Nielsen/NetRatings should be out with September numbers for unique visitors to major websites by Tuesday of next week. But, ahead of those numbers, it is informative to look at the Alexa ratings from the website-tracking division of Amazon.com, Inc. They may be a fairly good preview of next week's ratings news.
According to Alexa, AOL.com's ranking among all websites this week is 41st. Its three month average ranking is 36th, which with these kind of audience measurements is not a meaningful difference. The same holds true for CNN.com. Its rank for the current week is 36th and its average rank for the last three months is 31st.
There is more movement among smaller websites where traffic is likely to fluctuate more than it does in the Top 50.
Mapquest, a surprisingly large property, ranks 123rd this week and has a three month average rank of 112th. AIM.com, the home site of AOL Instant Messenger, ranked 355th this week and 335th for its three month average.
ICQ.com, another AOL site for chat and message traffic, rose from 300th place as its three month average to 324th for the week.
The largest drop was for Netscape.com which was changed from an Internet portal to a social news site in July. Its three-month rank is 383rd. Its average rank for the current week is 554th. By contrast, its closest competition, Digg.com, ranked 91st for the last three months and 85th this week.
For reference, the top six websites worldwide as measured by Alexa, are Yahoo!, MSN, Google, Chinese web properties Baidu.com and qq.com, and MySpace. Unlike Nielsen or comScore, Alexa measures individual sites. The other services measure site families, so, in the case of AOL, most of the sites mentioned here would be reported as a group and the overall ranking would be much higher. (comScore has told us that they break out both site families and individual sites.)
Time Warner Inc. (NYSE: TWX) and AOL management probably hope that the Nielsen/NetRatings numbers paint a somewhat better picture.
Douglas A. McIntyre is a partner at 24/7 Wall St.