This web site statistics report covers the period of July 2006. The information bellow was provided by Google Analytics. A summary of the University's web site statistics for July 2006 is available for download in PDF form. Summary July 2006

The Visitors Graph shows how many visitors the University of Newcastle's web site received over time during the date range. If a user visits the web site multiple times within a day they are only counted once. The Percent New Visitors graph shows the percentage of visitors who were new visitors.


The Visits, Pageviews, and Average Pageviews per Visit graphs show the number of visits, the number of web pages viewed, and the average number of web pages viewed per visit over time during the date range.

First Time Absolute Unique Visitors is the number of visitors (counting each visitor only once) who visited the University's web site for the first time during the active date range. Prior Absolute Unique Visitors is the number of visitors (counting each visitor only once) who first visited the University's web site prior to the active date range and who returned for one or more visits during the active date range.

Unique visitors viewing the University's web site during the active date range is categorized according to the total number of times the visitor has visited your site (without regard to date range). The number of visitors with only one visit (no loyalty) are indicated on the left of the histogram. The number of visitors with over 200 visits (very loyal) are indicated on the far right.

Each visitor who visits the University's web site during the active date range is categorized according to the number of days that have elapsed since his or her last visit. New visitors and those who are returning from a previous visit are on the left of the histogram. Visitors who last visited the site one year ago are shown on the far right.

This report shows the average per visit value for new and returning visitors.

How do visitors referred by different sources (such as search engine, newsletter, or referral site) compare with respect to number of visits? Each source is qualified by medium, in brackets, such as [referral]. Each medium is either one of the mediums with which you tagged referral links or one of the following special cases:

This report compares each geographic region's number of visits and page views per visit.

The Geo Map Overlay is a graphical representation of the volume of visitors coming from locations around the world. The largest points indicate locations driving the most visitors to your website.

This report shows the number of visits, page views per visit, conversion rates, and average visit value for each ISP and corporate network.

How do visitors with different language preferences compare with respect to average visit value? This report compares number of visits, page views per visit according to the language preference they have set on their computer.

This report allows you to track the Internet service provider (ISP) domains the user resolves to. The domain is determined by the Internet service that owns the user's Internet protocol (IP) identifier. The report shows the amount visits from each ISP domain.

Which keywords drive the highest quality traffic? This report shows number of visits and page views per visit and organic keywords.

How well do other keywords perform? This report shows the top performing unused organic keywords. Each keyword's performance is shown in terms of number of visits, page views per visit, conversion rates, transactions per visit, and average visit value.

This report shows how many visits and page views each page on the University's web site received, the average amount of time that visitors spent on the page, and how frequently visitors left your site after viewing the. This report is useful for finding the key content that should be a part of the main flow of the site.

This report shows how many visits and page views each page on the University's web site received, the average amount of time that visitors spent on the page and how frequently visitors left your site after viewing the.

How many pages are viewed during a visit to the University's website? Visits of a single page appear on the left of the graph; visits of twenty pages or more appear on the right side of the graph.

How much time do visitors spend on the University's website? Visits of less than ten seconds appear to the left of the graph; visits of more than 1801 seconds appear on the right side of the graph.

Do visitors continue their visit after viewing their first page or do they immediately leave my site? This report lists the top entrance pages on which visitors land and their respective number of Bounces and Bounce Rates.

From which pages do visitors commonly exit the University's web site? This report shows the number of exits and number of page views for the top exit pages on the University's site.

This report provides a list of browser versions used to access the University's web site.

This report provides a list of the operating systems that the University's visitor's use.

This report allows you to examine which screen resolutions the University's users are seeing our site in.

For which colour resolutions should I optimise my site and content? If your site is graphics intensive, you may want to experiment using the same color resolution your visitors use.

This report illustrates what version of Flash the University's users are using.

What percentage of the University's visitors have Java enabled on their browsers?

This report illustrates what type/speed of internet connection the University's users are using.