Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Google stats show top 3 posts on tattoo blog


An analysis of the Google statistics for Body Mod Chicago shows the three most popular posts:  “Chicago nurse discovers her gift for permanent makeup tattooing,” “Widowed blogger honors husband with memorial tattoo” and “Native young people leave behind traditional tattooing customs.”

The top two posts are the oldest on the site, which may explain why they have the most views. 

“Widowed blogger honors husband with memorial tattoo” has an audio segment that's been played 15 times.  

“Researcher: ‘Earliest tattoo was cosmetic,’” has an audio segment played eight times. This post consistently rises in page views. 

Another post that gets more traffic than others is “Native young people leave behind traditional tattooing customs,” which was based on an interview with the tattoo expert featured in “Researcher: ‘Earliest tattoo was cosmetic.’” 

Sources of traffic were largely referrals from the home page and Google searches. 145 page views were referred by social media sites like Facebook and Twitter. Some readers clicked over from the  LifeAfterSteve blog, owned by Karen Marcus featured in "Widowed blogger honors husband with memorial tattoo," 

The audience for this blog is based primarily in the United States. Of Body Mod Chicago’s 738 page views, 707 views came from U.S. readers. 

Thirty-one views came from other countries including Germany, 11 views; the United Kingdom, eight views; France, six views; Netherlands, three views; Poland, two views; and Japan, one view. 

Fifty-one percent of visitors used Safari to view Body Mod Chicago and two percent used mobile Safari. Twenty-five percent of views came from users with Google Chrome. Eleven percent used Firefox to access the site. The remaining percentage of readers used Internet Explorer and non-Safari mobile browsers. 

Sixty-five percent of readers used Apple operating systems to view the site, including Macintosh, iPad and iPhone. Seventeen percent used Windows, 11 percent used Linux and the remaining three percent used Android. 

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