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  • GA360 Sunset : Is Now the Time to Switch ?

    20 mai 2024, par Erin

    Google pushed the sunset date of Universal Analytics 360 to July 2024, giving enterprise users more time to transition to Google Analytics 4. This extension is also seen by some as time to find a suitable alternative. 

    While Google positions GA4 as an upgrade to Universal Analytics, the new platform has faced its fair share of backlash. 

    So before you rush to meet the new sunset deadline, ask yourself this question : Is now the time to switch to a Google Analytics alternative ?

    In this article, we’ll explain what the new GA360 sunset date means and show you what you could gain by choosing a privacy-friendly alternative. 

    What’s happening with the final GA360 sunset ?

    Google has given Universal Analytics 360 properties with a current 360 licence a one-time extension, which will end on 1 July 2024.

    Why did Google extend the sunset ?

    In a blog post on Google, Russell Ketchum, Director of Product Management at Google Analytics, provided more details about the final GA360 sunset. 

    In short, the tech giant realised it would take large enterprise accounts (which typically have complex analytics setups) much longer to transition smoothly. The extension gives them time to migrate to GA4 and check everything is tracking correctly. 

    What’s more, Google is also focused on improving the GA4 experience before more GA360 users migrate :

    “We’re focusing our efforts and investments on Google Analytics 4 to deliver a solution built to adapt to a changing ecosystem. Because of this, throughout 2023 we’ll be shifting support away from Universal Analytics 360 and will move our full focus to Google Analytics 4 in 2024. As a result, performance will likely degrade in Universal Analytics 360 until the new sunset date.”

    Despite the extension, the July sunset is definitive. 

    Starting the week of 1 July 2024, you won’t be able to access any Universal Analytics properties or the API (not even with read-only access), and all data will be deleted.

    In other words, it’s not just data collection that will cease at the start of July. You won’t be able to access the platform, and all your data will be deleted. 

    What GA360 features is Google deprecating, and when ?

    If you’re wondering which GA360 features are being deprecated and when, here is the timeline for Google’s final GA360 sunset :

    • 1 January 2024 : From the beginning of the year, Google doesn’t guarantee all features and functionalities in UA 360 will continue to work as expected. 
    • 29 January 2024 : Google began deprecating a string of advertising and measurement features as it shifts resources to focus on GA4. These features include :
      • Realtime reports
      • Lifetime Value report
      • Model Explorer
      • Cohort Analysis
      • Conversion Probability report
      • GDN Impression Beta
    • Early March 2024 : Google began deprecating more advertising and measurement features. Deprecated advertising features include Demographic and Interest reports, Publisher reporting, Phone Analytics, Event and Salesforce Data Import, and Realtime BigQuery Export. Deprecated measurement features include Universal Analytics property creation, App Views, Unsampled reports, Custom Tables and annotations.
    • Late March 2024 : This is the last recommended date for migration to GA4 to give users three months to validate data and settings. By this date, Google recommends that you migrate your UA’s Google Ads links to GA4, create new Google Ad conversions based on GA4 events, and add GA4 audiences to campaigns and ad groups for retargeting. 
    • 1 July 2024 : From 1 July 2024, you won’t be able to access any UA properties, and all data will be deleted.

    What’s different about GA4 360 ? 

    GA4 comes with a new set of metrics, setups and reports that change how you analyse your data. We highlight the key differences between Universal Analytics and GA4 below. 

    What’s different about GA4?

    New dashboard

    The layout of GA4 is completely different from Universal Analytics, so much so that the UX can be very complex for first-time and experienced GA users alike. Reports or metrics that used to be available in a couple of clicks in UA now take five or more to find. While you can do more in theory with GA4, it takes much more work. 

    New measurements

    The biggest difference between GA4 and UA is how Google measures data. GA4 tracks events — and everything counts as an event. That includes pageviews, scrolls, clicks, file downloads and contact form submissions. 

    The idea is to anonymise data while letting you track complex buyer journeys across multiple devices. However, it can be very confusing, even for experienced marketers and analysts. 

    New metrics

    You won’t be able to track the same metrics in GA4 as in Universal Analytics. Rather than bounce rate, for example, you are forced to track engagement rate, which is the percentage of engaged sessions. These sessions last at least ten seconds, at least two pageviews or at least one conversion event. 

    Confused ? You’re not alone. 

    New reports

    Most reports you’ll be familiar with in Universal Analytics have been replaced in GA4. The new platform also has a completely different reporting interface, with every report grouped under the following five headings : realtime, audience, acquisition, behaviour and conversions. It can be hard for experienced marketers, let alone beginners, to find their way around these new reports. 

    AI insights

    GA4 has machine learning (ML) capabilities that allow you to generate AI insights from your data. Specifically, GA4 has predictive analytics features that let you track three trends : 

    • Purchase probability : the likelihood that a consumer will make a purchase in a given timeframe.
    • Churn probability : the likelihood a customer will churn in a given period.
    • Predictive revenue : the amount of revenue a user is likely to generate over a given period. 

    Google generates these insights using historical data and machine learning algorithms. 

    Cross-platform capabilities

    GA4 also offers cross-platform capabilities, meaning it can track user interactions across websites and mobile apps, giving businesses a holistic view of customer behaviour. This allows for better decision-making throughout the customer journey.

    Does GA4 360 come with other risks ?

    Aside from the poor usability, complexity and steep learning curve, upgrading your GA360 property to GA4 comes with several other risks.

    GA4 has a rocky relationship with privacy regulations, and while you can use it in a GDPR-compliant way at the moment, there’s no guarantee you’ll be able to do so in the future. 

    This presents the prospect of fines for non-compliance. A worse risk, however, is regulators forcing you to change web analytics platforms in the future—something that’s already happened in the EU. Migrating to a new application can be incredibly painful and time-consuming, especially when you can choose a privacy-friendly alternative that avoids the possibility of this scenario. 

    If all this wasn’t bad enough, switching to GA4 risks your historical Universal Analytics data. That’s because you can’t import Universal Analytics data into GA4, even if you migrate ahead of the sunset deadline.

    Why you should consider a GA4 360 alternative instead

    With the GA360 sunset on the horizon, what are your options if you don’t want to deal with GA4’s problems ? 

    The easiest solution is to migrate to a GA4 360 alternative instead. And there are plenty of reasons to migrate from Google Analytics to a privacy-friendly alternative like Matomo. 

    Keep historical data

    As we’ve explained, Google isn’t letting users import their Universal Analytics data from GA360 to GA4. The easiest way to keep it is by switching to a Google Analytics alternative like Matomo that lets you import your historical data. 

    Any business using Google Analytics, whether a GA360 user or otherwise, can import data into Matomo using our Google Analytics Importer plugin. It’s the best way to avoid disruption or losing data when moving on from Universal Analytics.

    Collect 100% accurate data

    Google Analytics implements data sampling and machine learning to fill gaps in your data and generate the kind of predictive insights we mentioned earlier. For standard GA4 users, data sampling starts at 10 million events. For GA4 360 users, data sampling starts at one billion events. Nevertheless, Google Analytics data may not accurately reflect your web traffic. 

    You can fix this using a Google Analytics alternative like Matomo that doesn’t use data sampling. That way, you can be confident that your data-driven decisions are being made with 100% accurate user data. 

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    Guarantee user privacy first

    Google has a stormy relationship with the EU-US Data Privacy Framework—being banned and added back to the framework in recent years.

    Currently, organisations governed by GDPR can use Google Analytics to collect data about EU residents, but there’s no guarantee of their ability to do so in the future. Nor does the Framework prevent Google from using EU customer data for ulterior purposes such as marketing and training large language models. 

    By switching to a privacy-focused alternative like Matomo, you don’t have to worry about your user’s data ending up in the wrong hands.

    Upgrade to an all-in-one analytics tool

    Switching from Google Analytics can actually give organisations access to more features. That’s because some GA4 alternatives, like Matomo, offer advanced conversion optimisation features like heatmaps, session recordings, A/B testing, form analytics and more right out of the box. 

    Matomo Heatmaps Feature

    This makes Matomo a great choice for marketing teams that want to minimise their tech stack and use one tool for both web and behavioural analytics. 

    Get real-time reports

    GA4 isn’t the best tool for analysing website visitors in real time. That’s because it can take up to 4 hours to process new reports in GA360.

    However, Google Analytics alternatives like Matomo have a range of real-time reports you can leverage.

    Real-Time Map Tooltip

    In Matomo, the Real Time Visitor World Map and other reports are processed every 15 minutes. There is also a Visits in Real-time report, which refreshes every five seconds and shows a wealth of data for each visitor. 

    Matomo makes migration easy

    Whether it’s the poor usability, steep learning curve, inaccurate data or privacy issues, there’s every reason to think twice about migrating your UA360 account to GA4. 

    So why not migrate to a Google Analytics alternative like Matomo instead ? One that doesn’t sample data, guarantees your customers’ privacy, offers all the features GA4 doesn’t and is already used by over 1 million sites worldwide.

    Making the switch is easy. Matomo is one of the few web analytics tools that lets you import historical Google Analytics data. In doing so, you can continue to access your historical data and develop more meaningful insights by not having to start from scratch.

    If you’re ready to start a Google Analytics migration, you can try Matomo free for 21 days — no credit card required. 

  • What Is Data Misuse & How to Prevent It ? (With Examples)

    13 mai 2024, par Erin

    Your data is everywhere. Every time you sign up for an email list, log in to Facebook or download a free app onto your smartphone, your data is being taken.

    This can scare customers and users who fear their data will be misused.

    While data can be a powerful asset for your business, it’s important you manage it well, or you could be in over your head.

    In this guide, we break down what data misuse is, what the different types are, some examples of major data misuse and how you can prevent it so you can grow your brand sustainably.

    What is data misuse ?

    Data is a good thing.

    It helps analysts and marketers understand their customers better so they can serve them relevant information, products and services to improve their lives.

    But it can quickly become a bad thing for both the customers and business owners when it’s mishandled and misused.

    What is data misuse?

    Data misuse is when a business uses data outside of the agreed-upon terms. When companies collect data, they need to legally communicate how that data is being used. 

    Who or what determines when data is being misused ?

    Several bodies :

    • User agreements
    • Data privacy laws
    • Corporate policies
    • Industry regulations

    There are certain laws and regulations around how you can collect and use data. Failure to comply with these guidelines and rules can result in several consequences, including legal action.

    Keep reading to discover the different types of data misuse and how to prevent it.

    3 types of data misuse

    There are a few different types of data misuse.

    If you fail to understand them, you could face penalties, legal trouble and a poor brand reputation.

    3 types of data misuse.

    1. Commingling

    When you collect data, you need to ensure you’re using it for the right purpose. Commingling is when an organisation collects data from a specific audience for a specific reason but then uses the data for another purpose.

    One example of commingling is if a company shares sensitive customer data with another company. In many cases, sister companies will share data even if the terms of the data collection didn’t include that clause.

    Another example is if someone collects data for academic purposes like research but then uses the data later on for marketing purposes to drive business growth in a for-profit company.

    In either case, the company went wrong by not being clear on what the data would be used for. You must communicate with your audience exactly how the data will be used.

    2. Personal benefit

    The second common way data is misused in the workplace is through “personal benefit.” This is when someone with access to data abuses it for their own gain.

    The most common example of personal benefit data muse is when an employee misuses internal data.

    While this may sound like each instance of data misuse is caused by malicious intent, that’s not always the case. Data misuse can still exist even if an employee didn’t have any harmful intent behind their actions. 

    One of the most common examples is when an employee mistakenly moves data from a company device to personal devices for easier access.

    3. Ambiguity

    As mentioned above, when discussing commingling, a company must only use data how they say they will use it when they collect it.

    A company can misuse data when they’re unclear on how the data is used. Ambiguity is when a company fails to disclose how user data is being collected and used.

    This means communicating poorly on how the data will be used can be wrong and lead to misuse.

    One of the most common ways this happens is when a company doesn’t know how to use the data, so they can’t give a specific reason. However, this is still considered misuse, as companies need to disclose exactly how they will use the data they collect from their customers.

    Laws on data misuse you need to follow

    Data misuse can lead to poor reputations and penalties from big tech companies. For example, if you step outside social media platforms’ guidelines, you could be suspended, banned or shadowbanned.

    But what’s even more important is certain types of data misuse could mean you’re breaking laws worldwide. Here are some laws on data misuse you need to follow to avoid legal trouble :

    General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)

    The GDPR, or General Data Protection Regulation, is a law within the European Union (EU) that went into effect in 2018.

    The GDPR was implemented to set a standard and improve data protection in Europe. It was also established to increase accountability and transparency for data breaches within businesses and organisations.

    The purpose of the GDPR is to protect residents within the European Union.

    The penalties for breaking GDPR laws are fines up to 20 million Euros or 4% of global revenues (whatever the higher amount is).

    The GDPR doesn’t just affect companies in Europe. You can break the GDPR’s laws regardless of where your organisation is located worldwide. As long as your company collects, processes or uses the personal data of any EU resident, you’re subject to the GDPR’s rules.

    If you want to track user data to grow your business, you need to ensure you’re following international data laws. Tools like Matomo—the world’s leading privacy-friendly web analytics solution—can help you achieve GDPR compliance and maintain it.

    With Matomo, you can confidently enhance your website’s performance, knowing that you’re adhering to data protection laws. 

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA)

    The California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) is another important data law companies worldwide must follow.

    Like GDPR, the CCPA is a data privacy law established to protect residents of a certain region — in this case, residents of California in the United States.

    The CCPA was implemented in 2020, and businesses worldwide can be penalised for breaking the regulations. For example, if you’re found violating the CCPA, you could be fined $7,500 for each intentional violation.

    If you have unintentional violations, you could still be fined, but at a lesser fee of $2,500.

    The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLBA)

    If your business is located within the United States, then you’re subject to a federal law implemented in 1999 called The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB Act or GLBA).

    The GLBA is also known as the Financial Modernization Act of 1999. Its purpose is to control the way American financial institutions handle consumer data. 

    In the GLBA, there are three sections :

    1. The Financial Privacy Rule : regulates the collection and disclosure of private financial data.
    2. Safeguards Rule : Financial institutions must establish security programs to protect financial data.
    3. Pretexting Provisions : Prohibits accessing private data using false pretences.

    The GLBA also requires financial institutions in the U.S. to give their customers written privacy policy communications that explain their data-sharing practices.

    4 examples of data misuse in real life

    If you want to see what data misuse looks like in real life, look no further.

    Big tech is central to some of the biggest data misuses and scandals.

    4 examples of data misuse in real life.

    Here are a few examples of data misuse in real life you should take note of to avoid a similar scenario :

    1. Facebook election interference

    One of history’s most famous examples of data misuse is the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica scandal in 2018.

    During the 2018 U.S. midterm elections, Cambridge Analytica, a political consulting firm, acquired personal data from Facebook users that was said to have been collected for academic research.

    Instead, Cambridge Analytica used data from roughly 87 million Facebook users. 

    This is a prime example of commingling.

    The result ? Cambridge Analytica was left bankrupt and dissolved, and Facebook was fined $5 billion by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC).

    2. Uber “God View” tracking

    Another big tech company, Uber, was caught misusing data a decade ago. 

    Why ?

    Uber implemented a new feature for its employees in 2014 called “God View.”

    The tool enabled Uber employees to track riders using their app. The problem was that they were watching them without the users’ permission. “God View” lets Uber spy on their riders to see their movements and locations.

    The FTC ended up slapping them with a major lawsuit, and as part of their settlement agreement, Uber agreed to have an outside firm audit their privacy practices between 2014 and 2034.

    Uber "God View."

    3. Twitter targeted ads overstep

    In 2019, Twitter was found guilty of allowing advertisers to access its users’ personal data to improve advertisement targeting.

    Advertisers were given access to user email addresses and phone numbers without explicit permission from the users. The result was that Twitter ad buyers could use this contact information to cross-reference with Twitter’s data to serve ads to them.

    Twitter stated that the data leak was an internal error. 

    4. Google location tracking

    In 2020, Google was found guilty of not explicitly disclosing how it’s using its users’ personal data, which is an example of ambiguity.

    The result ?

    The French data protection authority fined Google $57 million.

    8 ways to prevent data misuse in your company

    Now that you know the dangers of data misuse and its associated penalties, it’s time to understand how you can prevent it in your company.

    How to prevent data misuse in your company.

    Here are eight ways you can prevent data misuse :

    1. Track data with an ethical web analytics solution

    You can’t get by in today’s business world without tracking data. The question is whether you’re tracking it safely or not.

    If you want to ensure you aren’t getting into legal trouble with data misuse, then you need to use an ethical web analytics solution like Matomo.

    With it, you can track and improve your website performance while remaining GDPR-compliant and respecting user privacy. Unlike other web analytics solutions that monetise your data and auction it off to advertisers, with Matomo, you own your data.

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    2. Don’t share data with big tech

    As the data misuse examples above show, big tech companies often violate data privacy laws.

    And while most of these companies, like Google, appear to be convenient, they’re often inconvenient (and much worse), especially regarding data leaks, privacy breaches and the sale of your data to advertisers.

    Have you ever heard the phrase : “You are the product ?” When it comes to big tech, chances are if you’re getting it for free, you (and your data) are the products they’re selling.

    The best way to stop sharing data with big tech is to stop using platforms like Google. For more ideas on different Google product alternatives, check out this list of Google alternatives.

    3. Identity verification 

    Data misuse typically isn’t a company-wide ploy. Often, it’s the lack of security structure and systems within your company. 

    An important place to start is to ensure proper identity verification for anyone with access to your data.

    4. Access management

    After establishing identity verification, you should ensure you have proper access management set up. For example, you should only give specific access to specific roles in your company to prevent data misuse.

    5. Activity logs and monitoring

    One way to track data misuse or breaches is by setting up activity logs to ensure you can see who is accessing certain types of data and when they’re accessing it.

    You should ensure you have a team dedicated to continuously monitoring these logs to catch anything quickly.

    6. Behaviour alerts 

    While manually monitoring data is important, it’s also good to set up automatic alerts if there is unusual activity around your data centres. You should set up behaviour alerts and notifications in case threats or compromising events occur.

    7. Onboarding, training, education

    One way to ensure quality data management is to keep your employees up to speed on data security. You should ensure data security is a part of your employee onboarding. Also, you should have regular training and education to keep people informed on protecting company and customer data.

    8. Create data protocols and processes 

    To ensure long-term data security, you should establish data protocols and processes. 

    To protect your user data, set up rules and systems within your organisation that people can reference and follow continuously to prevent data misuse.

    Leverage data ethically with Matomo

    Data is everything in business.

    But it’s not something to be taken lightly. Mishandling user data can break customer trust, lead to penalties from organisations and even create legal trouble and massive fines.

    You should only use privacy-first tools to ensure you’re handling data responsibly.

    Matomo is a privacy-friendly web analytics tool that collects, stores and tracks data across your website without breaking privacy laws.

    With over 1 million websites using Matomo, you can track and improve website performance with :

    • Accurate data (no data sampling)
    • Privacy-friendly and compliant with privacy regulations like GDPR, CCPA and more
    • Advanced features like heatmaps, session recordings, A/B testing and more

    Try Matomo free for 21-days. No credit card required.

  • How Funnel for Piwik Analytics enriches your Piwik experience giving you ultimate insights and debugging capabilities

    13 janvier 2017, par InnoCraft — Community

    No matter what type of website or app you have, whether you are trying to get your users to sign up for something or sell products, there is a certain number of steps your visitors have to go through. On every step you lose visitors and therefore potential revenue and conversions. Therefore it is critical to know where your visitors actually follow those steps in your website or app, where you lose them and where your visitors maybe get confused. By defining a funnel, you can improve your conversion rates, sales and revenue as you can exactly determine where you lose your visitors in converting your goal or a sale.

    A Funnel defines a series of steps that you expect your visitors to take on their way to converting a goal. Funnels, a premium feature for Piwik developed by InnoCraft, lets you create funnels to get the data you need to improve your websites and mobile apps. Learn more about Funnel.

    In this blog post we will cover the reports the Funnel plugin provides. The next blog post shows you how to configure and validate your funnel in Piwik.

    Integration in Goal reports

    At Piwik and InnoCraft, we usually start looking into our goal reports. Funnel integrates directly into each goal reporting page giving you a quick overview how your funnel is doing. This saves us a lot of time as we don’t have to separately look into each funnel page and only takes us maybe an additional second to keep an eye on our funnels. By clicking on the headline or “View funnel report” link, you can directly go to the funnel report to get a more detailed report if you notice any spike in the evolution of the conversions or conversion rate.

    Getting an overall Funnel overview

    Next we usually go to the “Funnel Overview” page where it shows a list of all activated Funnels and their performance over time. You will find the look familiar as it is similar to the “Goals Overview” page. If we find something unusual there, for example any spikes, we usually directly click on the headline of the Funnel to go to the detailed Funnel report. You can also choose a funnel from the left reporting menu or search for a funnel by entering the shortcut “f”.

    Viewing a funnel report

    A funnel reporting page looks very similar to a Goal reporting page. It starts with an evolution graph and sparklines showing you the performance of your funnel over time.

    In the evolution graph you can select the metrics you want to plot. We usually have an eye on the funnel conversion rate and the number of “Funnel entries” or the number of “Funnel conversions”. The conversion rate alone does not show you how your funnel is performing. Imagine the rate is always stable at around 20% and you might think everything is alright, but if the number of visitors that take part in your funnel goes down, you might have a problem as the number of funnel conversions actually decreases even though the rate is the same. So we recommend to not only have a look at the conversion rate. The report will remember the metrics you want to plot each time you open it so you don’t have to re-select them over and over again.

    The funnel overview

    In the funnel overview we are giving you more details about the funnel and goal related conversion metrics so you don’t have to switch between the goal and funnel report and compare them easily.

    When you analyze a funnel report, you might not always remember how the funnel is configured. Even though you specify names for each step you sometimes need to know on which pages a certain step will be activated. By clicking on the funnel summary link you can quickly look into the funnel configuration and also see all important metrics at a glance in a simple table without having to scroll.

    You might also notice the Visitor Log link which will show you all actions for all visitors that have entered this funnel. This lets you really understand how your visitors navigate through your website and how they proceeded, exited or converted your funnel on a visitor level.

    The Funnel visualization

    Below the funnel overview you can visually see where your visitors entered, proceeded, converted and exited your funnel. We kept the UI clean so you can focus on the important things.

    Most tools only give you the pages where visitors have entered your funnel but we do better and also show you the list of external referrers used by visitors to enter your funnel directly (marketing campaigns, search engines or other websites). Also we do not only show only the top 5 pages but up to 100 pages and 50 referrers (more can be configured if needed). When you hover a row, you will not only see the number of hits but also the percentage each row has contributed to the entries. Here you want to look and understand how your visitors enter your funnel and based on the data maybe invest in successful referrers, campaigns and pages. If the pages or referrers you expect to see there don’t show up, your users might not understand the path you had in mind for them.

    Next you may notice how many visits have gone through each step, in this case 3487 visits. The green and red bar lets you quickly identify how many of your visitors have proceeded to the next step (green) compared to how many have exited the funnel at this step (red). Ideally, most of the bar is green and not red indicating that more visitors proceed to the next step than they exit.

    Now the next feature is really valuable. When you hover the step title or the number of visits, you will notice that two icons appear :

    Those two little icons are really powerful and give you even more insights to really dig into all the data. The left icon shows you the visitor log showing all actions of each visitor that have participated in this particular funnel step. This means for each step you get to see all the details and actions of each visitor. This lets you really debug and understand problems in your funnel.

    At InnoCraft, we understand that plain numbers are often not so valuable. Only the evolution over time, when you put the numbers in relation to something else you can really understand how your website is doing. The icon to the right lets you do exactly this, it lets you view the row evolution for each funnel step. We are sure you will enjoy this feature. It lets you explore how each funnel step is doing over time. For example the number of entries for a step or how many proceeded to the next step from here over time. Here you ideally want to see that the “Proceeded Rate” increases over time, meaning more and more visitors actually proceed to the next step instead of exiting it.

    We are sure you will really love those features that give you just those extra insights that other tools don’t give you.

    On the right you can find out where your visitors went to, if they did not proceed any further in the funnel. This lets you better understand why they left the funnel and did not proceed any further.

    At the end of the funnel report you find again the number of conversions and the conversion rate. Here we recommend looking into the visitor log when you hover the name of the last step as you can analyze how each visitor converted this funnel in detail.

    Applying segments

    Funnels lets you apply any Piwik segment to the Funnel report allowing you to dice your visitors multiplying the value you get out of Funnel. For example you may want to apply a segment and analyze the funnel for visitors that have visited your website or mobile app for the first time vs. recurring visitors. Sometimes it may be interesting how visitors from different countries go through your funnel, the possibilities are endless. We really recommend to take advantage of segments to understand your different target groups even better.

    The plugin also adds some new segments to your Piwik letting you segment any Piwik report by visitors that have participated in a funnel or participated in a particular funnel step. For example you could go to the “Visitors => Locations” report and apply a segment for your funnel to see which countries have participated or converted most in your funnel.

    Widgets, Scheduled Reports, and more.

    This is not where the fun ends. Funnels defines new widgets that you can add to your dashboard or export it into a third party website. You can set up scheduled reports to receive the Funnel report automatically via email or sms or download the report to share it with your colleagues. It works also very well with Custom Alerts and you can view the Funnel report in the Piwik Mobile app. You can manage Funnels via HTTP API and also fetch all Funnel reports via the HTTP Reporting API. The plugin is really nicely integrated into Piwik we will need some more blog posts to show you all the ways Funnels advances your Piwik experience and how it lets you dig into all the data so you can increase your conversions and sales based on this data.

    How to get Funnels and related features

    You can get Funnels on the Piwik Marketplace. If you want to learn more about Funnels you might be also interested in the Funnel User Guide and the Funnel FAQ.

    Similar to Funnels we also offer Users Flow which lets you visualize the flow of your users and visitors across several interactions.