Traffic Sources
The origins of visitors to a website, such as search engines, direct visits, social media, and referrals from other sites.
The origins of visitors to a website, such as search engines, direct visits, social media, and referrals from other sites.
The tendency for people to pay more attention to items placed in the center of a visual field.
The practice of two websites agreeing to link to each other's content, often used to build relationships and improve SEO.
The theory that users search for information in a manner similar to animals foraging for food, aiming to maximize value while minimizing effort.
The phenomenon where people have a reduced ability to recall the last items in a list when additional, unrelated information is added at the end.
A design strategy that prioritizes the mobile user experience by designing for mobile devices first before scaling up to larger screens.
A phenomenon where the probability of recalling an item from a list depends on the length of the list.
Numeronym for the word "Canonicalization" (C + 14 letters + N), converting data to a standard, normalized form to ensure consistency and eliminate ambiguities, often used in URLs to avoid duplicate content issues in SEO.
A marketing strategy that uses user behavior data to deliver personalized advertisements and content.