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Encodage et transformation en formats lisibles sur Internet
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP transforme et ré-encode les documents mis en ligne afin de les rendre lisibles sur Internet et automatiquement utilisables sans intervention du créateur de contenu.
Les vidéos sont automatiquement encodées dans les formats supportés par HTML5 : MP4, Ogv et WebM. La version "MP4" est également utilisée pour le lecteur flash de secours nécessaire aux anciens navigateurs.
Les documents audios sont également ré-encodés dans les deux formats utilisables par HTML5 :MP3 et Ogg. La version "MP3" (...) -
Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond
5 septembre 2013, par kent1Certains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;
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Configuration spécifique d’Apache
4 février 2011, par kent1Modules spécifiques
Pour la configuration d’Apache, il est conseillé d’activer certains modules non spécifiques à MediaSPIP, mais permettant d’améliorer les performances : mod_deflate et mod_headers pour compresser automatiquement via Apache les pages. Cf ce tutoriel ; mode_expires pour gérer correctement l’expiration des hits. Cf ce tutoriel ;
Il est également conseillé d’ajouter la prise en charge par apache du mime-type pour les fichiers WebM comme indiqué dans ce tutoriel.
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6 Crucial Benefits of Conversion Rate Optimisation
26 février 2024, par ErinWhether investing time or money in marketing, you want the best return on your investment. You want to get as many customers as possible with your budget and resources.
That’s what conversion rate optimisation (CRO) aims to do. But how does it help you achieve this major goal ?
This guide explores the concrete benefits of conversion rate optimisation and how they lead to more effective marketing and ROI. We’ll also introduce specific CRO best practices to help unlock these benefits.
What is conversion rate optimisation ?
Conversion rate optimisation (CRO) is the process of examining your website for improvements and creating tests to increase the number of visitors who take a desired action, like purchasing a product or submitting a form.
The conversion rate is the percentage of visitors who complete a specific goal.
In order to improve your conversion rate, you need to figure out :
- Where your customers come from
- How potential customers navigate or interact with your website
- Where potential customers are likely to exit your site (or abandon carts)
- What patterns drive valuable actions like sign-ups and sales
From there, you can gradually implement changes that will drive more visitors to convert. That’s the essence of conversion rate optimisation.
6 top benefits of conversion rate optimisation (and best practices to unlock them)
Conversion rate optimisation can help you get more out of your campaigns without investing more. CRO helps you in these six ways :
1. Understand your visitors (and customers) better
The main goal of CRO is to boost conversions, but it’s more than that. In the process of improving conversion rates, you’ll also benefit by gaining deep insights into user behaviour, preferences, and needs.
Using web analytics, tests and behavioural analytics, CRO helps marketers shape their website to match what users need.
Best practices for understanding your customer :
First, analyse how visitors act with full context (the pages they view, how long they stay and more).
In Matomo, you can use the Users Flow report to understand how visitors navigate through your site. This will help you visualise and identify trends in the buyer’s journey.
Then, you can dive deeper by defining and analysing journeys with Funnels. This shows you how many potential customers follow through each step in your defined journey and identify where you might have a leaky funnel.
In the above Funnel Report, nearly half of our visitors, just 44%, are moving forward in the buyer’s journey after landing on our scuba diving mask promotion page. With 56% of potential customers dropping off at this page, it’s a prime opportunity for optimising conversions.
Think of Funnels as your map, and pages with high drop-off rates as valuable opportunities for improvement.
Once you notice patterns, you can try to identify the why. Analyse the pages, do user testing and do your best to improve them.
2. Deliver a better user experience
A better understanding of your customers’ needs means you can deliver a better user experience.
For example, if you notice many people spend more time than expected on a particular step in the sign-up process, you can work to streamline it.
Best practices for improving your user experience :
To do this, you need to come up with testable hypotheses. Start by using Heatmaps and Session Recordings to visualise the user experience and understand where visitors are hesitating, experiencing points of frustration, and exiting.
You need to outline what drives certain patterns in behaviour — like cart abandonment for specific products, and what you think can fix them.
Let’s look at an example. In the screenshot above, we used Matomo’s Heatmap feature to analyse user behaviour on our website.
Only 65% of visitors scroll down far enough to encounter our main call to action to “Write a Review.” This insight suggests a potential opportunity for optimisation, where we can focus efforts on encouraging more users to engage with this key element on our site.
Once you’ve identified an area of improvement, you need to test the results of your proposed solution to the problem. The most common way to do this is with an A/B test.
This is a test where you create a new version of the problematic page, trying different titles, comparing long, and short copy, adding or removing images, testing variations of call-to-action buttons and more. Then, you compare the results — the conversion rate — against the original. With Matomo’s A/B Testing feature, you can easily split traffic between the original and one or more variations.
In the example above from Matomo, we can see that testing different header sizes on a page revealed that the wider header led to a higher conversion rate of 47%, compared to the original rate of 35% and the smaller header’s 36%.
Matomo’s report also analyses the “statistical significance” of the difference in results. Essentially, this is the likelihood that the difference comes from the changes you made in the variation. With a small sample size, random patterns (like one page receiving more organic search visits) can cause the differences.
If you see a significant change over a larger sample size, you can be fairly certain that the difference is meaningful. And that’s exactly what a high statistical significance rating indicates in Matomo.
Once a winner is identified, you can apply the change and start a new experiment.
3. Create a culture of data-driven decision-making
Marketers can no longer afford to rely on guesswork or gamble away budgets and resources. In our digital age, you must use data to get ahead of the competition. In 2021, 65% of business leaders agreed that decisions were getting more complex.
CRO is a great way to start a company-wide focus on data-driven decision-making.
Best practices to start a data-driven culture :
Don’t only test “hunches” or “best practices” — look at the data. Figure out the patterns that highlight how different types of visitors interact with your site.
Try to answer these questions :
- How do our most valuable customers interact with our site before purchasing ?
- How do potential customers who abandon their carts act ?
- Where do our most valuable customers come from ?
Moreover, it’s key to democratise insights by providing multiple team members access to information, fostering informed decision-making company-wide.
4. Lower your acquisition costs and get higher ROI from all marketing efforts
Once you make meaningful optimisations, CRO can help you lower customer acquisition costs (CAC). Getting new customers through advertising will be cheaper.
As a result, you’ll get a better return on investment (ROI) on all your campaigns. Every ad and dollar invested will get you closer to a new customer than before. That’s the bottom line of CRO.
Best practices to lower your CAC (customer acquisition costs) through CRO adjustments :
The easiest way to lower acquisition costs is to understand where your customers come from. Use marketing attribution to track the results of your campaigns, revealing how each touchpoint contributes to conversions and revenue over time, beyond just last-click attribution.
You can then compare the number of conversions to the marketing costs of each channel, to get a channel-specific breakdown of CAC.
This performance overview can help you quickly prioritise the best value channels and ads, lowering your CAC. But these are only surface-level insights.
You can also further lower CAC by optimising the pages these campaigns send visitors to. Start with a deep dive into your landing pages using features like Matomo’s Session Recordings or Heatmaps.
They can help you identify issues with an unengaging user experience or content. Using these insights, you can create A/B tests, where you implement a new page that replaces problematic headlines, buttons, copy, or visuals.
When a test shows a statistically significant improvement in conversion rates, implement the new version. Repeat this over time, and you can increase your conversion rates significantly, getting more customers with the same spend. This will reduce your customer acquisition costs, and help your company grow faster without increasing your ad budget.
5. Improve your average order value (AOV) and customer lifetime value (CLV)
CRO isn’t only about increasing the number of customers you convert. If you adapt your approach, you can also use it to increase the revenue from each customer you bring in.
But you can’t do that by only tracking conversion rates, you also need to track exactly what your customers buy.
If you only blindly optimise for CAC, you even risk lowering your CLV and the overall profitability of your campaigns. (For example, if you focus on Facebook Ads with a $6 CAC, but an average CLV of $50, over Google Ads with a $12 CAC, but a $100 CLV.)
Best practices to track and improve CLV :
First, integrate your analytics platform with your e-commerce (B2C) or your CRM (B2B). This will help you get a more holistic view of your customers. You don’t want the data to stop at “converted.” You want to be able to dive deep into the patterns of high-value customers.
The sales report in Matomo’s ecommerce analytics makes it easy to break down average order value by channels, campaigns, and specific ads.
In the report above, we can see that search engines drive customers who spend significantly more, on average, than social networks — $241 vs. $184. But social networks drive a higher volume of customers and more revenue.
To figure out which channel to focus on, you need to see how the CAC compares to the AOV (or CLV for B2B customers). Let’s say the CAC of social networks is $50, while the search engine CAC is $65. Search engine customers are more profitable — $176 vs. $134. So you may want to adjust some more budget to that channel.
To put it simply :
Profit per customer = AOV (or CLV) – CAC
Example :
- Profit per customer for social networks = $184 – $50 = $134
- Profit per customer for search engines = $241 – $65 = $176
You can also try to A/B test changes that may increase the AOV, like creating a product bundle and recommending it on specific sales pages.
An improvement in CLV will make your campaigns more profitable, and help stretch your advertising budget even further.
6. Improve your content and SEO rankings
A valuable side-effect of focusing on CRO metrics and analyses is that it can boost your SEO rankings.
How ?
CRO helps you improve the user experience of your website. That’s a key signal Google (and other search engines) care about when ranking webpages.
For example, Google’s algorithm considers “dwell time,” AKA how long a user stays on your page. If many users quickly return to the results page and click another result, that’s a bad sign. But if most people stay on your site for a while (or don’t return to Google at all), Google thinks your page gives the user their answer.
As a result, Google will improve your website’s ranking in the search results.
Best practices to make the most of CRO when it comes to SEO :
Use A/B Testing, Heatmaps, and Session Recordings to run experiments and understand user behaviour. Test changes to headlines, page layout, imagery and more to see how it impacts the user experience. You can even experiment with completely changing the content on a page, like substituting an introduction.
Bring your CRO-testing mindset to important pages that aren’t ranking well to improve metrics like dwell time.
Start optimising your conversion rate today
As you’ve seen, enjoying the benefits of CRO heavily relies on the data from a reliable web analytics solution.
But in an increasingly privacy-conscious world (just look at the timeline of GDPR updates and fines), you must tread carefully. One of the dilemmas that marketing managers face today is whether to prioritise data quality or privacy (and regulations).
With Matomo, you don’t have to choose. Matomo values both data quality and privacy, adhering to stringent privacy laws like GDPR and CCPA.
Unlike other web analytics, Matomo doesn’t sample data or use AI and machine learning to fill data gaps. Plus, you can track without annoying visitors with a cookie consent banner – so you capture 100% of traffic while respecting user privacy (excluding in Germany and UK).
And as you’ve already seen above, you’ll still get plenty of reports and insights to drive your CRO efforts. With User Flows, Funnels, Session Recordings, Form Analytics, and Heatmaps, you can immediately find insights to improve your bottom line.
And our built-in A/B testing feature will help you test your hypotheses and drive reliable progress. If you’re ready to reliably optimise conversion rates (with accuracy and without privacy concerns), try Matomo for free for 21 days. No credit card required.
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21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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How to Measure Marketing Effectiveness : A Step-by-Step Guide
22 février 2024, par ErinAre you struggling to prove that your marketing efforts are having a measurable impact on your company’s performance ? We get it.
You would think that digital marketing would make it easier to track the effectiveness of your marketing efforts. But in many ways, it’s harder than ever. With so many channels and strategies competing against each other, it can feel impossible to pin down the campaign that caused a conversion.
That leaves you in a tricky spot as a marketing manager. It can be hard to know which campaigns to persevere with and harder still to prove your worth to stakeholders.
Thankfully, there are several strategies you can use to measure the success of your campaigns and put a value on your efforts. So, if you want to learn how you can measure the effectiveness of your marketing, improve the ROI of your efforts and prove your value as an employee, read on.
What is marketing effectiveness ?
Marketing effectiveness measures how successful a marketing strategy or campaign is and the extent to which it achieves goals and business objectives.
It’s a growing concern for brands, with research showing that 61.2% say measuring marketing effectiveness has become a more prominent factor in decision-making over the last three years. In other words, it’s becoming critical for marketers to know how to measure their effectiveness.
But it’s getting harder to do so. A combination of factors, including channel fragmentation, increasingly convoluted customer journeys, and the deprecation of third-party cookies, makes it hard for marketing teams to measure marketing performance.
Why you need to measure marketing effectiveness
Imagine ploughing thousands of dollars into a campaign and not being confident that your efforts bore fruit. It’s unthinkable, right ? If you care about optimising campaigns and improving your worth as a marketer, measuring marketing effectiveness is necessary.
Optimise marketing campaigns
Do you know how effectively each campaign generates conversions and drives revenue ? No ? Then, you need to measure marketing effectiveness.
Doing so could also shine a light on ways to improve your campaigns. One paid ad campaign may suffer from a poor return on ad spend caused by high CPCs. Targeting less competitive keywords could dramatically reduce your costs.
Improve ROI
Today, marketing budgets make up almost 10% of a company’s total revenue, up from 6.4% in 2021. With so much revenue at stake, you’ve got to deliver a return on that investment.
Measuring marketing effectiveness can help you identify the campaigns or strategies delivering the highest ROI so you can invest more heavily into them. On the other side of the same coin, you can use the data to strike off any campaigns that aren’t pulling their weight — increasing your ROI even further.
Demonstrate value
Let’s get selfish for a second. Whether you’re an in-house marketing manager or work for an agency, the security of your paycheck depends on your ability to deliver high-ROI campaigns.
Measuring your marketing effectiveness lets you showcase your value to your company and clients. It helps you build stronger relationships that can lead to bigger and better opportunities in the future.
We should take this opportunity to point out that a good tool for measuring marketing effectiveness is equally important. You probably think Google Analytics will do the job, right ? But when you start implementing the strategies we discuss below, there’s a good chance you’ll have data quality issues.
That was the case for full-service marketing agency MHP/Team SI, which found Google Analytics’ data sampling severely limited the quantity and quality of insights they could collect. It was only by switching to Matomo, a platform that doesn’t use data sampling, that the agency could deliver the insights its clients needed to grow.
Further reading :
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How to measure marketing effectiveness
Measuring marketing effectiveness is not always easy, especially if you have long buying cycles and a lack of good-quality data. Make things as easy as possible by following the steps below :
Know what success looks like
You can’t tell whether your campaigns are effective if you don’t know what you are trying to achieve. That’s why the first step in measuring marketing effectiveness is to set a clear goal.
So, ask yourself what success looks like for each campaign you launch.
Remember, a campaign doesn’t have to drive leads to be considered effective. If all you wanted to do was raise brand awareness or increase organic traffic, you could achieve both goals without recording a single conversion.
We’d wager that’s probably not true for most marketing managers. It’s much more likely you want to achieve something like the following :
- Generating 100 new customers
- Increasing revenue by 20%
- Selling $5,000 of your new product line
- Reducing customer churn by 50%
- Achieving a return on ad spend of 150%
Conventional goal-setting wisdom applies here. So, ensure your goals are measurable, timely, relevant and achievable.
Track conversions
Setting up conversion tracking in your web analytics platform is vital to measuring marketing effectiveness accurately.
What you count as a conversion event will depend on the goals you’ve set above. It doesn’t have to be a sale, mind you. Downloading an ebook or signing up for a webinar are worthy conversion goals, especially if you know they increase the chances of a customer converting.
Whichever platform you choose, ensure it can meet your current and future needs. This is one of the reasons open-source content management system Concrete CMS opted for Matomo when choosing a new website analytics platform. The flexibility of the Matomo platform gave Concrete CMS the adaptability it needed for future growth.
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Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Decide on an attribution model
Marketing attribution is a way of measuring the impact of different channels and touchpoints across the customer journey. If you can assign a value to each conversion, you can use a marketing attribution model to quantify the value of your channels and campaigns.
While most web analytics platforms simply credit the last touchpoint, marketing attribution offers a more comprehensive view by considering all interactions along the customer journey. This distinction is important because relying solely on the last touchpoint can lead to skewed insights and misallocation of resources and budget.
By adopting a marketing attribution approach, you can make more informed decisions, optimizing your campaigns and maximizing your return on investment.
There are several different attribution models you can use to give credit to your various campaigns. These include :
- First interaction : Gives all the credit to the first channel in the customer journey.
- Last interaction : Gives all the credit to the last channel in the customer journey.
- Last non-direct attribution : Gives all credit to the final touchpoint in the customer journey, except for direct interactions. In those cases, credit is given to the touchpoint just before the direct one.
- Linear attribution : Distributes credit equally across all touchpoints.
- Position-based attribution : Attributes 40% credit to the first and last touchpoints and distributes the remaining 20% evenly across all other touchpoints.
Consider carefully which attribution model to use, as this can significantly impact your marketing effectiveness calculation by giving certain campaigns too much credit.
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Analyse KPIs
Tracking KPIs is essential if you want to quantify the impact of your marketing campaigns. But which metrics should you track ?
To improve brand awareness or traffic, so-called vanity metrics like sessions, returning visitors, and organic traffic may suffice as KPIs.
However, that’s not going to be the case for most marketers, whose performance is tied to revenue and ROI. If that’s you, put vanity metrics to one side and focus on the following conversion metrics instead :
- Conversion rate : the percentage of users who complete a desired action.
- Return on ad spend : the revenue earned for every dollar spent on a campaign.
- Return on investment : a broader calculation than ROAS, typically calculated across all your marketing efforts.
- Customer lifetime value : the total amount a customer will spend throughout their relationship with your company.
- Customer acquisition cost : the cost to acquire each customer on average.
Your analytics platform and advertising tools should track most of these KPIs by default. Matomo, for instance, automatically calculates your conversion rate in the Goals report.
How to present your marketing effectiveness
Calculating your marketing effectiveness is one thing, but it’s important to share this information with stakeholders — whether those are executives in your company or your agency’s clients.
Follow the steps below to create an insightful and compelling marketing report :
- Set the scene. There’s no guarantee that the people reading your report will know your goals. So, add context at the start of the reporting by spelling out what you are trying to achieve and why.
- Select the right data. You don’t want to overwhelm the reader with facts and figures, but you do need to provide hard evidence of your success. Include the KPIs you used to measure your success and show how these have changed over time. You can also support your report with audience insights such as heatmaps or customer surveys.
- Tell a story with your presentation. Give your presentation a narrative arc with a beginning, middle, and end. Start with what you want to achieve, describe how you plan to achieve it and end with the results. Support your story with graphs and other visual aids that hold your reader’s attention.
- Provide a concise summary. Not everyone will read your presentation cover to cover. With that in mind, provide a summary of your report at the start or end that shows what you achieved and quantifies your marketing effectiveness.
How to improve marketing effectiveness
Don’t settle for simply measuring your marketing effectiveness. Use the following strategies to make future campaigns as effective as possible.
Understand customer behaviour
More effective marketing campaigns start by deeply understanding your customers, who they are, and how they behave. This allows you to take an audience-first approach to your marketing efforts and design campaigns around the unique needs of your customers.
Gather as much first-party data as you can. Surveys, focus groups, and other market research techniques can help you learn more about who your customers are, but don’t disregard the quantitative data you can gather from your web analytics platform.
Using Heatmaps, Session Recordings and behavioural analytics tools, you can learn exactly how customers behave when they land on your site, where they focus their attention and which pages they look at first.
These insights can help you turn an average campaign into an exceptional one. For example, a heatmap may highlight the need to move CTA buttons above the fold to increase conversions. A session recording could pinpoint the problems users have when filling out your website’s forms.
Further reading :
Optimise landing pages
Developing a culture of testing and experimentation is a great way to improve your marketing effectiveness. Let’s dive into A/B testing.
By tweaking various elements of your landing pages, you can squeeze every last conversion from your campaigns.
We have a guide on conversion funnel optimisation, which we recommend you check out, but I’ll briefly list some of the optimisations you could test :
- Making your CTAs actionable and compelling
- Integrating images and videos
- Adding testimonials and other forms of social proof
- Reducing form fields
Use a different attribution model
It might be that some campaigns, strategies or traffic sources aren’t getting the love they deserve. By changing your attribution model, you can significantly change the perceived effectiveness of certain campaigns.
Let’s say you use a last-touch attribution model, for instance. Only the last channel customers will get credit for each conversion, meaning top-of-the-funnel campaigns like SEO may be deemed less effective than they are.
It’s why you must continually test, tweak and validate your chosen model — and why changing it can be so powerful.
Measure your marketing effectiveness with Matomo
Measuring your marketing effectiveness is hard work. But it’s vital to optimise campaigns, improve your ROI and demonstrate your value.
The good news is that Matomo makes things a lot easier thanks to its comprehensive conversion tracking, attribution modelling capabilities and behavioural insight features like Heatmaps, A/B Testing and Session Recordings.
Take steps today to start measuring (and improving) the effectiveness of your marketing with our 21-day free trial. No credit card required.
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21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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Linear Attribution Model : What Is It and How Does It Work ?
16 février 2024, par ErinWant a more in-depth way to understand the effectiveness of your marketing campaigns ? Then, the linear attribution model could be the answer.
Although you can choose from several different attribution models, a linear model is ideal for giving value to every touchpoint along the customer journey. It can help you identify your most effective marketing channels and optimise your campaigns.
So, without further ado, let’s explore what a linear attribution model is, when you should use it and how you can get started.
What is a linear attribution model ?
A linear attribution model is a multi-touch method of marketing attribution where equal credit is given to each touchpoint. Every marketing channel used across the entire customer journey gets credit, and each is considered equally important.
So, if a potential customer has four interactions before converting, each channel gets 25% of the credit.
Let’s look at how linear attribution works in practice using a hypothetical example of a marketing manager, Sally, who is looking for an alternative to Google Analytics.
Sally starts her conversion path by reading a Matomo article comparing Matomo to Google Analytics she finds when searching on Google. A few days later she signs up for a webinar she saw on Matomo’s LinkedIn page. Two weeks later, Sally gets a sign-off from her boss and decides to go ahead with Matomo. She visits the website and starts a free trial by clicking on one of the paid Google Ads.
Using a linear attribution model, we credit each of the channels Sally uses (organic traffic, organic social, and paid ads), ensuring no channel is overlooked in our marketing analysis.
Are there other types of attribution models ?
Absolutely. There are several common types of attribution models marketing managers can use to measure the impact of channels in different ways.
- First interaction : Also called a first-touch attribution model, this method gives all the credit to the first channel in the customer journey. This model is great for optimising the top of your sales funnel.
- Last interaction : Also called a last-touch attribution model, this approach gives all the credit to the last channel the customer interacts with. It’s a great model for optimising the bottom of your marketing funnel.
- Last non-direct interaction : This attribution model excludes direct traffic and credits the previous touchpoint. This is a fantastic alternative to a last-touch attribution model, especially if most customers visit your website before converting.
- Time decay attribution model : This model adjusts credit according to the order of the touchpoints. Those nearest the conversion get weighted the highest.
- Position-based attribution model : This model allocates 40% of the credit to the first and last touchpoints and splits the remaining 20% evenly between every other interaction.
Why use a linear attribution model ?
Marketing attribution is vital if you want to understand which parts of your marketing strategy are working. All of the attribution models described above can help you achieve this to some degree, but there are several reasons to choose a linear attribution model in particular.
It uses multi-touch attribution
Unlike single-touch attribution models like first and last interaction, linear attribution is a multi-touch attribution model that considers every touchpoint. This is vital to get a complete picture of the modern customer journey, where customers interact with companies between 20 and 500 times.
Single-touch attribution models can be misleading by giving conversion credit to a single channel, especially if it was the customer’s last use. In our example above, Sally’s last interaction with our brand was through a paid ad, but it was hardly the most important.
It’s easy to understand
Attribution models can be complicated, but linear attribution is easy to understand. Every touchpoint gets the same credit, allowing you to see how your entire marketing function works. This simplicity also makes it easy for marketers to take action.
It’s great for identifying effective marketing channels
Because linear attribution is one of the few models that provides a complete view of the customer journey, it’s easy to identify your most common and influential touchpoints.
It accounts for the top and bottom of your funnel, so you can also categorise your marketing channels more effectively and make more informed decisions. For example, PPC ads may be a more common bottom-of-the-full touchpoint and should, therefore, not be used to target broad, top-of-funnel search terms.
Are there any reasons not to use linear attribution ?
Linear attribution isn’t perfect. Like all attribution models, it has its weaknesses. Specifically, linear attribution can be too simple, dilute conversion credit and unsuitable for long sales cycles.
It can be too simple
Linear attribution lacks nuance. It only considers touchpoints while ignoring other factors like brand image and your competitors. This is true for most attribution models, but it’s still important to point it out.
It can dilute conversion credit
In reality, not every touchpoint impacts conversions to the same extent. In the example above, the social media post promoting the webinar may have been the most effective touchpoint, but we have no way of measuring this.
The risk with using a linear model is that credit can be underestimated and overestimated — especially if you have a long sales cycle.
It’s unsuitable for very long sales cycles
Speaking of long sales cycles, linear attribution models won’t add much value if your customer journey contains dozens of different touchpoints. Credit will get diluted to the point where analysis becomes impossible, and the model will also struggle to measure the precise ways certain touchpoints impact conversions.
Should you use a linear attribution model ?
A linear attribution model is a great choice for any company with shorter sales cycles or a reasonably straightforward customer journey that uses multiple marketing channels. In these cases, it helps you understand the contribution of each touchpoint and find your best channels.
It’s also a practical choice for small businesses and startups that don’t have a team of data scientists on staff or the budget to hire outside help. Because it’s so easy to set up and understand, anyone can start generating insights using this model.
How to set up a linear attribution model
Are you sold on the idea of using a linear attribution model ? Then follow the steps below to get started :
Choose a marketing attribution tool
Given the market is worth $3.1 billion, you won’t be surprised to learn there are plenty of tools to choose from. But choose carefully. The tool you pick can significantly impact your success with attribution modelling.
Take Google Analytics, for instance. While GA4 offers several marketing attribution models for free, including linear attribution, it lacks accuracy due to cookie consent rejection and data sampling.
Accurate marketing attribution is included as a feature in Matomo Cloud and is available as a plugin for Matomo On-Premise users. We support a full range of attribution models that use 100% accurate data because we don’t use data sampling, and cookie consent isn’t an issue (with the exception of Germany and the UK). That means you can trust our insights.
Matomo’s marketing attribution is available out of the box, and we also provide access to raw data, allowing you to develop your custom attribution model.
Collect data
The quality of your marketing attribution also depends on the quality and quantity of your data. It’s why you need to avoid a platform that uses data sampling.
This should include :
- General data from your analytics platform, like pages visited and forms filled
- Goals and conversions, which we’ll discuss in more detail in the next step
- Campaign tracking data so you can monitor the behaviour of traffic from different referral channels
- Behavioural data from features like Heatmaps or Session Recordings
Set up goals and conversions
You can’t assign conversion values to customer journey touchpoints if you don’t have conversion goals in place. That’s why the next step of the process is to set up conversion tracking in your web analytics platform.
Depending on your type of business and the product you sell, conversions could take one of the following forms :
- A product purchase
- Signing up for a webinar
- Downloading an ebook
- Filling in a form
- Starting a free trial
Setting up these kinds of goals is easy if you use Matomo.
Just head to the Goals section of the dashboard, click Manage Goals and then click the green Add A New Goal button.
Fill in the screen below, and add a Goal Revenue at the bottom of the page. Doing so will mean Matomo can automatically calculate the value of each touchpoint when using your attribution model.
If your analytics platform allows it, make sure you also set up Event Tracking, which will allow you to analyse how many users start to take a desired action (like filling in a form) but never complete the task.
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Test and validate
As we’ve explained, linear attribution is a great model in some scenarios, but it can fall short if you have a long or complex sales funnel. Even if you’re sure it’s the right model for your company, testing and validating is important.
Ideally, your chosen attribution tool should make this process pretty straightforward. For example, Matomo’s Marketing Attribution feature makes comparing and contrasting three different attribution models easy.
Here we compare the performance of three attribution models—linear, first-touch, and last-non-direct—in Matomo’s Marketing Attribution dashboard, providing straightforward analysis.
If you think linear attribution accurately reflects the value of your channels, you can start to analyse the insights it generates. If not, then consider using another attribution model.
Don’t forget to take action from your marketing efforts, either. Linear attribution helps you spot the channels that contribute most to conversions, so allocate more resources to those channels and see if you can improve your conversion rate or boost your ROI.
Make the most of marketing attribution with Matomo
A linear attribution model lets you measure every touchpoint in your customer journey. It’s an easy attribution model to start with and lets you identify and optimise your most effective marketing channels.
However, accurate data is essential if you want to benefit the most from marketing attribution data. If your web analytics solution doesn’t play nicely with cookies or uses sampled data, then your linear model isn’t going to tell you the whole story.
That’s why over 1 million sites trust Matomo’s privacy-focused web analytics, ensuring accurate data for a comprehensive understanding of customer journeys.
Now you know what linear attribution modelling is, start employing the model today by signing up for a free 21-day trial, no credit card required.
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