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2007-03-07 14:56:29 · 4 answers · asked by JG 1 in Computers & Internet Internet

4 answers

Conversion
Conversion occurs when a visitor to your public Web site decides to take an action and is "converted" from a member of the audience into a participant. One of the goals of your Web site, as a business, is to create customers. By getting your visitors to request information or make a purchase through your site, you have converted them from observers to participants, with the ultimate goal of making them into customers.

conversion page
A conversion page is the page a visitor reaches after having completed an action. For instance, a visitor who uses your Contact us form to request more information is shown a "Thank you for contacting us" Web page. That page is called a conversion page. Other examples of conversion pages are the confirmation pages a visitor sees after subscribing to a newsletter or making a purchase.

conversion points
Conversion points are measured by the number of visitors that reach your conversion pages. For instance, if 10 people sign up for your newsletter and land on your "Thank you" page, 10 conversion points are recorded for that page's URL.

conversion referrer
A conversion referrer is the combination of a domain referrer and a conversion point. For instance, a visitor to a business association site clicks a link to your site. The association is now considered a domain referral. The visitor, now on your site, decides to request information from you, fills out the Contact us form, and submits it. The visitor then sees the "Thank you" page and is now considered a conversion, the "Thank you" or conversion page is the conversion point, and the referring domain is now the conversion referrer.

2007-03-11 12:23:50 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

JG ... Your first answer from the other Tony is correct. In other words, in this context, a "convention" is a standard set of rules or practices that apply to anything for the purpose of achieving some kind of logical advantage.

Examples:
- In Western cultures, one's given name is customarily first and the family name is given last such as "Bill Gates." In other countries, though, he might be known as "Gates Bill." In other words, in the West, the "naming convention" is first, middle, last name.
- The URL strings we use don't HAVE to be as they are, but browser developers, networking gurus, and Web server coders got together and decided to adopt the conventions we've grown to accept.

Without these conventions (or "standards"), the Web would be a free-for-all. Certain browsers might work only with certain web servers, for example, if you can imagine such a thing.

2007-03-07 23:15:11 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

A naming convention is an arbitrary rule about how names will be assigned to objects. For example, one naming convention is that web servers will have a domain name starting with 'www'.

2007-03-07 23:00:46 · answer #3 · answered by tony1athome 5 · 0 0

Naming conventions:

Like
com.sun.eng

com.apple.quicktime.v2

edu.cmu.cs.bovik.cheese

The prefix of a unique package name is always written in all-lowercase ASCII letters and should be one of the top-level domain names, currently com, edu, gov, mil, net, org, or one of the English two-letter codes identifying countries as specified in ISO Standard 3166, 1981.

Subsequent components of the package name vary according to an organization's own internal naming conventions. Such conventions might specify that certain directory name components be division, department, project, machine, or login names.

2007-03-07 23:04:28 · answer #4 · answered by pinkstealth 6 · 0 0

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