on the Internet, when a user calls up a particular web site; see unique audience.
A sequence of hits received close together in time by a single Web server from a single Web client.
A request made for a page in a specified site, the user may request several more pages as they navigate through the site. However, if the user makes no further requests during a predetermined period, then the next request for a page on that site will begin a new visit.
In web terms: A visit to a web site. Commonly used to describe the activity for one visitor of a web site.
All requests for resources from a single IP address until no more requests are made for a period of 30 minutes.
A series of consecutive page requests made from a client to a server.
A visit is a sequence of requests made by one user to enter a site. Once a visitor stops making requests from a site for a given period of time, called a timeout, the next hit by this visitor is considered a new visit.
a collection of hits and page views that pertain to one specific person
an actual entity (live or electronic) coming to the site
an entire user session, made up of many accesses (usually)
an uninterrupted session on a Web site of a certain minimum length
a period of time when a web user browses a web site
a series of consecutive requests from a individual IP address to your Internet site within a specific period of time
a series of consecutive requests from a user to an Internet site
a series of page impressions made by a unique user
a single IP address that is active at any given time on your site
a single session of activity identified with an individual user, including all the page requests and hits logged during that session
a trip to the site by one individual in a 'session'
a Web user with a unique address entering a Web site at some page for the first time that day (or for the firs
Represents one unique viewer who has visited a web site. One site visitor can view many web pages.
A sequence of requests all made from the same IP address, with no gap between requests exceding a time limit (normaly 30 minutes). The time limit is configurable. This normaly represents a single person moving through your web site, but there can be exceptions. A proxy machine used by several people could result in several different people accessing the site from the same IP address within the time limit. It is also possible for a single person to make different requests to your site from multipule IP addresses at the same time. Both of these exceptions are rare, generaly accounting for a small portion of all visits.
User’s interaction with a site within a specified time period. All the pages seen on the same site, during one session. The number of visits cannot be taken as the number of visitors.
A visit to a WWW site, defining the advertising contact. A visit includes a browser's successful page access to the current site, if it occurred from outside the site and at least one page was transmitted to the consumer.
A visit is an interaction a unique visitor has with a website over a specified period of time or activity. In most cases, if a visitor has left a site or has not executed a click within 30 minutes, the visit session will terminate.
A visit begins when a visitors enters your site with an entry click and views a succession of one or more pageviews. The end of a visit is signaled by an exit click or a 10 minute period of inactivity. The next event (click) will be a new visit.
A request made for a page by a user. On any given visit, a user may request several pages as he or she navigates through the site. If a user makes no requests during a predetermined period of time, his/her next request would begin a new visit.
Commonly called Visitor Session. All activity for one visitor of a web site. By default, a visitor session is terminated when a visitor is inactive for more than 30 minutes.
Succession of activities for one user of a web site. A unique visitor is determined by the cookie to be a first time visitor or a returning visitor. All visits by a unique visitor are counted. By default, a visit is terminated when a visitor is inactive for more than 30 minutes. Synonym: Session.
Aaddzz considers multiple hits to a page or a site to be a part of the same visit if the hit occurs with in the 30 minutes of the last hit to the page or site. A visit is also ended if Aaddzz identifes the visitor at another site. See also: Aaddzz Terms & Conditions: VISITOR
Traffic The time spent by a visitor whilst logged on to a website whilst requesting various files (accesses), on various pages (page hits). Each time the visitor leaves the site and returns, it is a separate visit. - but see unique visitors
A series of page requests by a visitor without 30 consecutive minutes of inactivity.
See Site visits (User sessions) .
A "visit" is a group of hits grouped by IP/time. Every hit performed by a single IP will belong to the same visit until the IP times out. A timed out IP is a IP that didn't perform a hit on the server for at least X consecutive minutes (It is a settig that you can change in your profile. Default is 20.). If the IP makes a request after it timed out, a new visit will be created.
A series of requests by one user during a specific time period. If a user has no activity for a certain amount of time, the next hit would be a new visit. The specified time period is called time-out and is not consistent across sites.
A visit is a complete session of accesses to a certain web server conducted by one person. A visit is concluded when the customer hasn't viewed any page for a certain period of time (60 seconds in most cases).
All the activity of one visitor to a Web site. If a visitor is idle longer than the idle-time limit, WebTrends assumes the visit ended. If the visitor continues to browse your site after they reach the idle-time limit, a new visit is counted. The default idle-time limit is thirty minutes, but can be changed in Options.
There is little general agreement as to the definition of a "visit" to a website – it varies greatly from a "hit" (see above) to someone viewing a particular website for up to several hours at a time. On the New Zealand Rare Breeds website, a "visit" is counted as someone viewing one or more pages of the site on their browser during a single viewing "session" (in most cases more than one page is viewed in one session but it is counted as a single visit).
Synonymous with viewing a World Wide Web site.
A sequence of requests made by one user at one site. A visit is terminated by a period of inactivity from the user or a break in the user actions. Also called session or browsing period.
A page request or a series of page requests by a visitor to a given domain. If, after the initial page request occurs and 30 minutes elapses without a subsequent page request, the visit session is closed. A new visit session is opened upon the next page request to the given domain.
time span during which a unique visitor stays within the different pages of your site.
When you access a World Wide Web document you are said to be visiting the site.