Forum Moderators: Robert Charlton & goodroi
I find it curious as if google had a predetermined average traffic to allow to my site. Doesn’t look “random”.
I also noticed that my traffic increases during September and January months. These months, I experience excessive surge in traffic on some days. After these months, traffic stabilizes again, but higher on average than the previous stable months, as if a new plateau was allowed for my site after these specific months. Once this new plateau is set, google will keep sending almost same traffic each day for the other months until the new "plateau" months.
Has anyone noticed similar behaviour?
Cordially,
Brakkar
I'm just guessing, of course, but imho you're probably just seeing demographics in action.
1) Isp caching. They are getting very good at this, so during the day people are calling your site from the isp cache and not making a call on your server. This could mean that after most of the big isp's cache your page, you just won't know who and how many people are viewing the page.
2) The stats package resolves visitors to only the first few digits of an ip address. Thus, a server which 10 visitors have logged onto and then visited your site, resolves to only one 'unique' visitor as far as the stats software is concerned. This can really screw your data.
Both the above could create a dampening of your visitor count, as the day progresses.
I like to know if the search engines have that much control over our search traffic?
While there are many sources of traffic, search engines are certainly a big one. But why would they artifically control traffic on a per-domain basis? That wouldn't fit into their mission or business purpose, from the way I see it, and I really doubt that they would put any resources in that kind of direction. The leveling-off phenomenon we can see is probably more controlled by a steady and finite amount of interest in our particular topics.
Second, say you rank in the top 10 for a given term; how are Google going to put a cap on your traffic? Prevent people from making that search? Drop you from the search results towards the end of the day if you have taken more than your share of traffic? This effect has, to the best of my knowledge, never been reported.
Hey, sailoer, maybe your examples are not very well written so people have to keep coming back to understand them :)
Would seem clear Google could not limit referrals and there also seem to be "natural levels." For example, with a medium sized, single topic site without massive ad campaigns or questionable techniques it has always seemed hard to break the barrier of around 1,000 uniques per day from Google. I've had several sites build steadily to around that threshhold and then stall.