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  • 5-Step Conversion Rate Optimisation Checklist

    27 octobre 2023, par Erin

    Did you know the average conversion rate across e-commerce businesses in August 2023 was 2.03% ? In the past year, conversion rates have increased by 0.39%.

    Make no mistake. Just because conversion rates are higher this year doesn’t make it any easier to convert visitors.

    Cracking the secrets to improving conversion rates is crucial to running a successful website or business.

    Your site is the digital headquarters all of your marketing efforts funnel toward. With every visitor comes an opportunity to convert them into a lead (or sale).

    Keep reading if you want to improve your lead generation or convert more visitors into customers. In this article, we’ll break down a simple five-step conversion rate optimisation checklist you need to follow to maximise your conversions.

    What is conversion rate optimisation ?

    Before we dive into the steps you need to follow to optimise your conversions, let’s back up and talk conversion rate optimisation.

    Conversion rate optimisation, or CRO for short, is the process of increasing the number of website visitors who take a specific action. 

    In most cases, this means :

    • Turning more visitors into leads by getting them to join an email list
    • Convincing a visitor to fill out a contact form for a consultation
    • Converting a visitor into a paying customer by purchasing a product

    However, conversion rate optimisation can be used for any action you want someone to take on your site. That could be downloading a free guide, clicking on a specific link, commenting on a blog post or sharing your website with a friend.

    Why following a CRO checklist is important

    Conversion rate optimisation is both a valuable practice and an absolute necessity for any business or marketer. While it can be a bit complex, especially when you start diving into A/B testing, there are a variety of advantages :

    Get the most out of your efforts

    When all is said and done, if you can’t convert the traffic already coming to your site, dumping a ton of time and resources into traffic generation (whether paid or organic) won’t solve your problem.

    Instead, you need to look at the root of the problem : your conversion rate.

    By doubling down on conversions and following a conversion rate optimisation checklist, you’ll get the greatest result for the effort you’re already putting into your site.

    Increase audience size

    To increase your audience size, you need to increase your traffic, right ? Not exactly.

    While your audience may be considered people who have seen your content or follow you on social media, a high-value audience is one you can market to directly on an ongoing basis.

    Your website gives you the playground to convert visitors into high-value audience members. This is done by creating conversion-focused email signup forms and optimising your website for sale conversions.

    Generate more sales

    Boosting sales through CRO is the core objective. By optimising product pages, simplifying the checkout process, and employing persuasive strategies, you can systematically increase your sales and maximise the value of your existing traffic.

    Reduce customer acquisition costs (CAC)

    With conversion optimisation, you can convert a higher percentage of your website visitors into paid customers. Even if you don’t spend more on acquiring new customers, you’ll be able to generate more sales overall. 

    The result is that your customer acquisition costs will drop, allowing you to increase your total acquisitions to your customer base.

    Improve profitability

    While reduced customer acquisition costs mean you can pour more money into customer acquisition at a cheaper rate, you could simply maintain your costs while driving sales, resulting in increased profitability.

    If you can spend the same amount on acquisition but bring in 20% more customers (due to using a CRO checklist), your profit margins will automatically increase.

    5-step CRO checklist

    To double down on conversion rate optimisation, you need to follow a checklist to ensure you don’t miss any major optimisation opportunities.

    The checklist below is designed to help you systematically optimise your website, ensuring you make the most of your traffic by continuously refining its performance.

    1. Forms

    Analysing and optimising your website’s forms is crucial for enhancing conversion rates. Understanding how visitors interact with your forms can uncover pain points and help you streamline the conversion process.

    Ever wonder where your visitors drop off on your forms ? It could be due to lengthy, time-consuming fields or overly complex forms, leading to a frustrating user experience and lower conversion rate. Whatever the reason, you need the right tools to uncover the root of the issue.

    By leveraging Form Analytics, you gain powerful insights into user behaviour and can identify areas where people may encounter difficulties.

    Form Analytics provides the insights to discover :

    • Average time spent on each field : This metric helps you understand where users may be struggling or spending too much time. By optimising these fields, you can streamline the form, reduce user frustration and increase conversions.
    • Identifying drop-off points : Understanding where users drop off provides insights into which form fields may need improvement. Addressing these drop-off points can increase the conversion rate.
    • Unneeded fields with a high blank submission rate : Discovering fields left blank upon submission can highlight areas for simplification. By eliminating unnecessary fields, you can create more concise and user-friendly forms that may entice more visitors to engage with the form.

    Hear first-hand how Concrete CMS achieve 3x more leads with insights from Form Analytics. 

    These data-driven insights empower you to optimise your forms, remove guesswork and settle debates about form design. By fine-tuning and streamlining your forms, you can ensure a smoother path to conversion and maximise your success in converting more visitors.

    Try Matomo for Free

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

    No credit card required

    2. Copywriting

    Another crucial element you need to test is your copywriting. Your copywriting is the foundation of your entire website. It helps communicate to your audience what you have to offer and why they need to take action.

    You need to ensure you have a good offer. This isn’t just the product or service you’re putting out there. It’s the complete package. It includes the product, rewards, a unique guarantee, customer service, packaging and promotions.

    Start testing your copy with your headlines. Look at the headers and test different phrases to convert more potential customers into paying customers.

    Here are a few tips to optimise your copy for more conversions :

    • Ensure copy is relevant to your headline and vice versa.
    • Write short words, short sentences and short paragraphs.
    • Use bullets and subheaders to make the copy easy to skim.
    • Don’t focus too heavily on optimising for search engines (SEO). Instead, write for humans.
    • Focus on writing about benefits, not features.
    • Write about how your offer solves the pain points of your audience.

    You can test your copy in several areas once you’ve begun testing your headers – your subheaders, body copy, signup forms and product pages (if you’re e-commerce).

    3. Media : videos and audio

    Next, testing out different media types is crucial. This means incorporating videos and audio into your content.

    Don’t just take a random guess by throwing stuff against the wall, hoping it sticks. Instead, you should use data to develop impactful content.

    Look at your Media Analytics reports in your website analytics solution and see what media people spend the most time on. See what kind of video or audio content already impacts conversions.

    Humans are highly visual. You should craft your content so it’s easy to digest. Instead of covering your website in huge chunks of text, split up your copy with engaging content like videos.

    High-quality videos and audio recordings allow your readers to consume more of your content easily, and help persuade them to take action on your site.

    4. Calls to action (CTA)

    This brings us to our next point : your call to action (CTA).

    Are you trying to convert more prospects into leads ? Want to turn more leads into customers ? Trying to get more email subscribers ? Or do you want to generate more sales every month ?

    You could write the most compelling offer flooded with beautiful images, videos and CRO tactics. But your efforts will go to waste if you don’t include a compelling CTA.

    An example of a CTA

    Here are a few tips to optimise your CTAs :

    • Keep them congruent on a single web page (e.g., don’t sell a hat and a sweater on the same page, as it can be confusing).
    • Place at least one CTA above the fold on your web pages.
    • Include benefits in your CTA. Rather than “Buy Now,” try “Buy Now to Get 30% Off.”
    • It’s better to be clear and concise than too fancy and unique.

    Optimising your call to action isn’t just about your copywriting. It’s also about design. Test different fonts, sizes, and visual elements like borders, icons and background colours.

    5. Web design

    Your site design will impact how well your visitors convert. You could have incredible copywriting, but if your site is laid out poorly, it will drive people away.

    You must ensure your copy and visual content fit your website design well.

    The first place you need to start with your site is your homepage design.

    Your site design consists of the theme or template, colour scheme and other visual elements that can be optimised to improve conversions.

    Here are a few tips to keep in mind when optimising your website design :

    • Use a colour scheme that’s pleasant rather than too distracting or extreme.
    • Ensure your design doesn’t remove the text’s clarity but makes it easier to read.
    • When in doubt, start with black text on a white background (the opposite rarely works).
    • Keep plenty of whitespace in between design elements.
    • When in doubt about font size, start by testing a larger size.
    • Design mobile-first rather than desktop-first.

    Finally, it’s critical to ensure your website is easy to navigate. Good design is all about the user experience. Is it easy to find what they’re looking for ? Simplify steps to reduce the need to click, and your conversions will increase.

    Start optimising your website for conversions

    If you’re looking to get the most out of the traffic on your site by converting more visitors into leads or customers, following this 5-step CRO checklist will help you take steps in the right direction.

    Just remember conversion rate optimisation is an ongoing process. It’s not a one-time deal. To succeed, you need to test quickly, analyse the impact and do more of what’s working and less of what’s not.

    To optimise your website for better conversion rates, you need the right tools that provide accurate data and insights to effectively increase conversions. With Matomo, you gain access to web analytics and CRO features like Form Analytics and Media Analytics, designed to enhance your conversion rate optimisation efforts. 

    Try Matomo free for 21 days and take your conversion rate to the next level. No credit card required.

  • How to use Behavioural Analytics to Improve Website Performance

    20 septembre 2021, par Ben Erskine — Analytics Tips, Plugins, Heatmap

    User behavioural analytics (UBA) give your business unique insights into your customers. 

    Where traditional website metrics track what actions are completed or how many visitors you have, user behaviour shows the driving factors behind those actions. UBA tools such as website heatmap software provide an easy-to-read visualisation of this data. 

    Ultimately, user behaviour analysis improves website performance and conversions by boosting customer engagement, optimising positive customer experiences, and focusing on the most important part of your sales : the people who are actually buying from you. 

    What is user behaviour analytics ?

    User behaviour analytics (UBA) is data that shows how customers and website visitors interact with your brand online. 

    UBA is tracked using tools such as heatmaps, session recordings and data visualisation software. 

    Where traditional web analytics track metrics such as page views and bounce rates, behavioural analytics provide an even more in-depth picture of your website or funnel success. 

    For example, UBA tracks actions like 

    • How far users are scrolling down the page 
    • Which CTA’s and copy they are focusing on (or not focusing on) 
    • Which design elements, links or buttons they are interacting with 
    • What is happening in between each action

    Tracking user behaviour metrics help keep visitors on your website longer because they analyse where customers may be confused or unclear so you can fix it. 

    What’s the difference between data and behavioural analytics ?

    There are a few key differences between data and behavioural analytics. While data analytics are beneficial to improving website performance, using UBA creates a more customer-centric approach to funnel building. 

    The biggest difference between data and behavioural analytics ? Metric data shows which actions are happening. Behavioural analytics show you WHY they are happening. 

    For example, data can show you that a customer bounced or clicked away. Behaviour analytics show you that a page took a long time to load, they tried to click a link several times and then maybe got frustrated and clicked away. 

    Key differences between data analytics and behavioural analytics : 

    • What is happening versus what is driving it 
    • Track an action (e.g. click-through) versus tracking inaction (e.g. hover without clicking) 
    • Measuring completion of an action versus the flow of actions to complete action 
    • Source of traffic versus individual actions 
    • What happens when someone takes an action versus what happens in between taking action 

    Matomo heatmaps offer both website analytics and user behaviour for a comprehensive analysis.

    Why do behavioural analytics help improve website performance ?

    User behaviour is important because it doesn’t matter how many website visitors you have if they don’t convert. 

    If you have a lot of traffic on mobile devices, but a low CTR, heatmaps show you what is causing the low conversions. Perhaps there is a button that isn’t optimised for mobile scrolling, or a pop up that covers important copy. 

    Analysing the driving factors behind each decision means that you can increase sign-ups and conversions without losing money on website traffic that never actually buys. 

    Matomo's heatmaps feature

    How do heatmap tools show website user behaviour analytics ? 

    Heatmap tools provide a visual representation of user behaviour. 

    There are several key ways that heatmap tracking can improve website performance and therefore your overall conversions.

    Firstly, heatmaps show where to optimise website structure. It uses real visitor experiences to indicate whether customers have to scroll to reach important content, whether important messages are being missed, and whether CTAs are clear. 

    Secondly, heatmaps provide always-on UX and useability testing for your website, identifying user frustrations and optimising their experience over time.

    They also show valuable user experience insights for A/B versions of a landing page. Not only will you see the raw conversion data, but you will also understand why one page converts more than another.

    Ultimately, heatmaps increase ROI on marketing by optimising the traffic that you are sending to your website.

    Matomo Heatmaps - Hotjar alternative

    5 ways heatmaps and user behaviour analytics improve website performance and conversions

    #1. Improve customer experience

    One of the most important uses for UBA is to improve your customer experience. 

    Imagine you had a physical store. If there was something blocking customers from getting to the counter you could easily see and fix the problem. 

    It is just as important for an online store to find and fix these “roadblocks”. 

    Not only does it reduce friction in the sales funnel and make it easy for customers to buy from you, it improves their overall experience. And when 86% of buyers are willing to pay more for a great customer experience, UBA should be one of your number one priorities for growing your bottom line. 

    #2. Improve customer engagement

    Customer engagement is any interaction between a customer/product user and your business. 

    User behaviour analytics increase engagement at each customer journey touch point. 

    Using data from heatmaps will improve customer engagement because it gives you insights into how you can make your website more user friendly. This reduces friction and increases customer loyalty by making sure customers :

    • See important content 
    • Are not distracted by unnecessary elements 
    • Can easily access information or pages no matter what device they are using 
    • Are clicking on important page elements that take them further through the customer journey 

    For example, say a customer is on a sales page. A heatmap might show that pop ups or design elements like links to another page are pulling their attention away from the primary focus (i.e. the sales copy). 

    #3. Focus on customer-centric approach 

    A customer-centric approach means putting your customers at the centre of everything that you do. There is a lot of competition for your customers’ hard earned dollars, so you need to stand out. A good product or service is not enough on its own anymore. 

    User behaviour analytics are at the heart of customer-centric strategies. Instead of guessing how customers interact with your online presence, tools like heatmaps give insight into exactly what customers need. 

    This matched with an effective customer feedback strategy gives a holistic and effective approach to improving your customer experiences. 

    #4. Capture customer data across multiple channels

    Most customers won’t convert on their very first visit to a website. They might interact with your business across many channels and research your product multiple times before purchasing. 

    Multi Channel Conversion Attribution, also known as Cross Channel Attribution, lets you assign a value to each visit prior to a conversion or prior to a sale. By applying different attribution models, you get a better view on which channels actually lead to a conversion.

    User behaviour analytics like the multi channel conversion attribution that Matomo offers can show you exactly where you should focus your money to acquire new customers. 

    #5. Track and measure business objectives

    User behaviour analytics like heatmaps can show you whether you are actually hitting your targets. 

    Setting goals helps track your website performance against business objectives. 

    These include objectives such as lead generation, online sales and increased brand exposure. Matomo has a specific function for tracking goals and measuring analytics.

    Using a combination of UBA and data metrics will produce the most effective conversions. 

    For example, a customer reaching the payment confirmation page is a common objective to measure conversions. However, it is only tracked if they actually complete the action. Measuring on-page customer activity with heatmaps shows why they do or do not convert so you can fix issues. 

    Final thoughts on user behaviour analytics 

    User behavioural analytics (UBA) provide a unique and in-depth insight into your customers and their needs. Unlike traditional data metrics that track completed actions, UBA like heatmaps show you what happens in between each action and help fix any critical issues. 

    Heatmaps are your secret weapon to improving website performance while staying customer-centric ! 

    Want to know how heatmap analytics increase conversions and improve customer experience without spending more on traffic or marketing ? Check out some of the other in depth guides below. 

    The Ultimate Guide to Heatmap Software

    10 Proven Ways Heatmap Software Improves Website Conversions

    Heatmap Video

    Session Recording Video

  • Top 5 Web Analytics Tools for Your Site

    11 août 2023, par Erin — Analytics 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.