*Regards,Itzik Edri* Chairperson, Wikimedia Israel +972-(0)-54-5878078 | http://www.wikimedia.org.il Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. That's our commitment!
---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Itzik - Wikimedia Israel itzik@wikimedia.org.il Date: Thu, Aug 13, 2015 at 12:29 PM Subject: [PRESS] Wikipedia suddenly lost a massive amount of traffic from Google To: Communications Committee wmfcc-l@lists.wikimedia.org, "A mailing list for the Analytics Team at WMF and everybody who has an interest in Wikipedia and analytics." analytics@lists.wikimedia.org
http://www.businessinsider.in/Wikipedia-suddenly-lost-a-massive-amount-of-tr...
From what I see in the ReportCard (http://reportcard.wmflabs.org/), there
is decrease, but far less than mentioned on this article
----
Wikipedia suddenly lost a massive amount of traffic from Google
Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales speaks at a press conference ahead of the London Wikimania conference in 2014. The amount of traffic that Google sends to Wikipedia has declined by more than 250 million visits per month, according to SimilarWeb, the traffic measurement company. Roy Hinkis, SW's head of SEO, says the downgrade is a genuine mystery:
What I saw shocked me. Wikipedia lost an insane amount of traffic in the past 3 months. And by insane I mean that the free encyclopedia site lost more than 250 million desktop visits in just 3 months!
Here are the most recent numbers, in visits, per SimilarWeb:
May: 2.7 billion July: 2.4 billion wikipedia SimilarWeb.com
Hinkis suspects that Google has changed its search algorithm to favour actual brands and company web sites over the Wikipedia entries that are about them:
Wikipedia has long since been a huge competitor for brands in terms of website traffic. SEO's aren't crazy about it, because it takes a huge chunk of our traffic.
However, what Wikipedia taketh from other sites' traffic, Wikipedia also giveth: The site is so massive that it also drives a fair amount of traffic onward to other sites. But the less traffic Wikipedia gets, the less it can give.
Business Insider asked Google for comment but we have not heard back yet, so let's speculate.
One of the major trends happening at Google is the company's preference for inserting its own content above the content of other non-Google web sites, even when those sites may be better resources than Google itself. Here is an example. If you're trying to remember who won the World Cup last year, you might get this Google result:
wikipedia google Google
If you click on that down-arrow that Google provides for the "roster and overview," you get a capsule on the German team. That might be all you need, and Google believes this is so useful it might save you a click.
The problem is that a few months ago that click might have gone to Wikipedia.
Several information aggregation companies are suffering from this, most notably Yelp. Yelp has repeatedly and loudly complained that Google's own promo boxes on the top of search engine results pages are siphoning traffic from better-quality sites that normally would have come top of the results.
The issue is at the heart of the EU's investigation into whether Google is abusing its monopoly in Europe to favour its own properties and distort the market for search traffic on competing sites.
We're not saying that's what is happening to Wikipedia. But it's certainly an unfortunate coincidence.
*Regards,Itzik Edri* Chairperson, Wikimedia Israel +972-(0)-54-5878078 | http://www.wikimedia.org.il Imagine a world in which every single human being can freely share in the sum of all knowledge. That's our commitment!
On 13 August 2015 at 10:32, Itzik - Wikimedia Israel itzik@wikimedia.org.il wrote:
http://www.businessinsider.in/Wikipedia-suddenly-lost-a-massive-amount-of-tr...
From what I see in the ReportCard (http://reportcard.wmflabs.org/), there is decrease, but far less than mentioned on this article
Mobile + desktop traffic per reportcard:
May - 20.42b Jun - 17.93b Jul - 17.89b
Per similarweb:
May: 2.7 billion July: 2.4 billion
Assuming the ratio of visits:pageviews is about constant (which seems a reasonable assumption) then our drop shows about the same - July is 13.5% down on May in our data, and 11% in his. Our enwiki traffic matches even more closely - it's down 11% as well, 9.41b down to 8.36b.
The decline, interestingly, appears to be less marked in enwiki than in many other projects - frwp is down 22.5% over the same period, and eswp 26% (!).
However, a look at reportcard suggests this is not particularly unusual - we had an overall 13% drop June-September 2013, for example, which recovered again, and an 11% spike from June-September 2014. (tentative conclusion, summers are weird).