Piwik

# open source web analytics

http://piwik.org/

Les articles publiés sur le site

  • Top 5 Web Analytics Tools for Your Site

    11 août 2023, par ErinAnalytics Tips

    At the start of July 2023, Universal Analytics (UA) users had to say goodbye to their preferred web analytics tool as Google discontinued it. While some find Google Analytics 4 (GA4) can do what they need, many GA4 users are starting to realise GA4 doesn’t meet all the needs UA once fulfilled. Consequently, they are actively seeking another web analytics tool to complement GA4 and address those unmet requirements effectively.

    In this article, we’ll break down five of the top web analytics tools on the market. You’ll find details about their core capabilities, pricing structures and some noteworthy pros and cons to help you decide which tool is the right fit for you. We’ve also included some key features a good web analytics tool should have to give you a baseline for comparison.

    Whether you’re a marketing manager focused on ROI of campaigns, a web analyst focused on conversions or simply interested in learning more about web analytics, there’s something for you on this list.

    What is a web analytics tool?

    Web analytics tools collect and analyse information about your website’s visitors, their behaviour and the technical performance of your site. A web analytics tool compiles, measures and analyses website data to give you the information you need to improve site performance, boost conversions and increase your ROI.

    What makes a web analytics tool good?

    Before we get into tool specifics, let’s go over some of the core features you can expect from a web analytics tool.

    For a web analytics tool to be worth your time (and money), it needs to cover the basics. For example:

    • Visitor reports: The number of visitors, whether they were unique or repeat visitors, the source of traffic (where they found your website), device information (if they’re using a desktop or mobile device) and demographic information like geographic location
    • Behaviour reports: What your visitors did while on your site, conversion rates (e.g., if they signed up for or purchased something), the pages they entered and exited from, average session duration, total time spent on a page and bounce rates (if they left without interacting with anything)
    • Technical information: Page loading speed and event tracking — where users are clicking, what they’re downloading or sharing from your site, if they’re engaging with the media on it and how far down the page they’re scrolling
    • Marketing campaign information: Breakdowns of ad campaigns by provider, showing if ads resulted in traffic to your site and lead to an eventual sale or conversion
    • Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) information: Which keywords on which pages are driving traffic to your site, and what search engines are they coming from
    • Real-time data tracking: Visitor, behaviour and technical information available in real-time, or close to it — allowing you to address to issues as they occur
    • Data visualisation: Charts and graphs illustrating the above information in an easily-readable format — helping identify opportunities and providing valuable insights you can leverage to improve site performance, conversion rates and the amount of time visitors spend on a page
    • Custom reporting: Create custom reports detailing the desired metrics and time frame you’re interested in
    • Security: User access controls and management tools to limit who can see and interact with user data
    • Resources: Official user guides, technical documentation, troubleshooting materials,  customer support and community forums
    Google Analytics 4 dashboard

    Pros and Cons of  Google Analytics 4

    Despite many users’ dissatisfaction, GA4 isn’t going away anytime soon. It’s still a powerful tool with all the standard features you’d expect. It’s the most popular choice for web analytics for a few other reasons, too, including:

    • It’s free to use
    • It’s easy to set up
    • It has a convenient mobile app
    • It has a wealth of user documentation and technical resources online
    • Its machine-learning capabilities help predict user behaviour and offer insights on how to grow your site
    • It integrates easily with other Google tools, like Google Search Console, Google Ads and Google Cloud

    That said, it comes with some serious drawbacks. Many users accustomed to UA have reported being unhappy with the differences between it and GA4. Their reasons range from changes to the user interface and bounce rate calculations, as well as Google’s switch from pageview-focused metrics to event-based ones. 

    Let’s take a look at some of the other cons:

    Now that you know GA4’s strengths and weaknesses, it’s time to explore other tools that can help fill in GA4’s gaps.

    Top 5 web analytics tools (that aren’t Google)

    Below is a list of popular web analytics tools that, unless otherwise stated, have all the features a good tool should have.

    Adobe Analytics

    Screenshot of the landing page for Adobe's web analytics tool

    Adobe is a trusted name in software, with tools that have shaped the technological landscape for decades, like Photoshop and Illustrator. With web design and UX tools Dreamweaver and XD, it makes sense that they’d offer a web analytics platform as well.

    Adobe Analytics provides not just web analytics but marketing analytics that tell you about customer acquisition and retention, ROI and ad campaign performance metrics. Its machine learning (ML) and AI-powered analytics predict future customer behaviour based on previously collected data.

    Key features

    • Multichannel data collection that covers computers, mobile devices and IoT devices
    • Adobe Sensei (AI/ML) for marketing attribution and anomaly detection
    • Tag management through Adobe Experience Platform Launch simplifies the tag creation and maintenance process to help you track how users interact with your site

    Pros:

    • User-friendly and simple to learn with a drag-and-drop interface
    • When integrated with other Adobe software, it becomes a powerful solution for enterprises
    • Saves your team a lot of time with the recommendations and insights automatically generated by Adobe’s AI/ML

    Cons:

    • No free version
    • Adobe Sensei and tag manager limited to premium version
    • Expensive, especially when combined with the company’s other software
    • Steep learning curve for both setup and use

    Mobile app: Yes

    Integrations: Integrates with Adobe Experience Manager Sites, the company’s CMS. Adobe Target, a CRO tool and part of the Adobe Marketing Cloud subscription, integrates with Analytics.

    Pricing: Available upon request

    Matomo

    Screenshot of Matomo Web Analytics Dashboard

    Matomo is the leading open-source web analytics solution designed to help you make more informed decisions and enhance your customer experience while ensuring GDPR compliance and user privacy. With Matomo Cloud, your data is stored in Europe, while Matomo On-Premise allows you to host your data on your own servers.

    Matomo is used on over 1 million websites, in over 190 countries, and in over 50 languages. Additionally, Matomo is an all-in-one solution, with traditional web analytics (visits, acquisition, etc.) alongside behavioural analytics (heatmaps, session recordings and more), plus a tag manager. No more inefficiently jumping back and forth between tabs in a huge tech stack. It’s all in Matomo, for one consistent, seamless and efficient experience. 

    Key features: 

    • Heatmaps and session recording to display what users are clicking on and how individual users interacted with your site 
    • A/B testing to compare different versions of the same content and see which gets better results
    • Robust API that lets you get insights by connecting your data to other platforms, like data visualisation or business intelligence tools

    Pros: 

    • Open-source, reviewed by experts to ensure that it’s secure
    • Offers On-Premise or Cloud-hosted options
    • Fully compliant with GDPR, so you can be data-driven without worrying. 
    • Option to run without cookies, meaning in most countries you can use Matomo without annoying cookie consent banners and while getting more accurate data
    • You retain complete ownership of your data, with no third parties using it for advertising or unspecified “own purposes”

    Cons: 

    • On-Premise is free, but that means an additional cost for advanced features (A/B testing, heatmaps, etc.) that are included by default on Matomo Cloud
    • Matomo On-Premise requires servers and technical expertise to setup and manage

    Mobile app: Matomo offers a free mobile app (iOS and Android) so you can access your analytics on the go. 

    Integrations: Matomo integrates easily with many other tools and platforms, including WordPress, Looker Studio, Magento, Jira, Drupal, Joomla and Cloudflare.

    Pricing

    • Varies based on monthly hits
    • Matomo On-Premise: free
    • Matomo Cloud: starting at €19/month

    Mixpanel

    Screenshot of Mixpanel's product page

    Mixpanel’s features are heavily geared toward e-commerce companies. From the moment a visitor lands on your website to the moment they enter their payment details and complete a transaction, Mixpanel tracks these events.

    Similar to GA4, Mixpanel is an event-focused analytics platform. While you can still track pageviews with Mixpanel, its main focus is on the specific actions users take that lead them to purchases. Putting your attention on this information allows you to find out which events on your site are going through the sales funnel.

    They’re currently developing a Warehouse Events feature to simplify the process of importing data lakes and data warehouses.

    Key features:

    • Custom alerts and anomaly detection
    • Boards, which allow you to share multiple reports and insights with your team in a range of visual styles 
    • Detailed segmentation reporting that lets you break down your data to the individual user, specific event or geographic level

    Pros:

    • Boards allow for emojis, gifs, images and videos to make collaboration fun
    • Powerful mobile analytics for iOS and Android apps
    • Free promotional credits for eligible startups 

    Cons:

    • Limited features in free plan
    • Best features limited to the Enterprise-tier subscription
    • Complicated set up
    • Steep learning curve

    Mobile app: No

    Integrations: Mixpanel has a load of integrations, including Figma, Google Cloud, Slack, HappyFox, Snowflake, Microsoft Azure, Optimizely, Mailchimp and Tenjin. They also have a WordPress plugin.

    Pricing

    • Starter: free plan available
    • Growth: $20/month
    • Enterprise $833/month

    HubSpot Marketing

    Screenshot of Hubspot Marketing's main page

    HubSpot is a customer relationship management (CRM) platform with marketing, sales, customer service, content management system (CMS) and operations tools. This greater ecosystem of HubSpot software allows you to practically run your entire business in one place.

    Even though HubSpot Marketing isn’t a dedicated web analytics tool, it provides comparable standard metrics as the other tools on this list, albeit without the more advanced analytical metrics they offer. If you’re already using HubSpot to host your website, it’s definitely worth consideration.

    Key features:

    • Customer Journey Analytics presents the steps your customers went through in the sales process, step-by-step, in a visual way
    • Dashboards for your reports, including both fully customisable options for power users and pre-made templates for new users

    Pros:

    • Integration with other HubSpot tools, like HubSpot CRM’s free live chat widget 
    • User-friendly interface with many features being drag-and-drop, like the report dashboard
    • 24/7 customer support

    Cons:

    • Can get expensive with upgrades and other HubSpot tool add ons
    • Not a dedicated web analytics tool, so it’s missing some of the features other tools have, like heatmaps
    • Not really worth it as a standalone tool
    • Some users report customer support is unhelpful

    Mobile app: Yes

    Integrations: The larger HubSpot CRM platform can connect with nearly 1,500 other apps through the HubSpot App Marketplace. These include Slack, Microsoft Teams, Salesforce, Make, WordPress, SurveyMonkey, Shopify, monday.com, Stripe, WooCommerce and hundreds of others.

    Pricing

    • Starter: $20/month ($18/month with annual plan) 
    • Professional: $890/month ($800/month with annual plan) 
    • Enterprise: $3,600/month ($43,200 billed annually)

    Kissmetrics

    Screenshot of the landing page of web analytics tool Kissmetrics

    Kissmetrics is a web analytics tool that is marketed toward SaaS and ecommerce companies. They label themselves as “person-based” because they combine event-based tracking with detailed user profiles of the visitors to your site, which allows you to gain insights into customer behaviour. 

    With user profiles, you can drill down to see how many times someone has visited your site, if they’ve purchased from you and the steps they took before completing a sale. This allows you to cater more to these users and drive growth.

    Key features

    • Person Profiles that give granular information about individual users and their activities on your site
    • Campaigns, an engagement messenger application, allows you to set up email automations that are triggered by specific events
    • Detailed reporting tools 

    Pros

    • No third-party cookies
    • No data sampling
    • APIs for Ruby on Rails, JavaScript, Python and PHP

    Cons

    • Difficult installation
    • Strongest reporting features only available in the most expensive plan
    • Reports can be slow to generate
    • Requires custom JavaScript code to tack single-page applications
    • Doesn’t track demographic data, bounce rate, exits, session length or time on page

    Mobile app: No

    Integrations: Kissmetrics integrates with HubSpot, Appcues, Slack, Mailchimp, Shopify, WooCommerce, Recurly and a dozen others. There is also a Kissmetrics WordPress plugin.

    Pricing

    • Silver: $299/month (small businesses)
    • Gold: $499/month (medium) 
    • Platinum: custom pricing (enterprises)

    Conclusion

    In this article, you learned about popular tools for web analytics to better inform you of your options. Despite all of GA4’s shortcomings, by complementing it with another web analytics tool, teams can gain a more comprehensive understanding of their website traffic and enhance their overall analytics capabilities.

    If you want an option that delivers powerful insights while keeping privacy, security and compliance at the forefront, you should try Matomo. 

    Try Matomo alongside Google Analytics now to see how it compares.

    Start your 21-day free trial now – no credit card required.

  • Matomo NAMED 2023 Hi-Tech Awards finalist

    1er août 2023, par LancePress Releases

    WELLINGTON, N.Z., April 20, 2023 – InnoCraft, the makers of world-leading open-source web analytics platform Matomo, has been named an ASX Hi-Tech Emerging Company of the Year finalist in the 2023 Hi-Tech Awards. 



    Matomo founder Matthieu Aubry says, “At Matomo, we believe in empowering individuals and organizations to make informed decisions about their digital presence. By providing an open-source website analytics platform, we have created a more transparent and trustworthy digital ecosystem. We are proud to be recognised as a finalist for the Hi-Tech Awards, and we will continue to work towards a more open and ethical digital landscape, and grow the business in New Zealand and worldwide.”



    About Matomo

    Matomo, launched in 2007 as an open-source, privacy-friendly Google Analytics alternative, is trusted by over 1.5 million websites in 220 countries and has been translated in over 50 languages. Matomo tracks and analyses online visits and traffic to give users a deeper understanding of their website visitors to drive conversions and revenue; while keeping businesses compliant with privacy laws worldwide, such as the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA).

    Aubry says Matomo is performing extremely well internationally as consumers and organizations look for privacy-focused analytics solutions, with several European countries already ruling the use of Google Analytics illegal due to data transfers to the US. In addition, Matomo’s user increase was recognized earlier this year with W3Tech’s award for the best web analytics software in its Web Technologies of the Year 2022 – with previous winners including Google Analytics and Facebook Pixel.



    A record number of companies entered the 2023 Hi-Tech Awards, with entries coming in from across the country and from all areas of the Hi-Tech sector. This depth is reflected in the line-up of finalists this year, according to David Downs, Chair of the Hi-Tech Trust, who says the standard of entries continue to grow every year.

”

    The hi-tech sector continues to flourish and it’s fantastic to see the success that so many of our companies enjoy on the international stage. This sector continues to prove its resilience and is at the forefront of our export economy in turbulent times,” says Downs.



    The Hi-Tech Awards Gala Dinner will take place on Friday, the 23rd of June, in Christchurch. 


     

  • Leading Google Analytics alternative, Matomo, parodies Christopher Nolan blockbuster ahead of the UA sunset

    4 juillet 2023, par ErinPress Releases

    Wellington, New Zealand, 4 July 2023: In the world of online data, Google Analytics has long reigned supreme. Its dominance has been unquestioned, leaving website owners with little choice but to rely on the tech giant for their data insights. However, a new dawn in web analytics is upon us, and Matomo, the leading alternative to Google Analytics, is seizing a unique opportunity to position itself as the go-to provider. In a bold move, Matomo has launched a parody trailer, “Googleheimer,” humorously taking a satirical swipe at Google in the style of the upcoming Oppenheimer biopic by Christopher Nolan.

    Capitalising on a time-bound decision

    With an important decision looming for marketers and web specialists who need to switch analytics providers by July 1st, Matomo has found the perfect window to capture their attention.

    The urgency of the situation, combined with the high intent to switch providers, sets the stage for Matomo to establish itself as the leading alternative analytics platform of choice.

    Matomo’s parody trailer addresses the frustrations of GA4 head-on by highlighting the issues and the uncertainties caused by the sunset of Universal Analytics in humorous satire with lines such as:

    “But we’re keeping everyone’s data, right? Right?? …RIGHT?!”

    Riding on the coat tails of this summer’s anticipated blockbuster from Christopher Nolan, Matomo openly points at the downsides of GA4, and reflects many frustrated marketers pain points in an entertaining way. Beneath the comedic and satirical tone lies the message that users have choices, and no longer need to surrender to the behemoth incumbent.

    Matomo was founded to challenge the status quo and provide a solution for those who believe in privacy and in ethical analytics, and who prefer that their customer data not be concentrated in the hands of just a few corporations.

    Watch the full trailer here. 


    About Matomo

    Matomo is a world-leading open-source privacy-friendly ethical web analytics platform, trusted by over 1.4 million websites in 190 countries and translated into over 50 languages. Matomo helps businesses and organisations track and optimise their online presence allowing users to easily collect, analyse, and act on their website and marketing data to gain a deeper understanding of their visitors and drive conversions and revenue. Matomo’s vision is to create, as a community, the leading open digital analytics platform that gives every user complete control of their data.

    Visit matomo.org for more information.




    More on Google Analytics changes



    A new dawn in web analytics is upon us, and Matomo – the leading alternative to Google Analytics – is here for it. After 20 years, Google is blowing up Universal Analytics (or GA3) – and taking your data with it. Inspired by Christopher Nolan’s upcoming biopic about physicist J. Robert Oppenheimer and the making of his atomic bomb (also known as “The Manhattan Project”), this parody trailer openly points to Google and draws the comparison in humorous satire. GA4 comes with a new set of metrics, setups and reports that change how you analyse your data.

  • Meta Receives a Record GDPR Fine from The Irish Data Protection Commission

    29 mai 2023, par ErinGDPR

    The Irish Data Protection Commission (the DPC) issued a €1.2 billion fine to Meta on May, 22nd 2023 for violating the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR). 

    The regulator ruled that Meta was unlawfully transferring European users’ data to its US-based servers and taking no sufficient measures for ensuring users’ privacy. 

    Meta must now suspend data transfer within five months and delete EU/EEA users’ personal data that was illegally transferred across the border. Or they risk facing another round of repercussions. 

    Meta continued to transfer personal user data to the USA following an earlier ruling of The Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU), which already address problematic EU-U.S. data flows. Meta continued those transfers on the basis of the updated Standard Contractual Clauses (“SCCs”), adopted by the European Commission in 2021. 

    The Irish regulator successfully proved that these arrangements had not sufficiently addressed the “fundamental rights and freedoms” of the European data subjects, outlined in the CJEU ruling. Meta was not doing enough to protect EU users’ data against possible surveillance and unconsented usage by US authorities or other authorised entities.

    Why European Regulators Are After The US Big Tech Firms? 

    GDPR regulations have been a sore area of compliance for US-based big tech companies. 

    Effectively, they had to adopt a host of new measures for collecting user consent, ensuring compliant data storage and the right to request data removal for a substantial part of their user bases. 

    The wrinkle, however, is that companies like Google and Meta among others, don’t have separate data processing infrastructure for different markets. Instead, all the user data gets commingled on the companies’ servers, which are located in the US.  

    Data storage facilities’ location is an issue. In 2020, the CJEU made a historical ruling, called the invalidation of the Privacy Shield. Originally, international companies were allowed to transfer data between the EU and the US if they adhered to seven data protection principles. This arrangement was called the Privacy Shield. 

    However, the continuous investigation found that the Privacy Shield scheme was not GDPR compliant and therefore companies could no longer use it to justify cross-border data transfers.

    The invalidation of the Privacy Shield gave ground for further investigations of the big tech companies’ compliance statuses. 

    In March 2022, the Irish DPC issued the first €17 million fine to Meta for “insufficient technical and organisational measures to ensure information security of European users”. In September 2022, Meta was again hit with a €405 million fine for Instagram breaching GDPR principles. 

    2023 began with another series of rulings, with the DPC concluding that Meta had breaches of the GDPR relating to its Facebook service (€210 million fine) and breaches related to Instagram (€180 million fine). 

    Clearly, Meta already knew they weren’t doing enough for GDPR compliance and yet they refused to take privacy-focused action

    Is Google GDPR Compliant?

    Google has a similar “track record” as Meta when it comes to ensuring full compliance with the GDPR. Although Google has said to provide users with more controls for managing their data privacy, the proposed solutions are just scratching the surface. 

    In the background, Google continues to leverage its ample reserves of user browsing, behavioural and device data in product development and advertising. 

    In 2022, the Irish Council for Civil Liberties (ICCL) found that Google used web users’ information in its real-time bidding ad system without their knowledge or consent. The French data regulator (CNIL), in turn, fined Google for €150 million because of poor cookie consent banners the same year. 

    Google Analytics GDPR compliance status is, however, the bigger concern.

    Neither Google Univeral Analytics (UA) nor Google Analytics 4 are GDPR compliant, following the Privacy Shield framework invalidation in 2020. 

    Fines from individual regulators in Sweden, France, Austria, Italy, Denmark, Finland and Norway ruled that Google Analytics is non-GDPR compliant and is therefore illegal to use.  

    The regulatory rulings not just affect Google, but also GA users. Because the product is in breach of European privacy laws, people using it are complacent. Privacy groups like noyb, for example, are exercising their right to sue individual websites, using Google Analytics.

    How to Stay GDPR Compliant With Website Analytics 

    To avoid any potential risk exposure, selectively investigate each website analytics provider’s data storage and management practices. 

    Inquire about the company’s data storage locations among the first things. For example, Matomo Cloud keeps all the data in the EU, while Matomo On-Premise edition gives you the option to store data in any country of your choice. 

    Secondly, ask about their process for consent tracking and subsequent data analysis. Our website analytics product is fully GDPR compliant as we have first-party cookies enabled by default, offer a convenient option of tracking out-outs, provide a data removal mechanism and practice safe data storage. In fact, Matomo was approved by the French Data Protection Authority (CNIL) as one of the few web analytics apps that can be used to collect data without tracking consent

    Using an in-built GDPR Manager, Matomo users can implement the right set of controls for their market and their industry. For example, you can implement extra data or IP anonymization; disable visitor logs and profiles. 

    Thanks to our privacy-by-design architecture and native controls, users can make their Matomo analytics compliant even with the strictest privacy laws like HIPAA, CCPA, LGPD and PECR. 

    Learn more about GDPR-friendly website analytics.

    Final Thoughts

    Since the GDPR came into effect in 2018, over 1,400 fines have been given to various companies in breach of the regulations. Meta and Google have been initially lax in response to European regulatory demands. But as new fines follow and the consumer pressure mounts, Big Tech companies are forced to take more proactive measures: add opt-outs for personalised ads and introduce an alternative mechanism to third-party cookies.  

    Companies, using non-GDPR-compliant tools risk finding themselves in the crossfire of consumer angst and regulatory criticism. To operate an ethical, compliant business consider privacy-focused alternatives to Google products, especially in the area of website analytics. 

  • To all Matomo plugin developers : Matomo 5 is coming, make your plugin compatible now

    5 mai 2023, par Matomo Core TeamDevelopment

    We’re planning to release the first beta of Matomo 5 in a few weeks. For making it easy for Matomo users to be able to upgrade to this beta, it would be great to have as many plugins on the Marketplace as possible already updated and compatible with Matomo 5. Then many users would be able to upgrade to the first beta without any issues.

    Presumably, as you put your plugin on our Marketplace, you want people to use it. Making your plugin compatible with Matomo 5 helps ensure that people will be able to find and keep using your plugin. If your plugin is not compatible with Matomo 5, your plugin will be automatically deactivated in Matomo 5 instances. We’ll be happy to help you achieve compatibility should there be any issue.

    How do I upgrade my Matomo instance to Matomo 5?

    If you have installed your Matomo development environment through git, you can simply checkout the Matomo 5 branch “5.x-dev” and install its dependencies by executing these commands:

    • git checkout 5.x-dev
    • composer install

    Alternatively, you can also download the latest version directly from GitHub as a zip file and run composer install afterwards.

    How do I upgrade my plugin to Matomo 5?

    While there are some breaking changes in Matomo 5, most of our Platform APIs remain unchanged, and almost all changes are for rarely used APIs. Quite often, making your plugin compatible with Matomo 5 will just be a matter of adjusting the “plugin.json” file (as mentioned in the migration guide).

    You can find all developer documentation on our developer zone which has already been updated for Matomo 5.

    How do I know my plugin changes were released successfully?

    If you have configured an email address within your “plugin.json” file, then you will receive a confirmation or an error email within a few minutes. Alternatively, you can also check out your plugin page on the Marketplace directly. If the plugin release was successful, you will see additional links below the download button showing which versions your plugin is compatible with.

    what it looks like when your plugin is compatible with multiple Matomo versions

    How can switch between Matomo 4 and Matomo 5 or downgrade to Matomo 4?

    To downgrade from Matomo 5 to Matomo 4 in your Matomo development environment:

    • check out the “4.x-dev” branch 
    • run “composer install” as usual

    When will the final Matomo 5 release be available?

    We estimate the final stable Matomo 5.0.0 release will be released in approx. 2-3 months.

    What is new in Matomo 5?

    We don’t have a summary of the changes available just yet but you can see all closed issues within this release here.

    Any questions or need help?

    If you have any questions, or experience any problems during the migration, don’t hesitate to get in touch with us. We’ll be happy to help get your plugin compatible and the update published. If you find any undocumented breaking change or find any step during the migration process not clear, please let us know as well.

    Thank you for contributing a plugin to the Marketplace and making Matomo better. We really appreciate your work!