Site Meter: Alternatives for Refugees

This week I’ve mentioned the move by SiteMeter to send other organisations’ tracking cookies out with their counters, and I’ve taken the site meter off this blog. Perhaps it is called SM for a reason.

I thought it would be useful for some readers to suggest a couple of alternatives. I have used several different services over the last few years on a number of websites.

(Non-techie explanation: A tracking cookie is a text file left on your computer which allows a third party to gain information about your web-browsing habits. It is not itself a program, but creates an audit trail of your activity.)

Note: You can see the stats for this blog for each service by clicking on the icons in this post, or the links in the sidebar.

Firstly, there are two services which I have used and found satisfactory. Then there is a service new to me - Go Stats.

20070406-extreme-tracker-iconExtreme Tracker

I used Extreme tracker has for several years on a number of websites, and found the service straightforward. It is particularly easy to set up and navigate the statistics. Free Trackers must display the icon on the web page.

The free service does not report paths taken through your site by visitors.

20070406-stat-counter-iconStatcounter

Statcounter

provides a wider range of statistics than Extreme Tracker, including paths taken through your site by recent visitors. You can hide a Statcounter if you wish.

There is a review of Statcounter on Suburban Hen’s website here .

Statcounter has a couple of features that I think especially useful:

  • The origin of visitors can be displayed on a Google map.
  • You can set the initial counts for the service.

20070406-go-stats-iconGo-Stats

I have also been recommended to look at a service called Go-Stats.

I found the service considerably slower than the others, and it took some time to install a counter. However I will report back in a few days.

20070408-103bees 2103 Bees

I have not used 103 Bees before, but I hear good reports.

Installing the counter was straightforward, but I have not been able to open the stats for public view. I’ll post an update here in a couple of days.

Study my Stats

For a trial period only I have implemented all three on the Wardman Wire blog, and opened the statistics to public view. If you click on the icons at the bottom of the sidebar on the right, or in the post, you can visit the information on each service. Warning: they are not spectacular - the blog has only been going for 3 weeks.

Over to You

Do you know of any other free counter services? How do you use them and what limitations have you found?

Join the debate below.

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Article Series - Blog Statistics: Sitemeter Alternatives

  1. Site Meter: Alternatives for Refugees
  2. Comparing Web Statistics Services - Sitemeter, Go-Stats, Extreme-Tracker, 103Bees

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10 Responses to “ Site Meter: Alternatives for Refugees ”

  1. Hello Matt. StatCounter is good. It makes for easy finding of things like, er, when people enter your blog from links created at a site by a person named Matt Wardman :)

  2. Excellent !

    What happened to the trackback then?

    East Midlands for ever!

    Matt

  3. PS Doubtless you saw by .. er .. massive traffic.

    Current project: get into Technorato top million blogs!

    Matt

  4. er. no.

    I saw by one entry. Singular. Sorry.

    And I never have understood trackback. What do I do? click it? I’ll do that…

  5. […] “And I never have understood trackback. What do I do? click it? I’ll do that…” (link) […]

  6. […] Wire blog for comparison. This post is a comparison of the results so far. My first posting “Sitemeter: Alternatives for Refugees” explains why I am comparing different online traffic metrics […]

  7. […] is a very quick reminder for those of you who are interested in my articles about finding alternatives for the Sitemeter statistics service, after Sitemeter started serving 3rd party tracking […]

  8. […] blog will be Reporting the Results of the tests on Statistics Services for people who wish to move away from Sitemeter. I have tested Go Stats, Extreme Tracker, StatCounter and […]

  9. I currently use extreme tracking, but find that when I get alot of traffic, it almost becomes useless since it only recalls the last 20 history. I’m looking for a better stats tool myself.

  10. @alba fan: Personally I use Go Stats which I think is better than Extreme Tracker. Try them.

    The best is a hosted service in combination with log file analysis. For this I would suggest the Free version of Deep Log Analyser (google it for the link).

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