Where Users Go When They Leave

In addition to making it easy to find, consume and interact with news content once someone is on their site, it is also important for news organizations to understand where users go after they leave. Are they heading to another company-owned property promoted on that site? Are they sharing content by heading to a social network that the site pointed them to?  Are they clicking on an advertisement and moving to a retailer promoted on the page? Or have they left for other reasons?

If a large portion of users are going to Facebook after leaving a site, that may indicate the site’s content is easy to share and viewed as worth distributing to friends. On the other hand, if most users are leaving for Google or some other search engine, that could indicate that users either did not find what they were looking for on the site or got what they needed but were not drawn to any other content.

Nielsen collects data about departure sites in a way similar to how it counts sites that direct people to a news Web page.  The data represent the percent of all users to the Website. A “departure” occurs when someone clicks on a link that takes them away from the main website—a visitor to news.google.com who follows a link to NYtimes.com, for example, again with a minimum threshold. Clicks within a website—say from CNN.com to CNN.com/politics, for example—are not considered departures. But if the site one moves to has a different Web domain, even if it is related—a move say from CNN.com to money.cnn.com—Nielsen considers that a departure. [1] [1]

What does the data tell us about consumer behavior? Four main findings stand out:


FOOTNOTES:

1.  These 21 news sites are organized in very different ways.  Nielsen reports where users go when they leave at the subdomain level, like cnn.com/politics rather than the main domain, such as cnn.com. Some sites like AOL have a wide range of subdomains with all different kinds of sites that are organized differently.  The result is that a more complex site like AOL.com, which actually encompasses dozens of different products from AOL News to AOL Weather, is slightly different than a site like The New York Times which only includes articles and other content from the New York Times.  And, though a user can link to more than one outside Website over the course of a month, these percentages are much smaller than those of referring sites.

2.  Google provides many different services that news sites could utilize such as powering the search function on the site itself. For example Google provides the CAPTCHA services for the NYtimes.com email sign up.