To close out 2013, here is the first annual traffic report, showing the 25 articles which gained the most traffic over the entire year. Rather than annotating individual topics, I thought it would be best to strip the list down to the bare essentials and then discuss any overall trends that emerge. Broad themes are color-coded in the key below. For the top 25 topics for this week, see WP:TOP25.
Rank | Article | Class | Views |
---|---|---|---|
1 | 30,437,829 | ||
2 | Deaths in 2013 | List | 21,032,962 |
3 | Breaking Bad | 17,184,556 | |
4 | 16,930,496 | ||
5 | World War II | 16,632,652 | |
6 | Youtube | 15,863,520 | |
7 | List of Bollywood films of 2013 | List | 15,734,806 |
8 | United States | 15 324 117 | |
9 | The Walking Dead (TV series) | 14,506,197 | |
10 | Game of Thrones | 14 222 748 | |
11 | Yahoo! | 13,473,783 | |
12 | Nelson Mandela | 13,239,155 | |
13 | The Big Bang Theory | 12,843,248 | |
14 | Arrow (TV series) | 12,285,242 | |
15 | Wikipedia | 12,119,569 | |
16 | India | 11,799,639 | |
17 | How I Met Your Mother | 11,744,355 | |
18 | Jennifer Lawrence | 11,335,347 | |
19 | Sex | 11,180,431 | |
20 | Eminem | 11,113,512 | |
21 | IPv6 | 10,547,448 | |
22 | Macklemore | 10,376,268 | |
23 | Abraham Lincoln | 10,103,779 | |
24 | Doctor Who | 10,031,624 | |
25 | 2013 in film | List | 9,945,953 |
Key |
---|
Website |
People |
TV show |
Film |
Country |
Other topic |
The first thing that should leap out is that this list is not a random hodge-podge of disparate topics. In fact, the majority are relatively evenly split between three themes: people of interest, television, and websites. The second obvious trend is that the quality of the articles on this list is noticeably higher than for those in the weekly roundup—articles with a sustained level of high traffic are more likely to attract dedicated editors.
Determining the popularity of website articles is somewhat problematic, as it is currently impossible to say with certainty whether such views are the result of honest interest, or users accidentally clicking the Wikipedia page on Google's search list instead of the website itself. Given that the articles' respective popularities are largely inline with their sites' Alexa rankings, the latter hypothesis does seem credible. Access to more detailed search information, such as bounce rate, might help resolve the issue.