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February 6, 2003

Web Branding Takes Hold As Direct Navigation Is Most Popular Method For Delivering Users To Web Sites

By WebSideStory

More Efficient Web Surfing on the Rise as Users Know Exactly Where They Want to Go, According to WebSideStory's StatMarket

WebSideStory, Inc. ( www.websidestory.com), the leader in outsourced Web analytics, today reported that the majority of Internet sites worldwide are reached through direct navigation - typing a URL in their browser address bar or using a bookmark - rather than through search engines and Web links. As of February 3, 2003, over 64 percent of Internet users arrived at sites by direct navigation, compared to about 53 percent only a year ago, according to WebSideStory's StatMarket division, a leading source of data on global Internet user trends. Web links are anything that links from one site to another, including text links and ad banners.

"The days of Web users randomly 'surfing' to sites is ending. Now, more than ever, people know exactly where they want to go on the Web," said Geoff Johnston, vice president of product marketing for StatMarket. "This does not mean search sites or other Web links are now less important, because users still have to initially find a site before they can bookmark it. However, having a site worth returning to is becoming increasingly important to businesses."

StatMarket (www.statmarket.com) aggregates information from millions of Internet users a day to thousands of sites worldwide using WebSideStory's market-leading HitBox® (www.hitbox.com) Web analytics services. StatMarket helps Web site designers and software developers build the most effective sites and products possible. HitBox helps businesses optimize their online marketing and merchandising initiatives by providing detailed, real-time analysis of online visitor and customer behavior.


Global Internet Usage share

Search Engines Have More Than Twice the Conversion Rate of Other Acquisition Sources, According to WebSideStory

Direct Navigation Still Ranks No. 1, However, Highlighting the Importance of Branding and Customer Loyalty in Converting Visitors
SAN DIEGO, CA (Jan. 30, 2006) — Search engines have more than twice the e-commerce conversion rate of other traffic acquisition sources, showing why marketers have paid so much attention to the online channel over the past few years, according to a first-of-its kind study from WebSideStory, Inc. (Nasdaq: WSSI), a leading provider of on-demand digital marketing applications. During the last three months of 2005, the search engine conversion rate at business-to-consumer e-commerce web sites was 2.30 percent, more than twice the conversion rate of other acquisition sources (0.96 percent), which include banner ads, affiliate marketing links, shopping search engines and other referring links, according to the WebSideStory Index, a new statistical barometer that features techno-graphic and e-commerce trends culled from the millions of users that visit web sites using the company’s award-winning web analytics technology, HBX. However, search engines, including both paid and organic listings, still trailed direct navigation* conversion rates (4.23 percent), including bookmarks, by nearly double, according to the index.

“For several years now, search engine marketing and optimization has dominated online marketing, and this data shows why: it’s far more effective at converting visitors into buyers than most other acquisition sources taken as a whole,” said Ali Behnam, senior digital marketing consultant for WebSideStory. “But as this data also shows, the best conversion rate still comes from good old fashioned branding and customer loyalty, where visitors either bookmark your site or type your URL directly into the address bar.”

The disparity in conversion rate between acquisition sources can vary by e-commerce category. For example, the search engine conversion rate for “toys” jumped to 4 percent – nearly equaling the 4.85 percent conversion rate for direct navigation in that category – while dropping to 1.35 percent for “computers and electronics.” “It makes sense that search engine users, who arrive at sites they may not be familiar with, are much less likely to purchase a big-ticket item, such as a computer or television, than they are for a toy,” Behnam said.

“This unique study provides a high-level view of conversion rates by acquisition source, but for much more granular information, including up-to-the-second ROI data, marketers will want to use an enterprise-class web analytics solution to properly refine and adjust their marketing spend,” said Jeff Lunsford, chairman and CEO of WebSideStory.

HBX Analytics is an award-winning, on-demand web analytics solution that provides actionable information about online visitor and customer behavior. It is part of WebSideStory’s Active Marketing Suite, the industry’s first suite of integrated, on-demand digital marketing applications including web analytics, site search, web content management and, later this year, keyword bid management. For more information, please visit www.websidestory.com.

Conversion Rate by Acquisition Source

 

 

 
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