Facebook Accounts for 25% of All U.S. Pageviews

Mave

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Facebook’s putting up some big numbers in terms of U.S. web traffic. Right now, the site accounts for one out of every four pageviews in the United States — that’s 10% of all Internet visits.

According to data from analysis and intelligence firm Hitwise, Facebook’s (Facebook) year-over-year growth has been phenomenal. We reported in June that the social network was set to eclipse Google in web traffic; now, Hitwise is showing that in the past week, Facebook.com saw 3% more web visits and almost five times more pageviews than Google (Google).com.

By these metrics, Facebook is by far the single most popular website in the United States. Still, other sources with other measurements and criteria show some variance.

comScore has also released stats showing huge growth from Facebook — a 55% year-over-year increase, in fact. But comScore places Facebook at 151.13 million U.S. uniques for October 2010, slightly behind Google’s 173.3 monthly uniques, which means the search giant is the social network’s sole competitor for web traffic domination.

The company has been growing at a breakneck pace all year. It announced that its network had reached the extraordinary milestone of 500 million members in July. And at Web. 2.0 Summit this week, CEO Mark Zuckerberg told the audience that half of those members visit Facebook on a daily basis.

And the company’s not just racking up new members and pageviews; a large part of its success has been a continuous stream of new and revamped products. Facebook Places was one of the most talked-about new locations products in an already crowded market; Facebook also made waves with a new Messages experience and interface and the new Groups, which Zuckerberg said is the company’s fastest-growing product yet.

In short, it’s no wonder Facebook has performed so well this year; we wonder what the still-young company will do to keep these numbers growing in 2011.

Source: http://mashable.com/2010/11/19/facebook-traffic-stats/
 
Facebook’s putting up some big numbers in terms of U.S. web traffic. Right now, the site accounts for one out of every four pageviews in the United States — that’s 10% of all Internet visits.
Isn't it 25%?
 
Fries said:
Facebook’s putting up some big numbers in terms of U.S. web traffic.
It doesn't say anything about global. lrn2read.
Sigh.
"one out of every four pageviews in the United States" - 1 in 4 = 25% = 25% of US pageviews.
"that’s 10% of all Internet visits." = 10% of all pageviews from worldwide internet usage.
 
It makes no sense for the article to mention anything about worldwide internet usage when all it's talking about is the US and numbers pertaining to the US.
 
^ Your argument doesn't make any sense.

The article just says that Facebook is 10% of the internet usage in the world, and 1/4th of the internet usage of America.
 
How?
The entire article only talks about Facebook and its views in the US, why would it randomly say something relating to the entire world?

Plus, I believe the article defines pageviews and internet visits differently, so it may mean:
FB gets 25% of the pageviews, thats = to 10% of the internet visits in the US.
 
Fries said:
How?
The entire article only talks about Facebook and its views in the US, why would it randomly say something relating to the entire world?

Plus, I believe the article defines pageviews and internet visits differently, so it may mean:
FB gets 25% of the pageviews, thats = to 10% of the internet visits in the US.
Jt0xV.jpg
 
Fries said:
How?
The entire article only talks about Facebook and its views in the US, why would it randomly say something relating to the entire world?

Plus, I believe the article defines pageviews and internet visits differently, so it may mean:
FB gets 25% of the pageviews, thats = to 10% of the internet visits in the US.

Well its 25% of the U.S page views, and 10% of the world's actually :tongue:


Read this again:
Right now, the site accounts for one out of every four pageviews in the United States — that’s 10% of all Internet visits.

It states the fact for the U.S, then compares it to ALL internet visits, aka the entire world combined :tongue:
 
Fries is right. The article he linked to, as well as the article that's sourced from, say 10%/1 in 10 US visits.

I read this a few times, though, and I definitely would have thought it meant 10% of worldwide visits.
 
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