Honest
Numbers Can Be Wrong
I recently read a report that of nearly 100,000 spam messages received by one
firm, about a third were promoting po-rn sites. (I used a hyphen in hopes of ducking
blocking software.) What does this mean?
Numbers are funny. I never doubt such reports from respectable firms or people.
But I am always skeptical about the numbers themselves. Sure, those were the results
obtained. I will accept this without hesitation. But they often do not seem in
accord with my experiences.
I get lots and lots of spam. Less than 3% is po-rn related. Do I thus conclude
the report was wrong? That they were lying for some devious purpose?
Not at all. It only means their sample of email received was not representative
of what I receive. In like fashion, it is doubtful my email is typical of yours.
100,000 spams messages is a very small percentage of what is mailed each day.
It is so small, results from this sample have very little, if any significance.
These results were obtained, that's true. But they may have no meaning relative
to you.
Leave the particulars of demographics to those keen on the topic. Your best
plan is to ignore such numbers and focus on interactivity with readers and visitors.
In every way you can, seek input, then derive your own demographics from it.
Your
Log Files Can Mislead
Recently I was chatting with a fellow who was having trouble getting a page
to load under a specific condition in Netscape. Since he uses Internet Explorer,
which handled this case correctly, he hadn't noticed the problem until I pointed
it out.
When I did, he commented, "Hey, I don't need to worry. Only 5% of my visitors
are using Netscape." This fellow is dead wrong in two ways.
Of visitors to my site, over 40% are using Netscape. So have I got it wrong?
Or is the fellow reporting 5% wrong? Neither of us is. We are both reporting accurately.
Why Are There Such Great Differences?
The apparent dilemma stems from the fact that we all have our own set of visitors.
Each comes to us from a vast pool of many millions of Web users. Those who show
up on my site may never even hear about yours, let alone visit.
Thus my visitors are not representative of yours, except as to the fundamentals.
For example, all site visitors ask first, "What's in it for me?" Such
basics relate to every site. The specifics do not.
Even if a massive, well respected study reported only 1% of surfers use 640
x 480 monitors, it still might not apply to your site. For as suggested above,
the pool is so vast, hoping to draw a truly random sample from it is impossible.
Further,
things change rapidly on the Web. Not long ago, Netscape was the browser leader.
As Microsoft continued to demand Internet Explorer be installed on all new systems
delivered, the dominance of Netscape began to fade. Even after being acquired
by AOL, market share continued to drop.
Can you assume it will continue to do so? That would leave us with only one
major browser. A Microsoft product. A company already at odds with the Justice
department in anti-trust actions. It may prove to be in their best interest to
assure that Netscape regains a significant share of the market.
What seems so today is suspect, for it may not be so tomorrow. Rather than
making assumptions which may prove false tomorrow, the better plan is to accommodate
all possible options today, and be prepared to make changes tomorrow.
The Mistake That Matters Most
But the second mistake made by the fellow mentioned above is in ignoring Netscape
users however small their numbers be. Suppose only 5% of my visitors use Netscape.
To toss away this many potential customers is foolish at least. I take the time
to make it work for them.
Hasten Slowly
JavaScript has been available for some time. Is it wise to use it if N% of
systems can not deal with it? The better plan is to offer an alternate way to
access your site for those who can not.
Plug ins are popular of late. Will users take the time to download and install
one so as to see your site in all its glory? I doubt it. What's best is to offer
the option to do so, but be sure your site functions effectively without it.
One of my systems uses a Pentium II with awesome supporting resources. However,
it doesn't have a sound card. A site that requires I have one, will hold my attention
only so long as it takes to hit the Back button or enter another URL.
Killer Assumptions
If we make assumptions about the power and tools our visitors have readily
available, to the extent we are wrong, we are driving them off our sites.
When you consider how hard it is to draw a new visitor, driving even one away
seems a pretty silly thing to do.
About the Author:
Bob McElwain, author of "Your Path To Success." How to build ANY business
you want, just the way you want it, with only pocket money. http://sitetipsandtricks.com
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