Three-quarters
of a million individual page views
By
Will Collette
The
Progressive Charlestown odometer registered another big number: 750,000 page
views. That happened sometime early Sunday morning.
As
Charlestown’s most notorious blog, we draw a lot of readers interested in our
mix of local news, political scandals, things to do, jokes and cartoons,
recipes, environmental coverage, health tips and whatever else that interests
us, and might interest you.
“Page
views” is a way of counting readership that is very different than “hits.” For
a page view to get counted, a visitor to Progressive Charlestown has to
actually click on an article to read it. A “hit” simply means somebody visited
our website and may or may not have read anything. As a rule of thumb, it takes
about ten hits to produce one page view – yes, I know, TMI.
Our
election coverage rocketed up our readership to almost 1,900 a day. Since then,
the numbers have settled down to an average of 1,350 to 1,400 per day. It goes way up
during the week, especially when there’s a Town Council meeting, and tamps down to the 1200+ range on weekends.
Last
month’s average was a shade under 1,400 a day.
By
the numbers, our biggest all-time stories have been environmental. The top
three articles were on do-it-yourself solar energy, how recycling is good but
reuse and reduction is better, and on why you should compost. Those three
stories alone had a total of 18,000 readers.
We
have published over 4,100 articles and over 3,500 comments. We have rejected
813 comments, almost all of them anonymous. Since we eliminated “anonymous” as
an option for posting comments, we have had a lot fewer trolls and a whole lot
less commercial spam writers posing as commenters.
We used to get dozens of
those a day. If you want to comment, we expect you to identify yourself.
Our
reason for being is to bring you the news, reveal the truth, help to educate
and enlighten, make you laugh and sometimes – well, lots of the time – make you
angry, and entertain.
We
know that in this day and age, lots more people rely on the internet for
information. As a lover of newspapers and books, I lament that shift, but as
they say, it is what it is. Since most people either don’t have the time, or
don’t know how, to find the kind of information we deliver on Progressive
Charlestown, I also like to think we provide a public service.
But
whatever it is that we’re doing, on any given day, there are about 1,400 who
decide they want to read Progressive Charlestown. Thank you for reading and we
hope you’ll keep coming back.