bounce rate on Your WordPress Site

An increasing bounce rate is one of the many signs of an imminent failure in search engine optimization. A bounce rate that is close to 100% percent indicates that there is a growing disinterest in the content available on your website. Numerous factors can be attributed to the rising bounce rates and understanding them helps you curb the rise and stay ahead of your competition. We are going to focus on understanding bounce rate, and learn how we can reduce it in WordPress.

What is Bounce Rate?

Bounce rate means the percentage of people who visit your website and leave (‘bounce’) without taking more time to check other pages on your website. Tracking bounce rate is very important for your website since you will be able to gauge whether the visitors on your website are interested in your content or not. Bounce rate is the best measure of the effectiveness of your content and can be a good place to begin improving your user's experience. The image below shows the bounce rate of 86.96% in one of my blogs, you too can add Google Analytics on your website and monitor your bounce rate. Google Analytics helps you monitor several metrics that determine the health of your website.

How to Decrease Bounce Rate on Your WordPress Site

As you can see from the image above the pages and sessions are closely related to the bounce rate.  There are several factors that drive the bounce rate to increase, like the design of the site and user experience. On the contrary, some visitors leave the site after viewing a single page if they have found the information the visitor was looking for. Websites with only a single page may experience a higher bounce rate than other websites.

How is Bounce Rate Measured?

How to Decrease Bounce Rate on Your WordPress Site

Now that you know about bounce rate, you may wonder exactly how the percentage is calculated and how to analyze it for your SEO purposes. This percentage is calculated as the ratio between bounced visitors and total visitors to your website.

Example

If you published a WordPress post and received a total of 100 visitors in a month but 86 of the 100 visitors left your website immediately, then your bounce rate will be calculated as follows;

Bounce Rate = Bounces/ Total Visitors X 100; in this case it is   86/100 = 0.86 x 100 = 86%

Analyzing Bounce Rate

You will not be calculating bounce rate but will be viewing it on the Google Analytics account. If you have installed Google Analytics on your blog, you should be able to track the bounce rate of each of the pages on your website. When you look at the bounce rate you should know, the closer the percentage is to 100% the poor the content on your website.

Ideally, you should get worried if your bounce rate exceeds 60%. If your bounce rate is below 50% this indicates that your site is good. A high bounce rate is also a bad SEO sign for you since search engines will tend to penalize such websites. Websites with high bounce rates seem not to offer any value to visitors. You should therefore look for ways to reduce your bounce rate and improve your website ranking.

How to Reduce Bounce Rate on WordPress Posts

We are now going to focus on the different ways that can be employed to keep visitors more engaged with your website content. If you are experiencing a high bounce rate above 90%, you need to employ these tips to bring it down and improve user experience and consequently website ranking.

1) Stop using WordPress Popups

The first step towards reducing the bounce rate on your website is to do away with all the popups. Popups are often used for a number of reasons in WordPress that include;  email signups, social media promotion, and advertisements. Nothing sends visitors away from your website than popups, especially in new websites. You should therefore avoid using popups or if you must use them, it should be sparingly. You should also ensure your popups have a clear way to close them since persistent popups drive visitors away from your website. You can also incorporate the side popups or bottom popups instead of using those that block the entire site.

2) Improve Your Navigation

Recently I wrote a tutorial on how to build a responsive WordPress navigation. A menu on a website is equivalent to a map and it should help your visitors get across your website with ease. Your menus should be easy to use and they should all be clickable. Make use of WordPress categories, custom menus, and pages to organize your website navigation properly. You should also ensure your menu is responsive and easily accessible on mobile gadgets and tablets.

3) Use responsive WordPress themes only

There are more and more people accessing the web via smartphones and tablets.  These statistics show a growing trend that you need to consider when building a WordPress blog. When you are building your WordPress site you should ensure you use or build a responsive theme. This will help reduce the bounce rates from mobile users. There are tons of free WordPress themes that are responsive and ready for use. A well-coded responsive WordPress theme also helps solve the problem I mentioned earlier regarding navigation.

4) Improve WordPress Loading Speed

The amount of time a site takes to load has a serious role to play in SEO. Once you achieve a good load speed on your website, you will see the bounce rate reduce drastically. There are a number of ways to improve website load speed that include; caching, slicing images, using the content delivery network, among others. There are also several WordPress plugins that can help you improve the site load speed. If your website takes more than 10 seconds to load you should work on improving the speed.

5) WordPress Internal Linking

Internal website links are the best way to quickly reduce your bounce rate as well as improve your search engine ranking. Since I started implementing internal links as a strategy of reducing bounce rate, I  noted significant improvement in website ranking. WordPress link feature allows you to link to existing content on your website. The more internal links you create in your WordPress posts the lower will be your bounce rate.

How to Decrease Bounce Rate on Your WordPress Site

You should create internal links based on relevance to promote related content. WordPress tags are a great way to improve your internal linking. You should add related posts at the bottom of the posts using a plugin or as a feature in your theme as another ingenue way of linking your posts. For you to leverage on 'related posts feature'  posts should have well-written titles that help improve the click-through rate.

6) Fix Broken Links on your Site

You should closely monitor links in your website using Google Webmaster Console to see which links are broken. Broken links can cause an increase in the rate at which visitors leave your website and should be fixed as soon as they are found. There are also several other free tools you can use to analyze your website links and identify broken links. Google Webmaster Tools is good since you get a prompt report about broken links on your website.

7) WordPress 404 Redirection

A high number of 404 pages can increase your bounce rate especially when they are not helpful. You should make your 404 pages helpful by creating alternatives for visitors to return to the home or view alternative pages. Just as I wrote in the tutorial – Building WordPress Custom 404 Page, you should consider making a custom 404 page. You should ensure you use 301 redirects for old permalinks on your WordPress blog since they are likely to be 404 pages.

8) Open WordPress External Links in New Tabs

When you are linking to external websites you should be careful not to lose your website visitor by opening the link on the same tab or window. You should instead target to open all external links in new tabs or windows. You can achieve this by adding; target=”_blank” to your URLs.

Example:

<a href=”http://yoururl.com” target=”_blank”>your anchor text</a>

By creating this kind of link, you ensure that you do not lose website visitors when they click on external links.

9)Place Your Ads Carefully

Ads can be a nice complement to good website design but if they are obstructive and distractive they lead to a high bounce rate. You should limit the location of ads to sidebars, below posts and when you use them inside the content you should clearly separate them from content. You should avoid using popup ads on your site unless they are used for a short period of time. They can be used for special promotions or discounts that run only for a few days.

10) Content is King – Create useful content for your Audience

There is no doubt about the value that good content contributes towards increasing your website audience and readership. If you produce useful content for your audience you will obviously make visitors stay longer on your website. Improving content should be the first and long-term strategy you take towards reducing bounce rates. The content should not only be free of grammar mistakes but should also be useful to readers. Your content should be well organized to make it easier to read. Use bullets points to list items and H1- H6 headings to clearly show the content titles. You should also use both video and image content to spruce up your website content.

Conclusion

Now that we have looked at the different ways of reducing bounce rate on your WordPress site. You should implement these measures on your blog to improve traffic and search engine ranking. The overall goal of your effort to reduce bounce rate should be to improve user experience and build a loyal audience. This can only be achieved if you create high-quality content, link appropriately, build a responsive website and augment it with good design.