Someone explain this to me

Screen Shot 2015-02-14 at 9.02.09 PM

This graph.

Make it make sense.

‘Cuz I don’t get it.


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9 thoughts on “Someone explain this to me

  1. Here’s my attempt:

    This shows a correlation ( relationship) between the total number of visitors you have and the total number of number books that are purchased.

    Example:
    Dates: 31-1

    change in the number of visitors: 41-0= 41 visitors
    change in the number of days: 1st-31st= 1 day
    slope (or ratio of visitors to days) : 41 visitors/1 day

    change in the number of purchases: 0-1= -1 purchase ( a decline in the number of purchases)
    change in the number of days: 1st-31st= 1 day= 1 day
    slope (or ratio of purchases to) : -1 purchase /1 day

    ratio of change( number of purchases/ number of visitors per day )= -1 purchases :41 visitors

    The ratio of change should tell you how the number of visitors impacted your sales on a given range of time. In other words the number of visitors that converted into customers.

    It may be tempting to simply divide total purchases by total number of visitors, however, determining your day by day conversion rate you can better identify the best sort of traffic for your sales.

    Hope this helps.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Let me be a trifle more specific, since people seem to be taking this seriously: it seems reasonable to believe that days where I have a lot of pageviews are likely to be days where I have lots of sales, yes? That is not what is happening here– in fact, I seem to just about only have sales on days with little to no pageviews. Today, for example: two sales, no (or possibly one) pageview. Which is not possible.

    The only thing I can think of is that Smashwords is delaying reporting sales for 24 hours but reporting pageviews on time; slide most of the sale peaks back a day and they make a bit more sense, but it’s still not perfect.

    Liked by 1 person

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