If you want the survey to show after a user has visited 5
pageviews then enter 5 for the value of this setting.
Not exact matches
Where as if you are in the advertising or publishing business, where your revenues are directly correlated to the number of visitors and
pageviews, or in other words the volume of eyeballs,
then optimizing for traffic is going to be a better strategy.
If we assume subscribers generally only make one
pageview each visit (they have already read most things) but chance visitors may read only the page they land on, but may look around (say an average of 2
pageviews per visit),
then we can guess that your average day includes 350 subscribers (you post most days) and about 500 + «drop - ins», mostly from Google.
Then recently I was surfing the blog of another popular blogger, and he claims to have over 300,000
pageviews a month.
Sure, it was going to generate him hundreds of thousands of
pageviews for a month or two, but
then Google would catch on to what he was doing, and would ban him permanently, and the site would
then be worthless.
In the early days my
pageviews would often double in a month, but it's slowed down quite a bit since
then!
Then don't forget to help Loop Looks reach 200
pageviews per day!
Then again,
pageviews — while they're good at measuring a story's popularity and decent at measuring its impact — don't accrue to much direct financial gain, either, even on a site that accepts advertising.
I'm not saying there is anything wrong with building
pageviews or having blogging as a full - time job, but if your objective for blogging is more personal and not a business focused,
then why make it stressful?
You know, I think most bloggers start humble but
then they get caught into the race of building
pageviews, and
then it's a slippery slope from there.
If you use WordPress.com (the free online version), you can not make money on advertising until you reach at least 25,000
pageviews, and only
then, you can 50/50 split any ad revenue with them.