Compete has brought out what they’re calling the ‘Attention 200’. Unfortunately, it’s just the standard data in an attention wrapper. Using any of the normal web tools available like Alexa, Technorati, and others will provide similar metrics because they’re not really measuring attention.
1 response so far ↓
Stephen DiMarco // March 6, 2007 at 11:15 pm
Well….I don’t agree. We did provide a list of the top 200 sites based on where people spend their time online. We do believe that people are spending more time online than they are reading magazines. There are differences in what sites different groups of consumers regularly interact with online. When we cut all of this data, we think its a great step forward in creating metrics that relate more to people than technologies. How would you advance the conversation?