When you visit a new Web site for the first time, you often want to know who made the page, where they are from, and why the page is there. Or say it's a site, not a page. So you naturally look for the "About Us" page. So, what do you find if you just search for About Us pages?
The 'About Us' phenomenon is a particularly useful acid test for determining the relevance of subjective queries to the positive results. We ran some tests across the database and learned that more people write 'about us' than write 'about you', if only because they know nothing about the 'you' who might be browsing their Web page.
Marketing researchers naturally want to learn as much about the people who choose 'click here', 'about us', and 'home' as they possibly can without sacrificing the integrity of their data results. It is possible to hypothesize a sample of the reduction in progress without calculating a full set of variables.
Sometimes you think you have an answer but then you find out that you really do not have the answer. You can, for example, ask yourself many questions about your own moral character and determine whether you should be proud of yourself for your misdeeds.