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Alexa

Not in top 100,000

         

FridayNight

1:44 pm on Jun 6, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



A suggestion to Alexa.com guys: Please remove that "Not in top 100,000" sign and show the data even if a website is below top 100,000. Sites are getting build every day and you should at least move that to "Not in top 300,000" after years. What do you think AlexaGuy? :)

Matt Probert

3:41 pm on Jun 6, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Is a ranking below 100,000 of any relevance? We rank around 25,000 and even that seems pretty irrelevant, a straw pole at the local pub revealed that ordinary punters were not impressed by our boast of being in the top 25,000 web sites!

Matt

twist

4:33 am on Jun 7, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



According to a source I read their are currently 53 million registered domain names. It would seem getting in to even the top 1 million is an accomplishment. I could sleep well at night knowing my domain is doing better than 52 million other domains. Having said that, I am at the 4.2 million mark.

JKMitchell

11:45 am on Jun 8, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Doesn't the Alexa rank come from people using their tool bar?

If so I guess you can inflate your position if you take long enough and visit enough of your own pages ;-)

partnermine

11:46 am on Jun 15, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Alexa is a wholly irrelevant service. It takes 2 visits per day yourself with a toolbar equipped (hampered?) browser to your own site each viewing about 5 pages to get a "ranking" in the 100-200k range from severla million!

It is unreliable as a service, and peculiarly biased in a way that only Alexa understands. It has the primary purpose of driving traffic to Amazon.com. All the rest is puffery.

Those chasing Alexa rankings are welcome to do so. I looked at Alexa first 2 years ago and was amused by it. Every test I have done since then bears out the original conclusion; "Waste of effort - Avoid".

hanuman

4:57 am on Jun 17, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



yea. who on earth pays attention to alexa rating?

dutch_dude

4:08 am on Jun 22, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



yea. who on earth pays attention to alexa rating?

I do, it's surprisingly accurate if you consider the source of their data. It allows me to keep an eye on the competition. I do see the effect on them if I fight my way up on some keywords, which gives me some sadistic pleasure I must admit ;)

Your site does have to be above a certain traffic level however it seems to draw any conclusions and even then common sense won't hurt :)

7_Driver

10:36 pm on Jun 22, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I agree. It gets a very bad press here on Webmaster World - mainly because it's easy to boost your ranking if you're very small.

In reality - most people have better things to do - and it's probably not that easy to boost your ranking to a high level anyhow.

It's a lot more accurate within a niche than most people realise - as you'll find out if you subscribe to an expensive traffic ranking service - and compare the figures.

For free - it's superb.

partnermine

7:17 am on Jun 23, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



So Alexa is "good" because all the others are bad? Why that makes perfect sense.

Alexa gets a bad press from anyone who has looked at the way it works, the way it us up and down like a whore's drawers, the way it is only picking up the IE users who happen to have installed its toolbar, the way it is a marketing tool for Amazon and so much else.

Over the period since it arrived on the scene I have noticed that the people rooting for it have a "good" rating and the people against it have ratings ranging from good to abysmal.

As for the concept of it not being easy to "fix" your rating, and "who would have the time?", simply employ a widget like "ghostmouse" on a spare machine for a few days and watch the rating of "notarealsite dot com" (a site that no-one visits anyway because it has no content) soar. All you need is a page with a load of links to other imnternal site pages, each with a link back to the index page.

Now, if you can do this for a non existent fake site you can do this for an enormous one.

But the real thing is "users do not care"! When was the last time you heard someone say "I must visit snodgrass dot com, it has a superb Alexa ranking"? Yup, you got it. Never.

So, if it pleases your ego, watch your ranking. It does precisely nothing for your business. Just about the only valid use is that if you assume(!) that your visitor population is the same as your competitor's then you will see how many more toolbar hampered people visit their site than yours - maybe.

7_Driver

1:53 pm on Jun 23, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



So Alexa is "good" because all the others are bad? Why that makes perfect sense.

No partnermine that wasn't what I meant. Sorry, I didn't make it clear - I'll try again:

I've monitored more than competing 50 sites in my niche with Alexa for more than 3 years now.

When I first started, it was a revelation to find out who was big and who wasn't. You'd never guess just by looking at them - some crappy looking sites are hugely popular - some superb looking ones are an unvisited wasteland.

Alexa ranked all my sites in the correct order by size - which gave me some faith in the quality of their results.

A few months ago, I subscribed to Hitwise. As you probably know this samples traffic at the ISP - so it's data is much more reliable than Alexa - but it costs thousands of dollars a year.

Guess what? Looking at the traffic Hitwise reports for my 50 competing sites - I found no real surprises.

I'm not saying every single site was ranked indentically - but broadly speaking, the Alexa rankings were pretty good: I already knew who the "players" were, and who were the "also rans".

Alexa has it's limitations, I agree. For one thing it's a self-selected panel of usually "techier than average" users - so figures are distorted when comparing sites across industries.

But my experience show's that WITHIN AN INDUSTRY it's a lot better than most people give it credit for - and that makes it a very useful tool.

There are a lot of webmasters (even here) who couldn't afford, (or justify) thousands of dollars a year on something like Hitwise. For them - Alexa provides a great competitive intelligence service - completely free.

You may be right about being able to manipulate the results very easily - but my experience shows, most people (in my industry at least) don't bother.

As a matter of interest - how high can you go with your manipulated Alexa rank? Top 100,000? Top 10,000? Higher? I'd be interested to know - because I've always imagined it would work outside the top 100,000 or so anyway - and the data's probably a bit suspect down there anyway, due to sample size.

partnermine

3:14 pm on Jun 23, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



As a matter of interest - how high can you go with your manipulated Alexa rank? Top 100,000? Top 10,000? Higher? I'd be interested to know - because I've always imagined it would work outside the top 100,000 or so anyway - and the data's probably a bit suspect down there anyway, due to sample size.

By dint of simple visiting daily over a period of 3 months I have got a previous site down to mid 50k about 2 years ago. I haven't bothered with the ghostmouse approach because, well, I, too, can't be bothered. Plus I have a living to earn.

The thing is not actually "the doing of it" that amuses me. It is the theory of doing it. Maybe you remember the days of "alladvantage dot com where you leased screen real estate to it in return for a fee for surfing and sometimes clicking its adverts? Ghostmouse pretty much bankrupted them. People left it running and went to work.

Now I see where you are coming from. You are, I think, ignoring "absolute ranking" and simply using the rank as a random number for comparison purposes. Probably you have hit on the only valid use of their "tool"

Alioc

4:07 am on Jun 24, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Forget it guys. Alexa was not accurate and will never be. With the increasing assault of adwares, more and more anti-adware, anti-spyware is being built and used by more and more people. These tools "catch" Alexa too and most users go ahead and fix-clean all of the found garbage on their computers including alexa.

Plus, add the exponential growth of number of websites... The need of processing power and storage capacity will also exponentially increase and Alexa will either be shut down or keep showing totally irrelevant results.

So, irrelevancy will inevitably increase. Useless.

bppilot

3:48 am on Jun 30, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Alexa seems to be skewed somewhat depending on the industry. For consumer items, many of the figures seem to be right on target. For some business / wholesale type issues though such as my particular market the numbers are way, way off. I've never met any of our customers who have the Alexa toolbar installed - most of our customers use their systems at work simply for jumping online, placing orders, and getting back to running their offline businesses.

Without the toolbar installed, all these people aren't getting correctly accounted for. It would be great if Alexa could tap some of the ISP traffic for more accurate wholesale business numbers. I love their layout, info, etc. but just wish that they could hit this segment a little bit more accurately.

7_Driver

1:05 am on Jul 2, 2005 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Yes, it's very skewed between industries - and can't really be used to compare sites in different niche's accurately. It's within a niche, for larger sites that it's at its best.

While I'm posting - here's another great use for Alexa:

Them: I've got a great site, does 5m page views a month, makes a fortune - do you want to buy it?

Us: Let's look at your Alexa stats - how come you're outside the top million sites if you have the traffic you claim?

Them: Errr...

Great timesaver to weed out the complete BS before even getting into due diligence...

twist

3:26 am on Jul 2, 2005 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Earlier in this thread I said I appeared on Alexa at 4.2 million. I tried what someone said and installed alexa toolbar and then make it a point to open IE a few times a day and look around my site.

I am now at 1.5 million and it says I am heading towards 550,000.