Website popularity is commonly determined using the number of unique users, and the metric is often quoted to potential advertisers or investors.[1] A website's number of unique users is usually measured over a standard period of time, typically a month. "Unique" is a term of art in this context that means distinct and does not count repeat visits or uses by the same person.[2][3]
Unique visitor
Unique visitors refers to the number of distinct individuals requesting pages from a website during a given period, regardless of how often they visit.[1] Because a visitor can make multiple visits in a specified period, the number of visits may be greater than the number of visitors. A visitor is sometimes referred to as a unique visitor or a unique user to clearly convey the idea that each visitor is only counted once.[1]
The purpose of tracking unique visitors is to help marketers understand website user behavior.
The measurement of users or visitors requires a standard time period and can be distorted by automatic activity (such as bots) that classify web content. Estimation of visitors, visits, and other traffic statistics are usually filtered to remove this type of activity by eliminating known IP addresses for bots, by requiring registration or cookies, or by using panel data.[1]
Understanding unique users numbers
Similar to the TURF (total unduplicated reach and frequency) metric often used in television, radio and newspaper analyses, unique users is a measure of the distribution of content to a number of distinct consumers.
A common mistake in using unique user numbers is adding up such numbers across dimensions. A unique user metric is valid only for its given set of dimensions, e.g. time and browsers. For example, a website may have 100 unique users on each day (day being the dimension) of a particular week. With only this data, one cannot extrapolate the number of weekly unique users (only that the unique user count for the week is between 100 and 700). However, website administrators who can track unique user traffic over a longer period of time can generate a reliable view on a website's performance against direct competitors within the sector. Online businesses tend to have a stable conversion rate between unique users and new business clients.
When calculating movement of unique users through the conversion funnel, the same time period must be used at every step.
Limitations
Use of performance indicators like unique visitors or users has been criticized. Greg Harmon of Belden Research inferred that many companies reporting their online performance "may overstate" the number of unique visitors due to the limitations of the metric. This is because an increasing number of people now access websites through multiple physical devices with different IP addresses, and thus may be counted multiple times. Websites that track users using cookies instead of IP addresses are not safe either, as some users regularly delete cookies from their devices, and others may use multiple web browsers to access a single website. This means that for a typical news site, for example, which people might visit more than once a day to keep up with breaking news, the reported number of unique users may overstate the number of different people by a factor of four.
See also
Further reading
- "Meaning of unique user in English". Cambridge Dictionary.
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 Farris, Paul W.; Neil T. Bendle; Phillip E. Pfeifer; David J. Reibstein (2010). Marketing Metrics: The Definitive Guide to Measuring Marketing Performance. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education, Inc. ISBN 0-13-705829-2. The Marketing Accountability Standards Board (MASB) endorses the definitions, purposes, and constructs of classes of measures that appear in Marketing Metrics as part of its ongoing Common Language: Marketing Activities and Metrics Project.
- ↑ "'unique user'". Cambridge Dictionary.
- ↑ "What is a Unique User? | Adtech Glossary". smartclip. Retrieved 2023-10-30.