Outkick's Top Markets For the 2013 Football Season

It was another robust college football regular season for Outkick the Coverage -- as over two million unique visitors visited the site from the day the season kicked off until the regular season ended.

I like to share all our data publicly with you guys, Outkick's readers, because you're the ones sharing and reading the site. 

So thanks to y'all.

2.5 years ago when I launched Outkick there was a real question about whether an independent sports site could survive. I'll be honest, I was nervous as hell about the decision to go it alone. 

But now we know the answer is yes -- Outkick's not just surviving, it's thriving.

The big decisions we have now are twofold:

1. How do we continue to grow smartly?

2.  When will we fire that bastard Clay Travis? 

We've now got three regular seasons of college football data in the books at Outkick and, not surprisingly, 2013 was Outkick's best year yet. 

Here are our unique visitor numbers for this year's college football season per Google analytics (note these numbers don't include readers on FoxSports.com):

2011: 727,000 uniques

2012: 1.45 million uniques

2013: 2.05 million uniques

(Our page view data's growing at higher rates than our unique visitors are, but I'm more interested in how many unique vistiors we're reaching since that number is harder to manipulate. Hello, slide shows! Our unique visitor numbers are also easier to compare year over year since the number of articles we've had up has stayed pretty consistent. Basically, more of you are reading what we do put up on the site.)

Our readers are an advertiser's dream, 61% of you are between 18-34 years old and 77% of you are under 44 years old. Craziest stat for a "sports" site? 43% of you are women.

I'm going to get more advanced demographics going forward, but I'm willing to bet that Outkick readers have higher education levels than any sports site on the Internet with the possible exception of Grantland. 

In addition to these seasonal college football numbers, we hit one million unique visitors in October, November, and it looks like, December as well.

That's extraordinary.

Thanks to y'all, truly. (Over 60% of Outkick's traffic is shared via either Twitter or Facebook).  

Two other bits of OKTC news:

1. Going forward I'm excited to now be paying writers for contributions to our Bullpen.

If you'd like to sign up and write for Outkick, go here and submit your articles.  

I've been impressed with the growing quality of the submissions. We pick several to feature each week and if we run your article we pay you for it. There aren't very many sites paying writers for content. I'm proud that we're one of them. 

FYI, I'm not reading and making editorial decisions so don't get mad at me. Lori Kelly is. She'll contact you if your story is running.

Thanks for all who have submitted articles.

And if you're wondering what kind of articles we're looking for -- don't write something that could ever be in a newspaper. Be smart, be funny, be original. 

Write about anything. 

Just be entertaining. 

2. It's Christmas.

Outkickgear.com is off and rolling this year.

Be honest, you have no idea what you're giving to your husband or boyfriend. 

Plus, you're kind of nervous about what he'll wear to games. 

End the insanity. 

Guys, did you outkick your coverage?

Prove it by giving her the shirt. Or wearing one yourself.  

Use the code "Thanks25" and you get 25% off everything, plus free shipping.

If you submit a photo wearing your Outkick gear, we're giving $200 to the winner.

And posting you on Outkick.

How much better can life get?

Not much. 

...

So where are our biggest markets?

I've broken them up by desktop and mobile. 

This football season we had more mobile readers than we did desktop readers. 

So OKTC's mobile data comes first this year: (FYI, Google seems to be getting better at specifying specific locations on mobile devices. So, for instance, suburbs are now not appearing in the overall metro market, but under the actual suburb's name in both mobile and desktop. That is, a place like Nashville or Birmingham now has a separate visitor number for Franklin or Homewood as opposed to just showing up in Nashville or Birmingham. That makes it harder to attribute traffic to markets, but my guess is that advertisers want to specify exact locations for mobile traffic and Google is trying to meet their desire.)

Here we go:

1. Atlanta

2. Nashville

3. San Antonio

4. Charlotte

5. Birmingham

6. Houston

7. Dallas

8. Chicago

9. St. Louis

10. Knoxville

11. New York City

12. Austin

13. Louisville

14. New Orleans

15. Memphis

16. Los Angeles

17. Kansas City

18. Raleigh

19. Tampa

20. San Francisco

...

Desktop

1. Nashville

2. Houston 

3. Birmingham

4. Knoxville

5. Atlanta

6. New York City

7. Dallas

8. Austin

9. Memphis

10. Chicago

11. Washington, D.C.

12. Louisville

13. San Antonio

14. Kansas City

15. Los Angeles

16. Baton Rouge

17. St. Louis

18. Montgomery

19. Chattanooga

20. Charlotte

Outkick's overall top ten markets:

1. Nashville

2. Atlanta

3. Houston

4. Birmingham

5. New York City

6. Dallas

7. Chicago

8. Knoxville

9. Austin

10. Charlotte

...

Thanks to all of you for making the third season of Outkick a continued success.

Now, if you'll excuse me, I have a meeting scheduled to fire Clay Travis.  

That guy's a total asshole. 

Written by
Clay Travis is the founder of the fastest growing national multimedia platform, OutKick, that produces and distributes engaging content across sports and pop culture to millions of fans across the country. OutKick was created by Travis in 2011 and sold to the Fox Corporation in 2021. One of the most electrifying and outspoken personalities in the industry, Travis hosts OutKick The Show where he provides his unfiltered opinion on the most compelling headlines throughout sports, culture, and politics. He also makes regular appearances on FOX News Media as a contributor providing analysis on a variety of subjects ranging from sports news to the cultural landscape. Throughout the college football season, Travis is on Big Noon Kickoff for Fox Sports breaking down the game and the latest storylines. Additionally, Travis serves as a co-host of The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show, a three-hour conservative radio talk program syndicated across Premiere Networks radio stations nationwide. Previously, he launched OutKick The Coverage on Fox Sports Radio that included interviews and listener interactions and was on Fox Sports Bet for four years. Additionally, Travis started an iHeartRadio Original Podcast called Wins & Losses that featured in-depth conversations with the biggest names in sports. Travis is a graduate of George Washington University as well as Vanderbilt Law School. Based in Nashville, he is the author of Dixieland Delight, On Rocky Top, and Republicans Buy Sneakers Too.