creating a site architecture but also makes it easy for users to navigate and search the information they are looking for. Once users are satisfied with the layout of your website, they will probably be visiting more than one page resulting in low bounce rate. Adding relevant images, videos, GIFs or other rich media also plays an important factor in increasing the stay of a user on your website. Having said that, you will also need to optimize your page loading times. If you use very high resolution images, pages on your website might take more time to load. This will not only make your user unhappy but also increase the bounce rate of your website.

Following Google’s Guidelines

Content also plays an important role in making a user decide whether to stay on a website or not. Google wants you to write what the users want to read, it’s simple. Google always strives to enhance the experience of their users while they are searching on web and in doing so, wants us to write the content for them, not for the Google itself. So if your website’s content answers the questions of users, then the user will spend more time on site. You can use Adword’s Keyword Planner or SEM rush tool to find the relevant keywords for your business.

Resolve Referral Spam Issue with .htaccess File

Referral spam seems to be the biggest headache for website owners. It doesn’t only create fake traffic to your website that increases the bounce rate but can also negatively affect the performance of your website. There are several solutions to overcome this problem however, the most effective one is through adding a code in your .htaccess file. You probably need the help of a developer or a technical person to do so but once it’s done, you’ll be able to stop referral spamming to your website.

Traffic Analysis

Do you want to know the global or country rank or any other traffic analysis of your website? Then you must check out similarweb.com. Just put your domain name and it will give you all the traffic analysis you want. It also gives you the option to compare the performance of your website with your competitors as well. All these analysis will definitely help you in making informed decisions for your business.

Create Relevant Backlinks

Getting links from other websites is the most effective SEO strategy along with onsite SEO, however, relevancy is the key factor that most of the SEO consultants sometimes ignore. Creating backlinks on car dealership websites for an online flower shop might increase the traffic on your website but this strategy will result in high bounce rate for your website. In order to increase your sales and leads, you should get backlinks from a relevant and trusted source.

Live Chat Solution

One of the most effective strategies to reduce the bounce rate is to integrate Live Chat on your website. People are no longer interested in waiting for phone calls, rather they want answers to their questions immediately on your website. The chat agent from a Live Chat company will not only answer visitor’s questions but will also direct them to relevant links from your website for more information. This will result in enhancing user experience on your website and get more meaningful leads for your business. This solution is ideal for those businesses as well who get a fair amount of traffic from their current clients, the live chat agents can answer questions on your behalf, saving your precious time and retaining your existing customers.

Implementing Tools

Crazy Egg is an amazing tool that can help you identify all the spots of your websites being clicked by the users, where they aren’t clicking, how many people scroll down your pages to read the information and much more. It’s also important that your website should not have any broken links (page that has an error) and regularly checking your website if there is any link not working using broken link check.

These little strategies if implemented, will definitely help you reducing bounce rate of your website and a gradual increase in your leads. Please don’t hesitate to ask any question in comments section.

By Jasmeen Gagnon.

Sourced from Digital Doughnut

By Annelieke van den Berg

Is it purely a visitor that hits the back button or is there more to it? And what can you tell by looking at the bounce rate of a webpage? In this post, I want to show you what it is, what it means and how you can improve your bounce rate.

What’s bounce rate?

Bounce rate is a metric that measures the percentage of people who land on your website, and do completely nothing on the page they entered. So they don’t click on a menu item, a ‘read more’ link, or any other internal links on the page. This means that the Google Analytics server doesn’t receive a trigger from the visitor. A user bounces when there has been no engagement with the landing page and the visit ends with a single-page visit. You can use bounce rate as a metric that indicates the quality of a webpage and/or the “quality” of your audience. By quality of your audience I mean whether the audience fits the purpose of your site.

How does Google Analytics calculate bounce rate?

According to Google bounce rate is calculated in the following way:

Bounce rate is single-page sessions divided by all sessions, or the percentage of all sessions on your site in which users viewed only a single page and triggered only a single request to the Analytics server.

In other words, it collects all sessions where a visitor only visited one page and divides it by all sessions.

Having a high bounce rate can mean three things:
1. The quality of the page is low. There’s nothing inviting to engage with.
2. Your audience doesn’t match the purpose of the page, as they won’t engage with your page.
3. Visitors have found the information that they were looking for.

I’ll get back to the meaning of bounce rate further below.

Bounce rate and SEO

In this post, I’m talking about bounce rate in Google Analytics. There’s been a lot of discussion about whether bounce rate is an SEO ranking factor. In my opinion, I can hardly imagine that Google takes Google Analytics’ data as a ranking factor, because if Google Analytics isn’t implemented correctly, then the data isn’t reliable. Moreover, you can easily manipulate the bounce rate.

Luckily, several Googlers say the same thing: Google doesn’t use Google Analytics’ data in their search algorithm. But, of course, you need to make sure that when people come from a search engine to your site, they don’t bounce back to the search results, since that kind of bouncing probably is a ranking factor. It might be measured in a different way though, than the bounce rate we see in Google Analytics.

From a holistic SEO perspective, you need to optimize every aspect of your site. So looking closely at your bounce rate, can help you optimize your website even further, which contributes to your SEO.

How to interpret bounce rates?

The height of your bounce rate and whether that’s a good or a bad thing, really depends on the purpose of the page. If the purpose of the page is to purely inform, then a high bounce rate isn’t a bad thing per se. Of course you’d like people to read more articles on your website, subscribe to your newsletter and so on. But when they’ve only visited a page to, for instance, read a post or find an address, then it isn’t surprising that they close the tab after they’re done reading. Mind you, also in this case, there’s no trigger sent to the Google Analytics server, thus it’s a bounce.

A clever thing to do, when you own a blog, is creating a segment that only contains ‘New visitors’. If the bounce rate amongst new visitors is high, think about how you could improve their engagement with your site. Because you do want new visitors to engage with your site.

If the purpose of a page is to actively engage with your site, then a high bounce rate is a bad thing. Let’s say you have a page that has one goal: get visitors to subscribe to your newsletter. If that page has a high bounce rate, then you might need to optimize the page itself. By adding a clear call-to-action, a ‘Subscribe to our newsletter’ button, for instance, you could lower that bounce rate.

But there can be other causes for a high bounce rate on a newsletter subscription page. In case you’ve lured visitors in under false pretenses, you shouldn’t be surprised when these visitors don’t engage with your page. They probably expected something else when landing on your subscription page. On the other hand, if you’ve been very clear from the start with what visitors could expect on the subscription page, a low bounce rate could say something about the quality of the visitors – they could be very motivated to get the newsletter – and not per se about the quality of the page.

Bounce rate and conversion

If you look at bounce rate from a conversion perspective, then bounce rate can be used as a metric to measure success. For instance, let’s say you’ve changed the design of your page hoping that it will convert better, then make sure to keep an eye on the bounce rate of that page. If you’re seeing an increase in bounces, the change in design you’ve made might have been the wrong change and it could explain the low conversion rate you have.

You could also check the bounce rate of your most popular pages. Which pages have a low and which pages have a high bounce rate? Compare the two, then learn from the pages with low bounce rates.

Another way of looking at your bounce rate, is from a traffic sources perspective. Which traffic sources lead to a high or a low bounce rate? Your newsletter for instance? Or a referral website that sends a lot of traffic? Can you figure out what causes this bounce rate? And if you’re running an AdWords campaign, you should keep an eye on the bounce rate of that traffic source as well.

Be careful with drawing conclusions though…

We’ve seen loads of clients with a bounce rate that was unnaturally low. All alarm bells should go off, especially if you don’t expect it, as that probably means that Google Analytics isn’t implemented correctly. There are several things that influence bounce rate, because they send a trigger to the Google Analytics server and Google Analytics falsely recognizes it as an engagement. Usually, an unnaturally low bounce rate is caused by an event that triggers the Google Analytics server. Think of pop-ups, auto-play of videos or an event you’ve implemented that fires after 1 second.

Of course, if you’ve created an event that tracks scrolling counts, then having a low bounce rate is a good thing. It shows that people actually scroll down the page and read your content.

How to lower high bounce rates?

The only way of lowering your bounce rate is by amping up the engagement on your page. In my opinion, there are two ways of looking at bounce rate. From a traffic perspective and from a page perspective.

If certain traffic sources have high bounce rates, then you need to look at the expectations of those visitors coming to your site. Let’s say you’re running an ad on another website, and most people coming to your site via that ad bounce, then you’re not making their wish come true. You’re not living up to their expectations. Review the ad you’re running and see if it matches the page you’re showing. If not, make sure the page is a logical follow-up of the ad or vice versa.

If your page lives up to the expectations of your visitors, and the page still has a high bounce rate, then you have to look at the page itself. How’s the usability of the page? Is there a call-to-action above the fold on the page? Do you have internal links that point to related pages or posts? Do you have a menu that’s easy to use? Does the page invite people to look further on your site? These are all things you need to consider when optimizing your page.

What about exit rate?

The bounce rate is frequently mistaken for the exit rate. Literally, the exit rate is the percentage of pageviews that were last in the session. It says something about users deciding to end their session on your website on that particular page. Google’s support page gives some clear examples of the exit rates and bounce rates which makes the difference very clear. This comes directly from their page:

Monday: Page B > Page A > Page C > Exit
Tuesday: Page B > Exit
Wednesday: Page A > Page C > Page B > Exit
Thursday: Page C > Exit
Friday: Page B > Page C > Page A > Exit

The % Exit and Bounce Rate calculations are:

Exit Rate:
Page A: 33% (3 sessions included Page A, 1 session exited from Page A)
Page B: 50% (4 sessions included Page B, 2 sessions exited from Page B)
Page C: 50% (4 sessions included Page C, 2 sessions exited from Page C)

Bounce Rate:
Page A: 0% (one session began with Page A, but that was not a single-page session, so it has no Bounce Rate)
Page B: 33% (Bounce Rate is less than Exit Rate, because 3 sessions started with Page B, with one leading to a bounce)
Page C: 100% (one session started with Page C, and it lead to a bounce)

Conclusion

Bounce rate is a metric you can use to analyze your marketing efforts. You can use it to measure if you’re living up to your visitors’ expectations. And you can use the bounce rate to decide which pages need more attention. Meeting your visitors’ expectations and making your pages more inviting for visitors all leads to creating an awesome website. And we all know that awesome websites rank better!

By Annelieke van den Berg

Annelieke van den Berg manages the Content, SEO and Brand department at Yoast. She has her Master’s degree in Sociology and focuses on all things related to marketing. Read all about Annelieke »
View her other posts or find her on Linkedin

Sourced from yoast

Sourced from Medium.

If you are thinking about some secrets which keep the visitors sustain on the site and reduce bounce rate?

Literally maximum number of users criticizes about not to find the concrete solution of such problems. Visitors leave the site straight away, when they either don’t get the desired information or all of the web design elements like photo, typography, and colors are annoying and not proper.

So why people go away from you website immediately without clicking anywhere and going further in Web Designing Gurgaon. So check here out how you can improve visitors on websites and reduce bounce rate:

Improve Content Readability — Your website website design will useless, if the content of the website is not readable and accurate so it easy to read by visitors. Mainly:

· Throw more light on the topic by using subheadings

· Use bullet points to explain more deeply

· Use charts, screenshots, images, and quote

· Bold important terms and keywords, but don’t overdo this.

· To interesting ask few questions which inspire visitors to participate.

Avoid Popup- It is natural that visitors get irritates by immaterial pop-ups and also even Google started penalizing the website that uses worthless popup. So it is good to remove popup.

Compelling call to action (CTA) — CTA is one of the important website elements as it engages users and leads them to visit to resource page and reduces bounce rate. So it is compulsory to make it compelling and actionable. Use always effectual call to action. Always start with verbs, get started now, add few adjective and Keep things simple and precise

Story Telling– Now attract visitors with your content with an engaging story as it captivates the mind of your target audience and makes the content appealing and dynamic.

Use relevant content– Always use relevant and useful content and add fresh content on a regular basis which builds impetus and establish faith.

Utilize Interactivity– Should use animations and additional interactive to hold visitors attention

Add Live Chat– Use a live chat module on your site to have someone there to answer questions of visitors.

Image Optimization- Images are worth a thousand words and a very necessary part of web designing. It enables visitors to get more detailed information about business nature

Easy Navigation– Make sure that website must have easy navigation for a successful website and it helps in creating user friendly website.

If really wants to increase visitors website and reduce bounce rate so contact Web Designing Company in Gurgaon for making a website compelling. We are having a dedicated and experienced team of web professionals who always use cutting edge and latest technology and leave no stone unturned to develop overall performance of the business website

Gap Infotech

Looking for a trustworthy and affordable web design company in Gurgaon! Visit now at http://www.gapinfotech.com

Sourced from Medium