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Thank you for your interest in our usage statistics dashboard!

The following guidance will help you to get the most out of your institution's dashboard which shows how Europeana’s audience are interacting with your institution's content on Europeana.eu. To see how much of your institution's content is on Europeana.eu then you can use our separate data statistics dashboard product.

Table of Contents

Receiving your dashboard

You can request a usage statistics dashboard for your institution by filling in the form in the Europeana Welcome Pack.

About the dashboard

Your dashboard consists of two databoards which you can click between (also known as looped databoards). The first shows your institution's data and the second shows all data made available in Europeana.eu so you can make a comparison.

Your institution's databoard

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This board shows the institution's name at the top with the Europeana logo to its left. It is important to bear in mind that if your institution has published data on Europeana.eu under different names in the past, the board may not show the usage statistics for all the name variations.

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The small dots in the centre at the bottom of the board can be used to move back and forth between your institution's board and the overall Europeana board. You can use the small arrows as well. On the far left at the bottom is the name of each board you are looking at.

Total no. of visits

This widget shows the number of visitors your institution's content measured by day. The number below the title shows the overall number of visitors in the period specified on the right of the title ‘No. of visits’.

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It is good to compare the numbers on your board with the overall number for the entire Europeana website. If Europeana.eu receives 500,000 visits a month for than 50 million item pages and editorial, and if your institution accounts for e.g. 10,000 item pages on Europeana, excluding editorial, then 100 visits per month would indicate that your content performs well compared to the Europeana average.

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Average Time

This widget shows the average time which visitors (the same ones recorded in no. of visits) have spent looking at your institution's content in the period selected. You can compare with the overall Europeana.eu figure in the next databoard, but please bear in mind that the overall Europeana data includes other content from the site, not just item pages, but also blogs and other editorial content. Editorial content will have longer average visiting times due to the time it takes to read through the page.

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Bounce Rate

This widget shows the percentage of people who leave Europeana after viewing one page of your institution's content. This means that they found it and then did not take another action on the page, such as downloading the item or moving to another page on Europeana. It is expressed as a percentage of all the visitors to your institution's pages.

It is not always negative if people leave quickly after finding your page. It could be that they quickly found exactly what they were looking for!

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Page Views

This widget shows how many times your institution's pages are viewed per day. The large number is the total pageviews and refers to the number of page views for all your institution's item pages within the period specified next to the title Pageviews. This is different from visits, which are lower as one person can view several pages within the course of one visit.

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The Europeana Board

This board has a title in the top centre which indicates that the data refers to Europeana.eu in general. The Europeana logo appears on the bottom right of the board.

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The small dots in the centre at the bottom of the board can be used to move back and forth between your institution's board and the overall Europeana board.

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Total number of visitorsvisitors

This widget shows the number of visitors to content made available through Europeana.eu measured by day. The number below the title shows the overall number of visitors in the period specified on the right of the title total number of visitors.

As with the institution's pages, sometimes this can be the same person coming back later on in a day or a month which means these are not true ‘unique visitors’ either but the overall number.

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Page Views

This is the number of Europeana.eu pages which are viewed, measured per day. The large number is the total page views and refers to the number of page views within the period specified next to the title Pageviews. This is different from the total number of visitors which are lower as one person can view several pages within the course of one visit.

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Average time on site

This widget shows the average time which the visitors (the same ones recorded in no. of visits) have spent looking at Europeana.eu in the period selected. This includes all editorial content which requires a longer time to read through, in addition to the item pages.

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Bounce Rate

This widget shows the percentage of people who leave Europeana after viewing one page. This means that they found a page immediately and then did not take another action on the page such as downloading something or moving to another page on the site. It is expressed as a percentage of all the visitors to Europeana.eu in the period selected.

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Downloads

This is the number of times a download button was clicked in the specified period.

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Click-through to provider website

This is the number of times that a visitor has clicked the link to any providing institutions’ websites in the specified period.

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Visits by country

This metric refers to the number of visitors coming from the countries specified, within the selected period.

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Visits by channel

This data shows us where the majority of visitors are coming from. The numbers are divided by the following sources: search engine, direct entry, social networks, websites, campaigns.

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Campaigns refer to visitors who come to Europeana.eu via special targeted links which can be used to track the performance of some specific promotional activities.

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Where does the data come from?

The data we display comes from Matomo, which we use at the Europeana Foundation to track the usage of our website Europeana.eu. Matomo is an open source product which is widely used by many EU institutions to track visitors to their websites. You can read more about Matomo here.

The dashboard is made with a specialised product called Databox, which is developed by an external provider. Databox pulls the data from Matomo, so you can see the live insights into the usage of your institution's data on Europeana.

From April 13th to June 17th 2023 we did not track visitors per data provider across Europeana.eu due to technical issues. Therefore, you will notice a drop in the statistics during this period - this is the same for all data providers.

What’s next?

In our user testing we found that many people were interested in knowing which specific items were popular. Unfortunately for this version of the dashboard it was not technically possible to provide this information, nor could we show which countries visitors are coming from, which items were downloaded or which links were clicked on - segmented by specific institution's content. We are looking into how we could support this in future iterations. For now you can see this detail on the Europeana board for the whole of Europeana.eu so you can get an insight into how our website is used.

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