I find that's true with my site as well. 30% comes from the jQuery site. 36% is from Google, but mostly jQuery related searches.
On Sep 18, 11:10 pm, Stephan Beal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi, all! > > The past couple of days i've been looking through some web logs and > found some really unexpected things... > > a) Though jQuery-related stuff is only a small part of my website, the > vast majority of the recent traffic targets my jQuery plugins pages. > (This is not to imply that my plugins are particularly popular > (they're not - they're all small/niche stuff).) > > b) The jQuery.com plugins repo is the most prolific referrer to my > site. > > c) 3 of the top 5 search terms which bring people to the site (via > google) are people searching for a jQuery color picker. Another one of > those top 5 is someone looking for a color picker in javascript (not > explicitly jQuery). > > My point is: If you write plugins, add them to the jQuery plugins > repository. There are lots of good reasons to do so, but one reason > which is probably under-considered is that doing so will drive traffic > more traffic to your site. Case in > point:http://wanderinghorse.net/computing/javascript/jquery/ > > :)