Twitter Web Analytics Launched: Track how much traffic Twitter sends to your site

Twitter is a powerful platform for websites to share their content, and drive traffic and engagement. However, people have struggled to accurately measure the amount of traffic Twitter is sending to their websites, in part because web analytics software hasn’t evolved as quickly as online sharing and social signals.

Today we’re announcing Twitter Web Analytics, a tool that helps website owners understand how much traffic they receive from Twitter and the effectiveness of Twitter integrations on their sites. Twitter Web Analytics was driven by the acquisition of BackType, which we announced in July.

The product provides three key benefits:

  • Understand how much your website content is being shared across the Twitter network
  • See the amount of traffic Twitter sends to your site
  • Measure the effectiveness of your Tweet Button integration

    Twitter Web Analytics will be rolled out this week to a small pilot group of partners, and will be made available to all website owners within the next few weeks. We’re also committed to releasing a Twitter Web Analytics API for developers interested in incorporating Twitter data in their products.

SOURCE: dev.twitter.com

Want More Blog Traffic! Submit Your New Blog Here For Free

When your blog is new the only thing you want is traffic and the most easy, simple, best and successful methods are here mentioned below:
  • Leave a comment at the bottom of this post with your blog’s URL and describe your blog in a short paragraph.
  • Subscribe to my RSS feed (In return, I will help you to boost your traffic).
  • Subscribe to the other blogs’ RSS feeds.
  • Make sure you subscribe to the comments so that you get alerted on every new comment.
  • Do not post as Anonymous user, it will be considered as SPAMMING.
  • Every time a new comment is added, go and visit that blog! Do for others as you would have them do for you.
  • Stumble few posts from your blog.
  • Digg few posts from your blog.
  • Delicious few posts from your blog.
  • Write a post on your own blog about the new blogs you have found and link to them.
  • Write a post on your own blog, link to this post so others can participate and write about the new blogs you have found. Link to them.
Your Participation is must for this to Succeed

If you just submit your link and that all ... then et me clear you that nothing gonna happen.
Spend time visiting the other blogs, commenting and subscribing to their feeds. You will also get some traffic from my readers who have already been blogging for a while.

The more you give, the more you get.

I’d like to encourage my regular readers to spread the link to this post around: This is one of those the-more-the-merrier kinds of things. So please Share this post on Facebook, twitter, myspace, stumble, and bookmark at Delicious

NOTE: My comments are moderated. The following will be deleted or marked as spam
  • Automated blogs or splogs
  • Adult content blogs
  • Content about illegal activities
  • Hate speech
  • Anything that seems suspicious to me
IDEA TAKEN FROM: http://remarkablogger.com

---Do you want to share you views?? Just leave a comment here. you can also drop an email on mail@amarjit.info

Google New policy change for Backlinks: Reorganizing internal vs. external backlinks

Today we’re making a change to the way we categorize link data in Webmaster Tools. As you know, Webmaster Tools lists links pointing to your site in two separate categories: links coming from other sites, and links from within your site. Today’s update won’t change your total number of links, but will hopefully present your backlinks in a way that more closely aligns with your idea of which links are actually from your site vs. from other sites.


You can manage many different types of sites in Webmaster Tools: a plain domain name (example.com), a subdomain (www.example.com or cats.example.com), or a domain with a subfolder path (www.example.com/cats/ or www.example.com/users/catlover/). Previously, only links that started with your site’s exact URL would be categorized as internal links: so if you entered www.example.com/users/catlover/ as your site, links from www.example.com/users/catlover/profile.html would be categorized as internal, but links from www.example.com/users/ or www.example.com would be categorized as external links. This also meant that if you entered www.example.com as your site, links from example.com would be considered external because they don’t start with the same URL as your site (they don’t contain www).


Most people think of example.com and www.example.com as the same site these days, so we’re changing it such that now, if you add either example.com or www.example.com as a site, links from both the www and non-www versions of the domain will be categorized as internal links. We’ve also extended this idea to include other subdomains, since many people who own a domain also own its subdomains—so links from cats.example.com or pets.example.com will also be categorized as internal links for www.example.com.

image

If you own a site that’s on a subdomain (such as googlewebmastercentral.blogspot.com) or in a subfolder (www.google.com/support/webmasters/) and don’t own the root domain, you’ll still only see links from URLs starting with that subdomain or subfolder in your internal links, and all others will be categorized as external links. We’ve made a few backend changes so that these numbers should be even more accurate for you.
Note that, if you own a root domain like example.com or www.example.com, your number of external links may appear to go down with this change; this is because, as described above, some of the URLs we were previously classifying as external links will have moved into the internal links report. Your total number of links (internal + external) should not be affected by this change.

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