P1T has taken dip in web visitation: 2016 to 2017 First Quarter Analytics
The longitudinal comparison of the previous year’s website
visitation performance with the most recent quarterly report provides a
snapshot of the overall reach of the project, as well the performance of the website
source links and micro-entrepreneur network pages. Additionally, the report
includes data about the reach of the project’s scholarship to the public
through select social media tools – e.g., this web blog. Some significant
changes in offer and marketing are tracked and have shaped the changes in the
performance of the website.
Here is the most recent report, P1T Dashboard Analytics
Report for 1st Quarter of 2017 (see inset
below). The report for the 2nd Quarter 2017 will be appearing in
an upcoming posting on this blog.
This report revealed
that new visitation to the www.peoplefirsttourism.com
web marketplace during the 1st Quarter 2017 has decreased slightly
(-3%) over the new visits seen during the 1st Quarter of 2016. There
has been a much higher decrease (-184%) in returned visitors to the site during
this period. Visitation to the site during the 1st Quarter is the
lowest recorded. Visitors to the site decreased (-85%) from the previous
quarter. New visits to the site made up nearly 80% of visits; a slight increase
over the previous Quarter which indicates that the site continues to generate interest
in visitors wanting to discover travel experiences. The
visits to the site during the quarter peaked during May.
As in previous
quarters, most visitors were from the USA, and they arrived at the P1t website
through links with partners such as visitraleigh.com and centroraleigh.com. Other
important sources of visitors are the websites of partner organizations like NC State University
and North Carolina Road Trips. The report
also features the ten most visited network locations of micro-entrepreneurs,
which now includes our recently posted Fork2Farmer experiences as well as the NC
Piedmont region and Kruger South Africa experiences. The social media statistics
are also indicating that Facebook and Twitter are producing impressive
awareness of People-First Tourism experiences.
While the primary purpose of these reports is to enable
data-driven business decisions through discussions with empowerment agents and
micro-entrepreneurs, we also use these reports to ensure transparency in our
efforts to drive academic discussions and research on micro-entrepreneurial
business analytics. Therefore, we invite the public and the academic community
to comment and to advise us on ways to improve this aspect of the People-First
Tourism project.
Gene
Brothers, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
of Equitable and Sustainable Tourism
NC State
University
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