Thursday, 27 January 2011

Blog's rise and fall graphically illustrated

Andy, aka Captain Ahab, commented that he'd noticed this blog's recent rise in the ranking chart, and wondered if it was on account of my having included "999" in the title having attracted lots of "outside" interest.

Is it the headline-grabbing story which pulls in the hits, or the headline itself? The content or the wrapper? Initially it must be the headline which entices people to click, but if the story fails to live up to the promise, then, eventually I suppose, people will not bother. They will have learned that this particular brand of sweets is not to their taste.


The graph, from StatCounter.com , plots daily hits against the date, for the last 30 days. It can be seen that these did indeed peak on 7th January, the date of my post entitled "Thames talk ends in 999 call". But this post was timed for 23:59, so the hits on that day were looking at previous posts. That for the 6th January was called "Timelapse camera captures moment of rescue, against the odds" A bit long for a headline, but there are certainly enticing elements there.

Since that peak of 283 hits that day, the trend has been ever downwards, reflecting the fact that I have allowed several days to go by without a post.

The graph over the last year shows five or six striking peaks.


217 hits on 3rd May 2010, attributable to the Granny Effect, where Andrew Denny highlighted my blog in one of his posts on Granny Buttons

244 hits on 8th September 2010, when I was writing up our propeller losing antics on the Thames

258 hits on 14th September 2010, after a post headed "Boat capsizes"

402 hits on 22nd September 2010, after a post which included "Elvis" in the title

192 hits on 3rd January 2011, after I'd written about the seals on the Norfolk coast

283 hits on 7th January 2011, that's the one referred to above

One of the best headline writers is the afore mentioned Andrew Denny. While researching for this post I rediscovered Andrew's post headed "Halfie films 100-year-old Russell brand" (the post talks about my film about Russell Newbery, the engine maker). What a terrific headline!

Sarah of NB Chertsey is another blogger who knows the value of a good (or should I say sexy?) headline. "Male member" is her latest inducement. I expect her hits will shoot straight up.

Jim of NB Starcross makes the good point that the hits count gives no indication of whether a particular post has been read through from beginning to end (are you still reading this, by the way?). A hit is a hit, whether it lasted a second or an hour. There's no appreciation factor, in other words. How is it, by the way, that some hits can be registered as lasting zero seconds?

Conclusions: A good headline will attract hits, but it helps to be mentioned by people in high places! Frequent posting is essential to keep the hit rate up.

7 comments:

Andy Tidy said...

Halfie
Thats interesting - it almost makes me want to publish risque titles just to see what happens. But thats not really in the spirit of the blog and whilst my mother isn't into computers, I always like to think that the content I post is of a standard that she wouldn't find offensive.
But Oh the temptation....
Glad I gave you an interesting subject to work on.
Andy

Sue said...

Interestingly, on Jan 8th (bearing in mind I don't publish my blog unil between 10pm and midnight) I had my highest hit count ever. A jump from two days previously of 25%.

It was equally as high on the 7th as well.

Was everybody catchng up on reading after the holidays I wonder.

Having said that, since then my stats have been much higher!

Sue said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Sarah said...

My post was, of course, the very opposite of risque... but I think the title was highly relevant nonetheless... Of course, you'll have to read it to find out.

Jim said...

I read once that the newspaper headline guaranteed to maximise sales by incorporating all the elements that readers are interested in would be: "Sex-change soap-star in mercy dash to royal corgi" Perhaps I should try that as a title for my next post?

Andy Tidy said...

Sarah
Please don't think for one minute I was levelling any criticism at your title. As you say, it was entirely appropriate and I really enjoyed the post. I was thinking more along the lines of the headline suggested by Jim.
Andy

Neil Corbett said...

These days I judge the popularity of my posts not by ranking, but by the number of comments received. Being visited is one thing, stimulating people to comment is another.

Nevertheless it's always fun when you get a mention by Granny B and the ratings shoot sky high for a day :-)