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La file d’attente de SPIPmotion
28 novembre 2010, par kent1Une file d’attente stockée dans la base de donnée
Lors de son installation, SPIPmotion crée une nouvelle table dans la base de donnée intitulée spip_spipmotion_attentes.
Cette nouvelle table est constituée des champs suivants : id_spipmotion_attente, l’identifiant numérique unique de la tâche à traiter ; id_document, l’identifiant numérique du document original à encoder ; id_objet l’identifiant unique de l’objet auquel le document encodé devra être attaché automatiquement ; objet, le type d’objet auquel (...) -
Les tâches Cron régulières de la ferme
1er décembre 2010, par kent1La gestion de la ferme passe par l’exécution à intervalle régulier de plusieurs tâches répétitives dites Cron.
Le super Cron (gestion_mutu_super_cron)
Cette tâche, planifiée chaque minute, a pour simple effet d’appeler le Cron de l’ensemble des instances de la mutualisation régulièrement. Couplée avec un Cron système sur le site central de la mutualisation, cela permet de simplement générer des visites régulières sur les différents sites et éviter que les tâches des sites peu visités soient trop (...) -
ANNEXE : Les extensions, plugins SPIP des canaux
11 février 2010, par kent1Un plugin est un ajout fonctionnel au noyau principal de SPIP. MediaSPIP consiste en un choix délibéré de plugins existant ou pas auparavant dans la communauté SPIP, qui ont pour certains nécessité soit leur création de A à Z, soit des ajouts de fonctionnalités.
Les extensions que MediaSPIP nécessite pour fonctionner
Depuis la version 2.1.0, SPIP permet d’ajouter des plugins dans le répertoire extensions/.
Les "extensions" ne sont ni plus ni moins que des plugins dont la particularité est qu’ils se (...)
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avutil/rational : Document what is to be expected from av_d2q() of doubles representin...
31 janvier 2024, par Michael Niedermayer -
11 of the Most Effective Conversion Rate Optimisation Best Practices
14 février 2024, par ErinDriving more traffic to your website is hard work, but it’s still only half the battle.
You don’t just need to acquire new users ; you need to make sure as many convert as possible to make your digital marketing efforts worthwhile.
That’s why improving your site’s conversion rate is so important. It will also help you get more value from your existing traffic source and keep you in line with your competitors. It’s also probably a lot easier than you think — especially if you adopt optimisation strategies that have been proven to be profitable time and time again.
In this article, we’ll show some of the most powerful, innovative and tried-and-tested conversion rate optimisation strategies you can implement immediately.
What is conversion rate optimisation ?
First, let’s look at what conversion rate optimisation means. Conversion rate optimisation is the practice of improving elements of your website to increase the number of users who take a desired action and turn visitors into customers.
Common conversion goals include :
- Making a purchase
- Adding an item to a shopping cart
- Signing up for a newsletter
- Registering for a free trial
- Downloading an ebook
- Watching a video
It doesn’t matter what your goal is. Using one of the following conversion rate optimisation best practices can send your conversions soaring.
11 conversion rate optimisation best practices
Are you ready to roll up your sleeves and get to work ? Then use one or more of the following best practices to improve your return on investment.
Set a clear goals and hypothesis
When running an A/B or multivariate test, you need a clear idea of what you are testing and why.
A goal (a statement about what you want to achieve) and a hypothesis (a statement about what you expect to happen) clarify the problem you are trying to solve and give you a definitive way to judge the experiment’s results.
Confused ? Just use this template :
We aim to [insert goal] by testing [insert test] on [insert page]. We expect that [insert test] will increase [insert metric] because [insert reason].
Make sure your goals are directly related to the experiment. If you are testing your CTA button, the goal should be getting more users to click the button. It shouldn’t be a goal further down the conversion funnel, like making a purchase.
Start with A/B tests
A/B testing is one of the easiest and most effective ways to run experiments to improve your current conversion rate. So, it’s no wonder that the A/B testing software market was expected to be worth $1.2 billion in 2023 and hit $3.6 billion by 2033.
Also known as split testing, A/B testing allows you to directly compare the conversion performance of two elements on your page, like the colour of your CTA button or your headline copy.
You can go even further with multivariate testing, which lets you test two or more changes against a single control.
For example, the screenshot above shows the results of a multivariate test between a standard header, a wide header and a small header using Matomo’s A/B testing tool. As you can see, the wider header has a much higher conversion, and the increase was statistically significant.
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Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Tweak your CTAs
Calls to action (CTAs) are page elements that prompt users to respond immediately. They are usually buttons but can also be images or plain text links.
What your CTAs say, how they look, and where they are placed can greatly impact your site’s conversion rates. As such, this is one of the elements you’ll want to optimise first.
There are several tweaks you can test, including your CTA’s :
- Colour
- Length
- Copy
- Placement
You can even test the impact of removing CTA banners and using text-based CTAs on your conversion rates.
You should test out personalising CTAs, too. Research shows that personalised CTAs perform 202% better than standard calls to action.
Revise your web copy
You can use several strategies to improve your website’s copy and generate more conversions.
Optimising copy for search engines can increase traffic and generate more conversions, for example. But that shouldn’t make your copy any less impactful. Bear search engines in mind, by all means, but make sure you are speaking to the needs and desires of your potential customers. Your copy needs to convince users that your product can solve their problems.
Nowhere is this more important than your headlines. These will be the first thing users read, so make sure they sell your USP and highlight pain points.
Don’t just guess at the kind of messaging that will move the needle, however. Constantly test new headlines and continue doing so even after you’ve started seeing success. The results may surprise you. TruckersReport, a site that helps people become truck drivers, boosted opt-ins by 21.7% by revising its landing page headline, among other changes.
Make sure there are no spelling mistakes in your copy, either. Misspelt words, poor grammar and bad formatting make your website look unprofessional and untrustworthy. Even if the rest of your copy is incredibly enticing, these rookie errors can be enough to turn customers off.
Simplify your site’s navigation
A website’s navigation is an often overlooked factor in conversion rate optimisation, but simplifying it can make it much easier for users to take action.
If you’ve ever used a poorly designed e-commerce store, you know how confusing and overwhelming bad navigation can be. Research shows that a whopping 82% of stores don’t divide their navigation into manageable chunks.
The trick is to simplify your navigation as much as possible. As you can see in the screenshot below, our navigation only has five headers and a call to action. It’s easy to find exactly what you’re looking for, and you can’t miss the big green CTA button.
Alternatively, you can test what happens when you completely remove your navigation. Brands usually do this on landing pages where the only action they want the user to take is to make a purchase.
It’s exactly the strategy we’ve used on our free trial landing page.
Leverage heatmaps
Analytics tools — and heatmaps in particular — can help you understand user behaviour and optimise accordingly.
Heatmaps are a visual representation of user interaction on your page. Red and yellow represent high levels of user interaction, and blue and green represent low levels of interaction.
As you can see in the screenshot above, our CTA button has some of the highest levels of engagement on the page, telling us that it’s well-positioned. Given the focus on the site’s navigation, we can also assume we are correct to have a CTA button in there — something we can confirm using our web analytics to see how many users click on it.
Reduce load time
Speed matters when it comes to conversions. Fact.
Research shows a huge difference in conversion rates between quick and slow sites. For example, a site that loads in one second converts three times better than a site that loads in five seconds.
That’s why using a web analytics tool is vital to understand page load times and act accordingly if you think slow speeds are hampering your conversions.
Identifying your slowest pages is easy with Matomo. Just sort your pages by the Avg. Use the page load time metric on the page performance report to identify the pages you want to drive conversions.
Next, take steps to improve your page’s load time by :
- Compressing images
- Compressing code files or using a more lightweight theme
- Removing unnecessary plugins
- Using a content delivery network
- Improving your hosting
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Add more trust signals
Trust is essential when you’re trying to convince customers to make a purchase. In fact, consumers rate trust as one of the top three buying factors, far above a brand’s reputation and whether they love the brand.
Adding trust signals to your landing pages, such as customer testimonials, customer reviews, case studies, and other forms of social proof, can transform your conversion rates. If consumers see real people and businesses buy from you, they’ll feel reassured to do the same.
It’s a strategy we use ourselves. Just look at the screenshot from our homepage above. Immediately after our free trial CTA, we display the logos of well-known brands that use our product.
Security-focused trust signals are also powerful if you are an online store. Installing an SSL certificate, showing logos of trusted payment providers (like PayPal and Mastercard) can convince people they are spending money at a legitimate store.
Improve your site’s mobile experience
More and more people are accessing the internet via their smartphones. In 2022, for instance, there were five billion unique mobile Internet users, meaning more than 60% of the internet population used a smartphone to browse online.
Moreover, 76% of U.S. adults make purchases using their smartphones.
That means you need to ensure your site’s mobile experience is on-point to increase conversions.
Your site should use a mobile-first design, meaning it works perfectly on smartphones and then scales up for desktop users.
Trust the data
Opinions are a fantastic form of inspiration for new A/B tests. But they should never be trusted over cold, hard data. If your test shows the opposite of what you and your team thought would happen, then trust the data and not yourself.
With that in mind, ensure you collect qualitative and quantitative data during your experiments. Web analytics should always form the backbone of conversion tests, but don’t forget to also use heatmaps, screen recordings, and customer surveys.
Keep testing
There’s no such word as “finished” in the world of A/B testing. Continual testing is key if you want to convert more website visitors.
Make sure you aren’t stopping tests prematurely, either. Make sure every A/B and multivariate test reaches a sample size that makes the test statistically significant.
Understand your users better with Matomo
Whether you run an e-commerce store, a SaaS company, or a service-based business, implementing these conversion rate optimisation best practices could be an easy way to lower your bounce rate and boost your conversion rates.
But remember, best practices aren’t clear-cut rules. What works for one website may not work for yours. That’s why running your own tests and understanding your visitors’ behaviour is important.
Matomo’s web analytics platform is the perfect tool for doing just that. Not only does it come with the tools you need to optimise your conversion rate (like an A/B testing tool, heatmaps and session recordings), but you can also trust the data. Unlike Google Analytics 4 and other tools, Matomo doesn’t use data sampling meaning you have 100% accurate data from which to make better decisions. It’s GDPR compliant and can run cookieless, so no need for cookie consent banners (excluding in the UK and Germany).
Discover how you can improve your website’s conversions with Matomo by starting a free 21-day trial, no credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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Attribution Tracking (What It Is and How It Works)
23 février 2024, par ErinFacebook, TikTok, Google, email, display ads — which one is best to grow your business ? There’s one proven way to figure it out : attribution tracking.
Marketing attribution allows you to see which channels are producing the best results for your marketing campaigns.
In this guide, we’ll show you what attribution tracking is, why it’s important and how you can leverage it to accelerate your marketing success.
What is attribution tracking ?
By 2026, the global digital marketing industry is projected to reach $786.2 billion.
With nearly three-quarters of a trillion U.S. dollars being poured into digital marketing every year, there’s no doubt it dominates traditional marketing.
The question is, though, how do you know which digital channels to use ?
By measuring your marketing efforts with attribution tracking.
So, what is attribution tracking ?
Attribution tracking is where you use software to keep track of different channels and campaign efforts to determine which channel you should attribute conversion to.
In other words, you can (and should) use attribution tracking to analyse which channels are pushing the needle and which ones aren’t.
By tracking your marketing efforts, you’ll be able to accurately measure the scale of impact each of your channels, campaigns and touchpoints have on a customer’s purchasing decision.
If you don’t track your attribution, you’ll end up blindly pouring time, money, and effort into activities that may or may not be helpful.
Attribution tracking simply gives you insight into what you’re doing right as a marketer — and what you’re doing wrong.
By understanding which efforts and channels are driving conversions and revenue, you’ll be able to properly allocate resources toward winning channels to double down on growth.
Matomo lets you track attribution across various channels. Whether you’re looking to track your conversions through organic, referral websites, campaigns, direct traffic, or social media, you can see all your conversions in one place.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Why attribution tracking is important
Attribution tracking is crucial to succeed with your marketing since it shows you your most valuable channels.
It takes the guesswork out of your efforts.
You don’t need to scratch your head wondering what made your campaigns a success (or a failure).
While most tools show you last click attribution by default, using attribution tracking, or marketing attribution, you can track revenue and conversions for each touchpoint.
For example, a Facebook ad might have no led to a conversion immediately. But, maybe the visitor returned to your website two weeks later through your email campaign. Attribution tracking will give credit over longer periods of time to see the bigger picture of how your marketing channels are impacting your overall performance.
Here are five reasons you need to be using attribution tracking in your business today :
1. Measure channel performance
The most obvious way attribution tracking helps is to show you how well each channel performs.
When you’re using a variety of marketing channels to reach your audience, you have to know what’s actually doing well (and what’s not).
This means having clarity on the performance of your :
- Emails
- Google Ads
- Facebook Ads
- Social media marketing
- Search engine optimisation (SEO)
- And more
Attribution tracking allows you to measure each channel’s ROI and identify how much each channel impacted your campaigns.
It gives you a more accurate picture of the performance of each channel and each campaign.
With it, you can easily break down your channels by how much they drove sales, conversions, signups, or other actions.
With this information, you can then understand where to further allocate your resources to fuel growth.
2. See campaign performance over longer periods of time
When you start tracking your channel performance with attribution tracking, you’ll gain new insights into how well your channels and campaigns are performing.
The best part — you don’t just get to see recent performance.
You get to track your campaign results over weeks or months.
For example, if someone found you through Google by searching a question that your blog had an answer to, but they didn’t convert, your traditional tracking strategy would discount SEO.
But, if that same person clicked a TikTok ad you placed three weeks later, came back, and converted — SEO would receive some attribution on the conversion.
Using an attribution tracking tool like Matomo can help paint a holistic view of how your marketing is really doing from channel to channel over the long run.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
3. Increase revenue
Attribution tracking has one incredible benefit for marketers : optimised marketing spend.
When you begin looking at how well your campaigns and your channels are performing, you’ll start to see what’s working.
Attribution tracking gives you clarity into the performance of campaigns since it’s not just looking at the first time someone clicks through to your site. It’s looking at every touchpoint a customer made along the way to a conversion.
By understanding what channels are most effective, you can pour more resources like time, money and labour into those effective channels.
By doubling down on the winning channels, you’ll be able to grow like never before.
Rather than trying to “diversify” your marketing efforts, lean into what’s working.
This is one of the key strategies of an effective marketer to maximise your campaign returns and experience long-term success in terms of revenue.
4. Improve profit margins
The final benefit to attribution tracking is simple : you’ll earn more profit.
Think about it this way : let’s say you’re putting 50% of your marketing spend into Facebook ads and 50% of your spend into email marketing.
You do this for one year, allocating $500,000 to Facebook and $500,000 to email.
Then, you start tracking attribution.
You find that your Facebook ads are generating $900,000 in revenue.
That’s a 1,800% return on your investment.
Not bad, right ?
Well, after tracking your attribution, you see what your email revenue is.
In the past year, you generated $1.7 million in email revenue.
That’s a 3,400% return on your investment (close to the average return of email marketing across all industries).
In this scenario, you can see that you’re getting nearly twice as much of a return on your marketing spend with email.
So, the following year, you decide to go for a 75/25 split.
Instead of putting $500,000 into both email and Facebook ads and email, you put $750,000 into email and $250,000 into Facebook ads.
You’re still diversifying, but you’re doubling down on what’s working best.
The result is that you’ll be able to get more revenue by investing the same amount of money, leaving you with higher profit margins.
Different types of marketing attribution tracking
There are several types of attribution tracking models in marketing.
Depending on your goals, your business and your preferred method, there are a variety of types of attribution tracking you can use.
Here are the six main types of attribution tracking :
1. Last interaction
Last interaction attribution model is also called “last touch.”
It’s one of the most common types of attribution. The way it works is to give 100% of the credit to the final channel a customer interacted with before they converted into a customer.
This could be through a paid ad, direct traffic, or organic search.
One potential drawback of last interaction is that it doesn’t factor in other channels that may have assisted in the conversion. However, this model can work really well depending on the business.
2. First interaction
This is the opposite of the previous model.
First interaction, or “first touch,” is all about the first interaction a customer has with your brand.
It gives 100% of the credit to the channel (i.e. a link clicked from a social media post). And it doesn’t report or attribute anything else to another channel that someone may have interacted with in your marketing mix.
For example, it won’t attribute the conversion or revenue if the visitor then clicked on an Instagram ad and converted. All credit would be given to the first touch which in this case would be the social media post.
The first interaction is a good model to use at the top of your funnel to help establish which channels are bringing leads in from outside your audience.
3. Last non-direct
Another model is called the last non-direct attribution model.
This model seeks to exclude direct traffic and assigns 100% credit for a conversion to the final channel a customer interacted with before becoming a customer, excluding clicks from direct traffic.
For instance, if someone first comes to your website from an emai campaignl, and then, a week later, directly visits and buys a product, the email campaign gets all the credit for the sale.
This attribution model tells a bit more about the whole sales process, shedding some more light on what other channels may have influenced the purchase decision.
4. Linear
Another common attribution model is linear.
This model distributes completely equal credit across every single touchpoint (that’s tracked).
Imagine someone comes to your website in different ways : first, they find it through a Google search, then they click a link in an email from your campaign the next day, followed by visiting from a Facebook post a few days later, and finally, a week later, they come from a TikTok ad.
Here’s how the attribution is divided among these sources :
- 25% Organic
- 25% Email
- 25% Facebook
- 25% TikTok ad
This attirubtion model provides a balanced perspective on the contribution of various sources to a user’s journey on your website.
5. Position-based
Position-based attribution is when you give 40% credit to both the first and last touchpoints and 20% credit is spread between the touchpoints in between.
This model is preferred if you want to identify the initial touchpoint that kickstarted a conversion journey and the final touchpoint that sealed the deal.
The downside is that you don’t gain much insight into the middle of the customer journey, which can make it hard to make effective decisions.
For example, someone may have been interacting with your email newsletter for seven weeks, which allowed them to be nurtured and build a relationship with you.
But that relationship and trust-building effort will be overlooked by the blog post that brought them in and the social media ad that eventually converted them.
6. Time decay
The final attribution model is called time decay attribution.
This is all about giving credit based on the timing of the interactions someone had with your brand.
For example, the touchpoints that just preceded the sale get the highest score, while the first touchpoints get the lowest score.
For example, let’s use that scenario from above with the linear model :
- 25% SEO
- 25% Email
- 25% Facebook ad
- 25% Organic TikTok
But, instead of splitting credit by 25% to each channel, you weigh the ones closer to the sale with more credit.
Instead, time decay may look at these same channels like this :
- 5% SEO (6 weeks ago)
- 20% Email (3 weeks ago)
- 30% Facebook ad (1 week ago)
- 45% Organic TikTok (2 days ago)
One downside is that it underestimates brand awareness campaigns. And, if you have longer sales cycles, it also isn’t the most accurate, as mid-stage nurturing and relationship building are underlooked.
Leverage Matomo : A marketing attribution tool
Attribution tracking is a crucial part of leading an effective marketing strategy.
But it’s impossible to do this without the right tools.
A marketing attribution tool can give you insights into your best-performing channels automatically.
One of the best marketing attribution tools available is Matomo, a web analytics tool that helps you understand what’s going on with your website and different channels in one easy-to-use dashboard.
With Matomo, you get marketing attribution as a plug-in or within Matomo On-Premise or for free in Matomo Cloud.
The best part is it’s all done with crystal-clear data. Matomo gives you 100% accurate data since it doesn’t use data sampling on any plans like Google Analytics.
To start tracking attribution today, try Matomo’s 21-day free trial. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.