Site Statistics
Every visit to your site is recorded by the web server and then
analysed by the Webalizer, a popular program that presents
the logs as meaningful statistics. The Webalizer updates your statistics
at least once per week and often more frequently.
Please take a look through my unofficial notes on what the statistics
mean. If anything is still fuzzy then I will be happy to talk to you: call
Ian on 01302 554988.
How to view your site's statistics
- Type the URL stats.hotchilli.net into your browser's Address
box or click here
- Wait a moment for the login screen to appear
- Type your web site's URL into the box and press Continue
Hotchilli groups your site's statistics by month. From the main screen you
can see how many visits your site has had from month to month. (Only the
last twelve months are displayed.)
What do these stats mean?
The graph will give you a rough visual indication of how busy your
site has been over the year.
Pages
The light blue bar (pages) is an interesting number. This shows
how many pages have been requested by all your visitors over a given time.
(One page may include a number of other files such as graphics and
stylesheets which is why the bright blue bar is larger.)
Visits
Visits (which is the yellow bar on the mini-graph and listed in the table below)
is the most important value; it roughly corresponds to the number of
people who have visited your site.
For example, if Alice finds your site in the morning, looks through
three pages and goes away again then comes back in the evening and looks at four more
pages then her usage counts as two visits.
KBytes
KBytes is the amount of data that is passed from your site to all its visitors.
This number is used by the designers who are performance tuning your site.
Did you know you can have up to 2GB of data transfer per month? That is
equivalent to about 50,000 page views on a typical site!
Files and Hits
These numbers are again more useful to your site's designers. Files
is simply the number of individual files that your web site has sent out to
people. (A single file stores data like a Word document or a photo like
you might have on your own computer.)
Your web designer may change your
web site's files from time to time, but for the most part they are the
same. Because of this, it isn't necessary to keep sending the same file
to your visitors if it hasn't changed since the last time they visited.
Each request is recorded as a hit although a file is
only counted if a file is sent from your web site to the user. (Remember
that it does not need to be sent if it is already on your visitor's hard disk,
that is, in their cache.)
The green bar (hits) will always be bigger than the bright
blue bar (files).
Finding out more
Click on one of the months. You will be taken to a page
filled with many more statistics!
You already know about hits, files, pages, visits and KBytes.
Total Unique Sites
This is the number of different people who have visited
your site. You may be wondering why there's so much jargon.
That's because people aren't the only things to visit your site.
Search engine spiders can also have a browse through your site.
Total Unique URLs
This is roughly the number of different files that have been requested.
Your web site is made up of more files than you probably realise.
Total Unique Referrers
A referrer is a page that links to yours. It is often one of your own pages but
can be a link from a search engine or an affiliate.
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Associated Companies: First Business Systems Ltd Florida.co.uk Ltd
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