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The Website Visitor Bounce Rate

The Website Visitor Bounce Rate

The Bounce Rate (or Exit Rate) measures the quality of traffic and how well that traffic is attracted to your Website. A low Exit Rate, followed by a high rate of conversion from visitor to customer is the ideal.

There are two definitions of the Exit Rate:

    The percentage of visitors who arrive and leave a Website immediately.

    The percentage of visitors that visit just one page on a website.

The two measurements give slightly different results.


Using StatCounter, the Exit Rate can be derived from the "Visit Length" for visitors who left after less than 5 seconds. Google analytics provides a Exit Rate using the second definition.

Interpreting the Exit Rate

A high Exit Rate may indicate that the Website needs a new direction. A low Exit rate does not guarantee success. If the conversion rate is low, then you may need to review the type of visitor that is currently being attracted to your Website.

If the second definition of the "Exit Rate" is used, the number of returning visitors may be a more meaningful statistic to judge the quality of traffic:

    Websites that comprise just a single page can have a high Exit Rate.

    Websites that supply information on a single page, like a Wiki, can have a high Exit Rate.

    Blogging Websites usually have a high Exit Rate.

There is no average Exit Rate that can be called good or bad. An acceptable Exit Rate depends very much upon the type of the Website, the target audience and expectations. The only real criterion is the conversion rate - i.e. the number of new customers derived each month from the Website. If the conversion rate is not acceptable, then the Exit Rate, whatever it is, needs to be reduced.

Reducing the Bounce Rate

Some of the following points may provide ideas for reducing the Bounce Rate:

    Spurious Visitors - Visitors frequently search and then click on a Website where they find that the content is not what they wanted at all. They will quickly leave, unless they find something to attract and interest them. Serendipitously some could become customers.

    Website Design - Poor site design will repel visitors. A dark background, gaudy colours, flash animation or sound can cause visitors to immediately depart. It may be difficult for the visitor to work out how to proceed with the next step. The visitor may not find immediately what they were looking for and leave in frustration.

    Backlinks - If the link is from a Website where their content has no relationship to your Website, the visitors are unlikely to stay long.

    Page Load Times - A slow server or large page sizes will cause visitors to cancel and try the next Website.

    Browser Compatibility - Your Website pages should appear the same in all the major browsers - Internet Explorer 7 and 8, Firefox and Chrome. I would not worry too much about the users of Internet Explorer 6. They will get the message sooner or later.

    Target Audience - The Target Audience may have been chosen correctly, but the Website may not relate to the Target Audience. The Website should be attractive to, and use the appropriate language for, the Target Audience. Don't talk down to professionals. Use the idioms suitable for the audience.

    Keywords - Check the Keywords used by the visitors who left immediately, and all the details that can be extracted, to identify this type of visitor. Make sure that you are not attracting too many non-targeted visitors. The Keywords are attracting visitors, but the content may not match visitor expectations.

    Page Content - Find out which pages have the highest Bounce Rate. The content of these pages should provide meaningful information for the visitor. The content should intrigue the viewer sufficiently enough to look further. Insert well researched content or items of interest for the viewer. The content should be fresh, informative, and relevant.

    Website Fundamentals - Poor design or navigation that is not intuitive will lead to a high Bounce Rate. There should be a simple page structure, relevant page titles and headings, etc, etc.

    Page Title and Meta Descriptions - Search Engines show the Page Title and often show the Meta Description in the results. These should accurately summarise the page content, otherwise you will get inappropriate visitors.

Evaluate the Changes

Measure the average Bounce Rate for your Website over a few weeks prior to making any changes. After making the changes, the average Bounce Rate should be checked again.

Hopefully the Bounce Rate will have improved. And so should the conversion rate.

Neville Silverman is a Microsoft software developer, based in Sydney Australia, and has been a Visual Basic programmer and Microsoft Access designer and programmer for many years.

He has created numerous Microsoft Access databases, SQL Server Databases and Microsoft Visual Basic systems for clients. He develops and supports software systems for the small to medium sized business. Administrative systems are custom built to fit company requirements - software solutions that are cost effective, efficient and user-friendly.

Optimising Access Database systems is his speciality. He has extended the useful life of many an Access Database system, avoiding the effort and cost of an SQL Server upgrade.


Article Source: Neville Silverman


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