It's now exactly one year ago that ffindr went online, one year of spreading and aggregating of Frisbee tournament information. All started around June 2007, when a small idea evolved into something bigger: some specifications of a community-based tournament calender. In August the open source platform symfony came into play, and about a month later the project with the codename ffindr went live: as ffindr.com!
In the last 12 months, ffindr accumulated 766 events -- shared and updated by roughly 300 registered people. The project is truly global, with listed events from 59 different countries. Here's are the top 20 country regarding where ffindr events are located:
ffindr counts almost 300 registered users. Once a logged user creates an event on ffindr, he/she becomes its owner. This entitles him to perform any modifications to his/her events. Besides the users there is a bunch of moderators who have the right to modify any event on ffindr, without being explicitly its owner.
The bulk of the data has been added by the admin (that's me). The high number of contributed events can also be explained by the fact that the ownership of "events added as anonymous" is quickly claimed by this greedy admin. In the following the top 15 users regarding their event contribution on ffindr:
In the following some statistics of the first year, from September 17, 2007 until today (September 16, 2008) to be precise.
104,381 total page views
27,603 total visits
Visitors came from impressive 126 different countries! Most of the ffindr users come from Europe (79%), followed by the Americas (17%). Only a minor number of visits comes from Asia (2.1%) and Oceania (1.3%), with Africa (0.3%) far behind.
Unsurprisingly there's a strong correlation between the event location ranking (see above) and the origin of visitors. Here are the top 15 countries regarding visitors:
Almost half of ffindr's traffic comes through referring sites (42%). Traffic sent by search engine accounts for 35% of the total. 23% of the visitors come directly to ffindr, that is by typing ffindr.com in their browser. English (37%) is first choice regarding the language settings on ffindr, followed by German (8%), French (7%), Spanish (1.4%) and Russian (0.8%).
And finally here are the top 15 ffindr cities, i.e. the origin of the ffindr users by city:
To conclude this detailed look at the access statistic, I'd like to announce a challenging goal for ffindr's second anniversary: having the same statistics of the whole first year for one single month! We'll see what ffindr's second year will bring...
In the meanwhile work on the second version of ffindr is rapidly advancing. The usability will be widely enhanced to allow for easier browsing of the huge amount of data. In addition, some new features will top the new ffindr off:
There hasn't been a release date fixed yet, but the transition to ffindr-2.0 will happen in the near future. This blog will keep you in the loop...
Hey Christian,
Self-reflection and celebration is nice, but can't be as fulfilling as congratulations from other people. And, since one else has gotten around to it, I figured I'd be the first commenter to say congratulations on a great first year. I don't think there's anyone who can argue with the fact that you're doing a great job filling a huge gap in Ultimate, and I think we're all excited to see the great work you put into the site in the future - it's obviously the result of a lot of hours of work and a labor of love. Good luck with the 2nd year goal, and we'll have to see if we can get España (and Madrid) a little higher up on those lists!
Justin
Thanks for your reply and all the wishes, Justin! You hit the nail on the head: it's a result of countless hours of work, but I really love it. I'm currently in a very ffindr-ish phase, since the second version demands quite some new knowledge of the ever evolving underlying symfony framework. See you on the field!
What !!! There is no one form Australia looking at this site. Alright, gonna do something about that.
Two things in the city stats are odd ones out: Paris (having almost 7 times as much share as the following place) and Erlangen (compare the populations of the cities around it - ER has quite a big share for it's size). The two top contributors are from these cities - could there be a correlation, ie administrative accesses blowing these numbers out of proportion?
Hi Frank,
the explanation is easy, at least for Paris: people here know the service very well. And since I run a lot of Frisbee events here that rely on ffindr, Paris generates quite some page views. The same is true for Erlangen, where Erik uses ffindr as his website of choice to promote his events. In addition, although the Internet is world wide, the value of word of mouth should not be underestimated.
Have a nice day!