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June 23, 2008

Google Trends for Websites Adds to Comparison Sites Confusion

If you want to see how your site is doing compared to the competition, then the new Google Trends for Websites is yet another option to conduct your research. Following the lead of sites like Compete.com and Alexa, Google Trends for Websites allows you to see a graph of traffic to the sites you designate.

But Google Trends for Websites is only adding to the confusion caused by Compete and Alexa. I used all three to compare SearchEngineWatch.com, SearchEngineLand.com, and SEOmoz.org, three of the leading search blogs. I got three very different graphs. Check out these screenshots.

searchblogsgoogletrends.jpg

searchblogscompete.jpg

searchblogsalexa.jpg

With all three, there are definite seasonal dips. But these graphs may speak more to the popularity of Google, Alexa and Compete than they do of the websites you may search. Alexa makes the sites look like they've seen traffic decline, and Compete makes the sites look like the traffic has increased, beginning with a big jump last June. Incidentally, almost any site related to internet marketing seems to have a big jump last June on Compete, which was discussed at search marketing conferences and made known to a wider audience.

Furthermore, Google Trends for Websites does not offer numerical values to give you a ballpark figure of how a site is performing. Alexa and Compete do. Still, Google Trends will likely become the most authoritative source for comparison data since Google has access to far more data than Compete or Alexa.

Posted by Nathania Johnson at June 23, 2008 9:14 AM

Comments

Google does give numerical data if you log in.

Posted by: wesley at June 23, 2008 9:49 AM

Thanks for pointing that out Wesley.

Still, Compete and Alexa do not require people to sign in, in order to view the numbers.

Posted by: Nathania Johnson at June 23, 2008 9:58 AM

And Quantcast allows sites to let it see their direct traffic, so that they aren't working from direct estimates. Not everyone shares this way, however.

Posted by: Danny Sullivan at June 23, 2008 10:13 AM

>>Furthermore, Google Trends for Websites does not offer numerical values

It does, but you must be logged in your Google account in order to see it.

Posted by: Sergi at June 23, 2008 10:31 AM

I guess Google will have the best data, though i'd like to see alexa's date options from google.

the difference in the graphs is because they show different things:
google - number of visits
alexa - % of traffic going to a site, so as the internet grows (more sites and traffic), everybody gets a smaller cut of the traffic, so the graphs tend donwards.
compete - i dont use complete but i guess a lot of sites are 'growing' there becaue compete is still growing and gaining more data sources?

Posted by: Aim at June 23, 2008 10:41 AM

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