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Apple Ranked as Fastest Growing Web Site

Apple Ranked as Fastest Growing Web Site

by , 10:35 AM EST, December 20th, 2005

Apple is the fastest growing site on the Web among the top brands, beating out Google, Amazon, and even Microsoft, according to a recent Nielson/NetRatings study. The study compared the top ten Web brands year-over-year growth for November in 2005.

Apple ranked number one with a 57 percent growth rate with 19.6 million online visitors in November 2004, compared to 30.8 million visitors in November 2005. The study attributes Apple's sharp increase to the popularity of the iPod.

Gerry Davidson, senior media analyst for Nielsen//NetRatings, commented "Among the top Web brands, fierce competition for share of online visitors continues to be a catalyst for the launch of new products and features."

Google came in second with a 29 percent increase. It had 66.4 million visitors last November, and 85.5 million this November. Amazon was third at 16 percent, with 36.6 million visitors last November, and 42.5 million this November.

Although Apple took the spot for the fastest growing Web site, Yahoo! is the most visited. In November of 2004, it had 94.5 million visitors, and this November, it had 103.8 million.

The rest of the top ten includes MapQuest (13%), Real (12%), eBay (10%), Yahoo! (10%), Microsoft (8%), AOL (4%), and MSN (2%).

Based on the number of unique visitors, Apple ranked number ten, although it did average 47 minutes, 20 seconds for each visitor, several minutes more than Microsoft's 43 minutes, 30 seconds. AOL beat out all of the top ten sites with an average 6 hours, 13 minutes, 39 seconds per visitor.

The report also listed the fastest growing Web brands, with PhotoBucket at the top of the pack. It jumped up 1,492 percent from 983,000 unique visitors in November 2004 to 15.64 million in November 2005. MySpace came in at number two with 752 percent growth. Its visitors for November 2004 came in at 2.87 million, and 24.49 million in November 2005.

The explosive growth many of these sites are seeing is being driven by a younger demographic. The majority of the visitors that are attracted to the top sites are more likely to fall in the 12-24 year old range. They account for a 50-90 percent increase in visitors in their age bracket, compared to the average Web site's audience.

Another area showing strong growth are the social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook. Mr. Davidson noted "They provide a desirable service in an entertaining format. Thus it is not surprising that many of the fastest growing sites fall into the social networking, blogging, and online member community genres."

Observer Comments

Show: Subjects Only | Full Comments
Close Name:Guest
Subject: sometin's no right 'ere

those numbers seem way too low. are we missing a few zero's on the visit numbers?

Close Name:Websnap Posts: 75 Joined: 17 Jun 2005
Subject:

I think that is unique visitors, not every time someone clicks refresh.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Numbers are off 1000-fold

They report data in thousands. So, it should be 30M visitors, for example, not 30K.

http://www.netratings.com/pr/pr_051220.pdf

Close Name:Guest
Subject:

Fastest growing means absolutely nothing. You could have 2 visitors one year and then 4 visitors the next, and that means you grew 100%. That doesn't tell you much.

And honestly, who in the heck spends 6 hours/session on a single website? All of these statistics mean absolutely nothing.

Close Name:gslusher Posts: 2088 Joined: 13 Nov 2002
Subject: Read more closely

Quote
Guest wrote:
Fastest growing means absolutely nothing. You could have 2 visitors one year and then 4 visitors the next, and that means you grew 100%. That doesn't tell you much.

And honestly, who in the heck spends 6 hours/session on a single website? All of these statistics mean absolutely nothing.


Note the qualifier in the article: "Apple is the fastest growing site on the Web among the top brands ..." That would leave out a site with two visitors. The aricle goes on to say that Apple's site was #10 in total numbers.

As for the 6 hours bit, that probably counts AOL members who sign onto AOL's homepage, then go somewhere else. Technically, they may be connected to AOL all that time, as they don't "leave" the AOL site until they disconnect/log off. Also, AOL has a lot of content, especially for kids--chat rooms, forums, games, etc. Many kids I know will turn AIM on and leave it on all the time so that their friends can contact them.

Close Name:Dreadnought Posts: 162 Joined: 01 Jan 2005
Subject: You can spend a lot of time on the Apple website

Quote
Guest wrote:

And honestly, who in the heck spends 6 hours/session on a single website? All of these statistics mean absolutely nothing.


Actually, a lot of people spend many hours a day on the Apple website - on the Discussion boards, helping other users. Those fora are an incredible resource for support, with users contributing from everywhere in the world (and some from outerspace, given the contents of their posts). Unlike Slashdot, or even the TMO sometimes, posting in the Apple Discussion forums isn't a bloodsport - so users tend to spend a lot of time there. I've been known to log 8 hours or more in a single 24 hour period.

In case you haven't ever visited the Apple Discussion boards, you may not have an idea how strong a community it is. Last week, a very active contributor (and a personal friend), TP2GO, died. Not only did Apple place a memorial banner on the Discussions homepage for him, but the over a hundred of members of the community have contributed to their condolences, and there are over a 1200 view of the page.

Dreadnought

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