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Thoughts on Blackberry Fail
http://www.vbseo.com/f5/vbseo-3-3-0-gold-releas...
Cool, huh?
That must be a google analytics widget
I had no idea they were available
I'd love to get one
In more related news, I started looking at Chartbeat earlier this week as well, and it's super slick. Betaworks is tearing it up! Cool to see your stats too...
Thanks for opening the Kimono a bit. A bunch of us are sitting in the Web2Expo keynote hall huddled over your analytics. Being able to put this data in context of a blog we're all very familiar with makes the demo incredibly useful. Hat tip to you.
First, I'm using Typepad Plus at the moment, and was concerned that I wouldn't be able to use the chartbeat service (Typepad Plus won't permit editing of CSS). I emailed and got a quick response, which I really appreciated. That being said, chartbeat really should have a help section that answers this questions
Second, I'm wondering about your thoughts on the different data services and how you weight them relative to each other. You do go into it a bit above, but are there particular services whose data you weigh more than others? Or particular data you've found to be most reliable?
I ask partially because MyBlogLog failed on me for 9 out of the past 14 days. An email exchange with a perky customer service rep did little to help, but I have been assured their "topnotch engineering department" is working on helping me recover the data.
A quick search on #mybloglog on Twitter Search, and a conversation with a Yahoo! employee, suggested I wasn't the only one ....
Also, saw you just added the Metric track to your streampad musicplayer - my site, ihearditon.com, has been preaching them for since March 3, when our team posted "Help, I'm Alive." Check us out, and since you're an honest fan of music, and reviewer of online services, let us know if you find anything with us.
Google "anal" is helpful for looking at trends and ad campaigns and such.
But literally watching people go through a site is amazing.
And thanks for keeping your's 'open'.
As I read through some of the features you mentioned something struck me. While I believe Chartbeat's realtime offerings are, in general, the main value in the application/service I wanted to make note of something that it does that I do not feel many other stats applications do very well; notifications. It seems most other stats gathering applications focus solely on recording the hit, and all of its metadata with it, that they ignore the position they are in to do so many other things. The realtime feedback being a big one - but also the opportunity to let the administrator know when things are going on that might otherwise not be normal for that site.
As you said, Chartbeat lets you know when you're getting a serious amount of traffic. That's noteworthy in and of itself. But the fact that it notifies you that your blog is down is absolutely the perfect feature to be build into a statistics application. I have never used Chartbeat, so I do not know all that it offers, but other things related to this that strike me as good fits in this category are: notifications when specific URLs "go down" (in other words, if people are getting 404 errors, email me), broken image reports, is a particular widget slowing my site down, and what about notifications of when new URLs link back to a particular page?
These are off-the-cuff ideas that would need a lot more thought... but in general we are using a geographically targeted, real-time, and aggregated Web that needs to begin to think itself as such. Statistics programs, while useful for gathering data about what has happened, are in the perfect position to let us know what is happening right now. And not just what people are doing on a site, but even what the site itself is doing.
I rant and rave about notifications to all of our companies and many others too
It is the single best way to develop engaged user bases and yet people miss this all the time
Great comment!