![]() ![]() and maybe just 1 will stay at the said hostel.Īnd if u have a store/ecommerce site, as i like to tell, the proof is in the pudding. maybe, just maybe, you'lll get 5 people passing thru ur town. and the 200 travellers that see the post with the said hostel mentioned. but what u dont think about is that 91,800 of these 92k will never travel and never visit your hostel and dt care about it anyway. I'll get so much publicity and some paying customers. if i let these dudes stay at my hostel for free, they'll quote my hostel on their FB post. i met some dudes who boasts they had 92K friends on FB and u think hmmmm thats good. Good call !!!!! want high numbers to boast about rather than the truth. Help us out, dont make us jump higher just because there might be a higher standard out there. ![]() Take a step back to simpler ways guys.not more, not more detailed, not more complex.simpler tech. ![]() While this methodology has certain limitations as tracking can be disabled by an ad blocker, it is much closer to numbers rendered by Google Analytics, and is much less susceptible to overcounting.Īgain the same question.why is Google the standard here?.i have google analytics on my site.i never use makes me feel more stupid than a 5 year old and i have to spend time calculating instead of taking a look (like weebly) and then going back to my seems like only tech people can actually understand it which makes sense for a huge web company like Google, not to mention their other standards for always changing their ways so that simple flok cannot understand what they're actually doing.Īpologies for the complain to aynone who is probably more tech-savy than I am and might think this is not even a problem for them.but I feel this is a problem for a lot of people. Which one is it? And why is Google analytics the standard for Weebly? Have you guys thought that maybe YOUR way of doing things is better for YOUR clientelle and that if anyone wishes to change his standard he can easily revert to Google analytics by himself? Customers and simple folk dont understand technicalities.we understand "it works" or "it doesnt work". This is the same methodology used by Google Analytics, and is designed to handle granular calculations.Įxcuse me but only tech people understand such details. The new Insights utilizes front-end tracking where a website visitor's browser pings Weebly servers to report usage. How is this new way of counting insights different without the old way being wrong? Why arent those the same thing? Either what you say is correct, which makes your old way of counting wrong which means you guys were making a mistake all this time.or it's something useless, which makes this change totally useless. I dont understand the difference.how is "being served/rendered" different than "actual usage". The newer metrics are more reflective of actual usage and a better point of comparison. If changing ISP, check what you're signing up for - other big ISPs are generally doing the same tactics, but Zen Internet are worth a look and offer 18 month deals with a guarantee of no price rises in the fixed term, smaller still suppliers like Aquiss and uno offer 12 month fixed price terms.Hi previous traffic stats were not inaccurate it just used a different counting methodology focusing on the number of times your site has been served / rendered, rather than the number of actual users that viewed your site. If renewing, be aware that in a year's time there will be an increase of RPI + 4%, and if you're on a heavily discounted deal at new customer pricing levels then the way VM apply the increase it will be doubled, and you won't be able to renegotiate because of changed terms that you'll have to agree to. ![]() If you cancel hoping to have those retention discussions from the position of strength of already having cancelled, make sure you have a Plan B in case you don't get any retention calls or are not around to take them, because if you don't then you could end up with no connection, but I had multiple calls during my notice period, and five calls on my last day of connection (but still told them no, and I'm now with another ISP). If you plan to leave regardless of what they offer you, just tell any VM callers you don't wish to be called again. ĭuring the 30 days notice VM will probably make considerable efforts to contact you and engage in retention discussions, and towards the end of the 30 days they'll offer the deals they give to new customers, although early on they'll probably be reluctant. Address is under section N of the Terms & Conditions. Have you considered cancelling by post using recorded delivery. ![]()
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