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  • 7 Mixpanel alternatives to consider for better web and product analytics

    1er août, par Joe

    Mixpanel is a web and mobile analytics platform that brings together product and marketing data so teams can see the impact of their actions and understand the customer journey. 

    It’s a well-rounded tool with features that help product teams understand how customers navigate their website or app. It’s also straightforward to set up, GDPR compliant, and easy for non-technical folks to use, thanks to an intuitive UI and drag-and-drop reports. 

    However, Mixpanel is just one of many product and web analytics platforms. Some are cheaper, others are more secure, and a few have more advanced or specialist features.

    This article will explore the leading Mixpanel alternatives for product teams and marketers. We’ll cover their key features, what users love about them, and why they may (or may not) be the right pick for you. 

    Mixpanel : an overview

    Let’s start by giving Mixpanel its dues. The platform does a great job of arming product teams with an arsenal of tools to track the impact of their updates, find ways to boost engagement and track which features users love. 

    Marketing teams use the platform to track customers through the sales funnel, attribute marketing campaigns and find ways to optimise spend. 

    There’s plenty to like about Mixpanel, including : 

    • Easy setup and maintenance : Mixpanel’s onboarding flow allows you to build a tracking plan and choose the specific events to measure. When Mixpanel collects data, you’ll see an introductory “starter board.” 
    • Generous free plan : Mixpanel doesn’t limit freemium users like some platforms. Collect data on 20 million monthly events, use pre-built templates and access its Slack community. There are also no limits on collaborators or integrations.
    • Extensive privacy configurations : Mixpanel provides strong consent management configurations. Clients can let their users opt out of tracking, disable geolocation and anonymise their data. It also automatically deletes user data after five years and offers an EU Data Residency Program that can help customers meet GDPR regulations. 
    • Comprehensive features : Mixpanel gives marketers and product teams the tools and features they need to understand the customer, improve the product and increase conversions. 
    • Easy-to-use UI : The platform prioritises self-service data, meaning users don’t need to be technically minded to use Mixpanel. Drag-and-drop dashboards democratise access to data and let anyone on your team find answers to their questions.

    You wouldn’t be reading this page if Mixpanel offered everything, though. No platform is perfect, and there are several reasons people may want to look for a Mixpanel alternative :

    • No self-hosted option : You’ll never have complete control over your data with Mixpanel due to the lack of a self-hosted option. Data will always live on Mixpanel’s servers, meaning compliance with data regulations like GDPR isn’t a given.
    • Lack of customisation : Mixpanel doesn’t offer much flexibility when it comes to visualising data. While the platform’s in-built reports are accessible to everyone, you’ll need a developer to build custom reports. 
    • Not open source : Mixpanel’s proprietary software doesn’t provide the transparency, security and community that comes with using open-source software like Matomo. Proprietary software isn’t inherently wrong, but it could mean your analytics solution isn’t future-proof. 
    • Steep learning curve : The learning curve can be steep unless you’re a developer. While setting up the software is straightforward, Mixpanel’s reliance on manual tracking means teams must spend a lot of time creating and structuring events to collect the data they need.

    If any of those struck a chord, see if one of the following seven Mixpanel alternatives might better fulfil your needs. 

    The top 7 Mixpanel alternatives

    Now, let’s look at the alternatives.

    We’ll explain exactly how each platform differs from Mixpanel, its standout features, strengths, common community critiques, and when it may be (or may not be) the right choice. 

    1. Matomo

    Matomo is a privacy-focused, open-source web and mobile analytics platform. As a proponent of an ethical web, Matomo prioritises data ownership and privacy protection. 

    It’s a great Mixpanel alternative for those who care about data privacy. You own 100% of your data and will always comply with data regulations like GDPR when using the platform. 

    A screenshot of the Matomo dashboard

    Main dashboard with visits log, visits over time, visitor map, combined keywords, and traffic sources
    (Image Source)

    Matomo isn’t short on features, either. Product teams and marketers can evaluate the entire user journey, capture detailed visitor profiles, combine web, mobile and app reports, and use custom reporting to generate the specific insides they need.

    Key features :

    • Complete app and web analytics : Matomo tracks performance metrics and KPIs across web, app and mobile. Understand which pages users visit, how long they stay and how they move between devices.
    • Marketing attribution : Built-in marketing attribution capabilities make it easy for marketers to pinpoint their most profitable campaigns and channels. 
    • User behaviour tracking : Generate in-depth user behaviour data thanks to heatmaps, form analytics and session recordings.

    Strengths

    • On-premise and cloud versions : Use Matomo for free on your servers or subscribe to Matomo Cloud for hosting and additional support. Either way, you remain in control of your data.
    • Exceptional customer support : On-premise and Matomo Cloud users get free access to the forum. Cloud customers get dedicated support, which is available at an additional cost for on-premise customers. 
    • Consent-free tracking : Matomo doesn’t ruin the user’s experience with cookie banners
    • Open-source software : Matomo’s software is free to use, modify, and distribute. Users get a more secure, reliable and transparent solution thanks to the community of developers and contributors working on the project. Matomo will never become proprietary software, so there’s no risk of vendor lock-in. You will always have access to the source code, raw data and APIs. 

    Common community critiques :

    • On-premise setup : The on-premise version requires some technical knowledge and a server.
    • App tracking features : Some features, like heatmaps, available on web analytics aren’t available in-app analytics. Features may also differ between Android SDK and iOS SDK.

    Price : 

    Matomo has three plans :

    • Free : on-premise analytics is free to use
    • Cloud : Hosted business plans start at €22 per month
    • Enterprise : custom-priced, cloud-hosted enterprise plan tailored to meet a business’s specific requirements.

    There’s a free 21-day trial for Matomo Cloud and a 30-day plugin trial for Matomo On-Premise.

    2. Adobe Analytics

    Adobe Analytics is an enterprise analytics platform part of the Adobe Experience Cloud. This makes it a great Mixpanel alternative for those already using other Adobe products. But, getting the most from the platform is challenging without the rest of the Adobe ecosystem. 

    A screenshot of the Adobe Analytics dashboard

    Adobe Analytics Analysis Workspace training tutorial
    (Image Source)

    Adobe Analytics offers many marketing tools, but product teams may find their offer lacking. Small or inexperienced teams may also need help using this feature-heavy platform. 

    Key features :

    • Detailed web and marketing analytics : Adobe lets marketers draw in data from almost any source to get a comprehensive view of the customer journey. 
    • Marketing attribution : There’s a great deal of flexibility when crediting conversions. There are unlimited attribution models, too, including both paid and organic media channels.
    • Live Stream : This feature lets brands access raw data in near real time (with a 30- to 90-second delay) to assess the impact of marketing campaigns as soon as they launch. 

    Strengths :

    • Enterprise focus : Adobe Analytics’s wide range of advanced features makes It attractive to large companies with one or more high-traffic websites or apps. 
    • Integrations : Adobe Analytics integrates neatly with other Adobe products like Campaign and Experience Cloud). Access marketing, analytics and content management tools in one place. 
    • Customisation : The platform makes it easy for users to tailor reports and dashboards to their specific needs.

    Common community critiques :

    • Few product analytics features : While marketers will likely love Adobe, product teams may find it lacking. For example, the heatmap tool isn’t well developed. You’ll need to use Adobe Target to run A/B tests.
    • Complexity : The sheer number of advanced features can make Adobe Analytics a confusing experience for inexperienced or non-technically minded users. While a wealth of support documentation is available, it will take longer to generate value. 
    • Price : Adobe Analytics costs several thousand dollars monthly, making it suitable only for enterprise clients.

    Price : 

    Adobe offers three tiers : Select, Prime and Ultimate. Pricing is only available on request.

    3. Amplitude

    Amplitude is a product analytics and event-tracking platform. It is arguably the most like-for-like platform on this list, and there is a lot of overlap between Amploitduce’s and Mixpanel’s capabilities. 

    A screenshot of Amplitude's conversion funnel chart

    The Ask Amplitude™ feature helps build and analyse conversion funnel charts.
    (Image Source)

    The platform is an excellent choice for marketers who want to create a unified view of the customer by tracking them across different devices. This is possible with several other analytics platforms on this list (Matomo included), but Mixpanel doesn’t centralise data from web and app users in a signal report. 

    Amplitude also has advanced features Mixpanel doesn’t have, like feature management and AI, as well as better customisation. 

    Key features :

    • Product analytics : Amplitude comes packed with features product teams will use regularly, including customer journey analysis, session replays and heatmaps. 
    • AI : Amplitude AI can clean up data, generate insights and detect anomalies.
    • Feature management : Amplitude provides near-real-time feedback on feature usage and adoption rates so that product teams can analyse the impact of their work. Developers can also use the platform to manage progressive rollouts. 

    Strengths :

    • Self-serve reporting : The platform’s self-serve nature means employees of all levels and abilities can get the insights they need. That includes data teams that want to run detailed and complex analyses. 
    • Integrated web experimentation. Product teams or marketers don’t need a third-party tool to run A/B tests because Amplitude has a comprehensive feature that lets users set up tests, collect data and create reports. 
    • Extensive customer support : Amplitude records webinars, holds out-of-office sessions and runs a Slack community to help customers extract as much value as possible.

    Common community critiques :

    • Off-site tracking : While Amplitude has many features for tracking customer interaction across your product, it lacks ways to track customers once they are off-site. This is not great for marketing attribution, for example, or growing search traffic. 
    • Too complex : The sheer number of things Amplitude tracks can overwhelm inexperienced users who must spend time learning how to use the platform. 
    • Few templates : Few stock templates make getting started with Amplitude even harder. Users have to create reports from scratch rather than customise a stock graph. 

    Price : 

    • Starter : Free to track up to 50,000 users per month. 
    • Plus : $49 per month to track up to 300,000 users.
    • Growth : Custom pricing for no tracking limits
    • Enterprise : Custom pricing for dedicated account managers and predictive analytics

    4. Google Analytics

    Google Analytics is the most popular web analytics platform. It’s completely free to use and easy to install. Although there’s no customer support, the thousands of online how-to videos and articles go some way to making up for it. 

    A screenshot of the Google Analytics dashboard

    GA dashboard showing acquisition, conversion and behaviour data across all channels 
    (Image Source)

    Most people are familiar with Google’s web analytics data, which makes it a great Mixpanel alternative for marketers. However, product teams may struggle to get the qualitative data they need.

    Key features :

    • User and conversion tracking : People don’t just use Google Analytics because it’s free. The platform boasts a competitive user engagement and conversion tracking offering, which lets businesses of any size understand how consumers navigate their sites and make purchases. 
    • Audience segmentation : Segment audiences based on time and event parameters.
    • Google Ads integration : Track users from the moment they interact with one of your ads. 

    Strengths :

    • It’s free : Web and product analytics platforms can cost hundreds of dollars monthly and put a sizable dent in a small business marketing budget. Google provides the basic tools most marketers need for free.
    • Cross-platform tracking : GA4 lets teams track mobile and web analytics in one place, which wasn’t possible in Universal Analytics.
    • A wealth of third-party support : There’s no shortage of Google Analytics tutorials on YouTube to help you set up and use the platform. 

    Common community critiques :

    • Data privacy concerns : There are concerns about Google’s lack of compliance with regulations like GDPR. The workaround is asking people for permission to collect their data, but that requires a consent pop-up that can disrupt the user experience. 
    • No CRO features : Google Analytics lacks the conversion optimisation features of other tools in this list, including Matomo. It can’t record sessions, track user interactions via a heatmap or run A/B tests. 
    • AI data sampling : Google generates insights using AI-powered data sampling rather than analysing your actual data, which may make your data inaccurate. 

    Price : 

    Google Analytics is free to use. Google also offers a premium version, GA 360, which starts at $50,000 per year. 

    5. Heap

    Heap is a digital insights and product analytics platform. It gives product managers and marketers the quantitative and qualitative data they need to improve conversion rates, improve product features, and reduce churn. 

    A screenshot of the Heap dashboard

    Heap marketing KPI dashboard
    (Image Source)

    The platform offers everything you’d expect from a product analytics perspective, including session replays, heatmaps and user journey analysis. It even has an AI tool that can answer your questions. 

    Key features :

    • Auto-capture : Unlike other analytics tools (Mixpanel and Google Analytics, for instance), you don’t need to manually code events. Heap’s auto-capture feature automatically collects every user interaction, allowing for retroactive analysis. 
    • Segmentation : Create distinct customer cohorts based on behaviour. Integrate other platforms like Marketo to use that information to personalise marketing campaigns. 
    • AI CoPilot : Heap has a generative AI tool, CoPilot, that answers questions like “How many people visited the About page last week ?” It can also handle follow-up questions and suggest what to search next. 

    Strengths :

    • Integrations : Heap’s integrations allow teams to centralise data from dozens of third-party applications. Popular integrations include Shopify and Salesforce. Heap can also connect to your data warehouse. 
    • Near real-time tracking : Heap has a live data feed that lets teams track user behaviour in near real-time (there’s a 15-second delay).
    • Collaboration : Heap facilitates cross-department collaboration via shared spaces and shared reports. You can also share session replays across teams.

    Common community critiques :

    • Struggles at scale : Heap’s auto-capture functionality can be more of a pain than a perk when working at scale. Sites with a million or more weekly visitors may need to limit data capture.
    • Data overload : Heap tracks so much data it can be hard to find the specific events you want to measure.
    • Poor-quality graphics : Heap’s visualisations are basic and may not appeal to non-technically minded users.

    Price : 

    Heap offers four plans with pricing available on request.

    • Free
    • Growth
    • Pro
    • Premier

    6. Hotjar

    Hotjar is a product experience insight tool that analyses why users behave as they do. The platform collects behavioural data using heatmaps, surveys and session recordings. 

    It’s a suitable alternative for product teams and marketers who care about collecting qualitative rather than quantitative data. 

    A screenshot of Hotjar's heatmap report

    New heatmap feature in hotjar
    (Image Source)

    It’s not your typical analytics platform, however. Hotjar doesn’t track site visits or conversions, so teams use it alongside a web analytics platform like Google Analytics or Matomo.

    Key features :

    • Surveys : Product teams can place surveys on specific pages to capture quantitative and qualitative data. 
    • Heatmaps : Hotjar provides several heatmaps — click, scroll and interaction — that show how users behave when browsing your site. 
    • Session recordings : Support quantitative analytics data with videos of genuine user behaviour. It’s like watching someone browsing your site over their shoulder. 

    Strengths :

    • User-friendly interface : The tool is easy to navigate and accessible to all employees. Anyone can start using it quickly. 
    • Funnel analysis : Use Hotjar’s range of tools to analyse your entire funnel, identifying friction points and opportunities to improve the customer experience. 
    • Cross-platform tracking : Hotjar compares user behaviour across desktop, mobile and app. 

    Common community critiques :

    • Limited web analytics : While Hotjar is great for understanding customer behaviour, it doesn’t collect standard web analytics data. 
    • Data retention : Hotjar only retains data for one month to a year on some plans.
    • Impacts page speed : The tool’s code impacts your site’s performance, leading to slower load times. 

    Price : 

    • Free : Up to five thousand monthly sessions, including screen recordings and heatmaps
    • Growth : $49 per month for 7,000 to 10,000 monthly sessions
    • Pro : Custom pricing for up to 500 million monthly sessions
    • Enterprise : Custom pricing for up to 6 billion monthly sessions. 

    7. Kissmetrics

    Kissmetrics is a web and mobile analytics platform that aims to help teams generate more revenue and acquire more users through product-led growth. 

    As such, the platform offers more to marketers than product teams — particularly online store owners and SaaS businesses. 

    A screenshot of a lead funnel on Kissmetrics

    Kissmetrics funnel report 
    (Image Source)

    Kissmetrics provides a suite of behavioural analytics tools that analyse how customers move through your funnel, where they drop off and why. That’s great for marketers, but product teams will struggle to understand how customers actually use their product once they’ve converted.

    Key features :

    • User journey mapping : Follow individual customer journeys to learn how each customer finds and engages with your brand. 
    • Funnel analysis : Funnel reports help marketers track cart abandonments and other drop-offs along the customer journey. 
    • A/B testing : Kissmetrics’s A/B testing tool measures how customers respond to different page layouts

    Strengths :

    • Detailed revenue metrics : Kissmetrics makes measuring customer lifetime value, churn rate, and other revenue-focused KPIs easy. 
    • Stellar onboarding experience : Kissmetrics gives new users a detailed walkthrough and tutorial, which helps non-technical users get up to speed. 
    • Integrations : Integrate data from dozens of platforms and tools, such as Facebook, Instagram, Shopify, and Woocommerce, so all your data is in one place. 

    Common community critiques :

    • Predominantly web-based : Kissmetrics focuses on web-based traffic over app- or cross-platform tracking. It may be fine for some teams, but product managers or marketers who track users across apps and smartphones may want to look elsewhere. 
    • Slow to load large data sources : The platform can be slow to load, react to, and analyse large volumes of data, which could be an issue for enterprise clients. 
    • Price : Kissmetrics is significantly more expensive than Mixpanel. There is no freemium tier, meaning you’ll need to pay at least $199 monthly. 

    Price : 

    • Silver : $199 per month for up to 2 million monthly events
    • Gold : $499 per month for up to five million monthly events
    • Platinum : Custom pricing

    Switch from Mixpanel to Matomo

    When it comes to extracting deep insights from user data while balancing compliance and privacy protection, Mixpanel delivers mixed results. If you want a more straightforward alternative, more websites chose Matomo over Mixpanel for their analytics because of its :

    • Accurate web analytics collected in an ethical, GDPR-compliant manner
    • Behavioural analytics (like heatmaps and session recordings) to understand how users engage with your site
    • Rolled-up cross-platform reporting for mobile and apps
    • Flexibility and customisation with 250+ settings, plentiful plugins and integrations, APIs, raw data access
    • Open-source code to create plugins to fit your specific business needs
    • 100% data ownership with Matomo On-Premise and Matomo Cloud

    Over one million websites in 190+ countries use Matomo’s powerful web analytics platform. Join them today by starting a free 21-day trial — no credit card required.

  • Homepage Design : Best Practices & Examples

    5 octobre 2022, par Erin

    Did you know users spend about 50 milliseconds deciding if they like your website’s homepage design or not ?

    With billions of websites and scrolling often done on the go, you have to make a strong first impression because the chances for a once-over are slim. 

    Learn how to design magnetically-appealing website homepages from this guide. 

    What is a homepage in web design ?

    Homepage is the front page of your website — a destination where users land when typing your website URL address. It’s located at the root of the website’s domain (e.g., matomo.org) or a subdomain (e.g., university.webflow.com).

    Design-wise a homepage has two goals :

    • Explain the purpose of the website and present overview information 
    • Provide top-level navigation to lower-level web pages (e.g., blog, sales pages, etc.) 

    Separately, a homepage is also the place where users will return each time they’ll feel stuck and want to start anew. Thus, your homepage website design should provide obvious navigation paths to other website areas.

    6 Must-Know Website Homepage Design Best Practices

    Behind every winning homepage design stands a detailed customer journey map. 

    A customer journey is a schematic representation of how site visitors will move around your website to accomplish various goals. 

    A good customer journey map lists different actions a user will take after landing on your website (e.g., browse product pages, save items to a wishlist, register an account, etc.) — and it does so for different audience segments

    Your homepage design should help users move from the first step on their journey (e.g., learning about your website) to the final one (e.g., converting to a paid customer). At the same time, your homepage should serve the needs of both new and returning visitors — prospects who may be at a different stage of their journey (e.g., consideration). 

    With the above in mind, let’s take a look at several website homepage design ideas and the reasons why they work. 

    1. Use Familiar Design Elements

    Whether you’re designing a new website or refreshing an old one, it’s always tempting to go “out of the box” — use horizontal scrolling, skip header navigation or include arty animations. 

    Bold design choices work for some brands, mainly those who aren’t using their website as a primary sales channel (e.g., luxury brands). 

    But unfamiliar design patterns can also intimidate a lot of shoppers. In one observational study, people were asked to guess where specific content (e.g., information on international calls) would be placed on a telecom website. 75% of users picked the same location. This means two things :

    • People already have expectations of where specific website information is typically placed 
    • Yet, one in four users struggles to identify the right areas even within standard website layouts

    So why make the job harder for them ? As UX consultant Peter Ramsey rightfully notes : 

    The truth is : designing the best experience isn’t about being unique, it’s about being easy. And guess what feels really easy to use ? Things that feel familiar.

    Therefore, analyse other homepage layout designs in your industry. Pay attention to the number and type of homepage screens and approaches to designing header/footer navigation. 

    Take some of those ideas as your “base”. Then make your homepage design on-brand with unique typography, icons, visuals and other graphic design elements.

    Take a cue from ICAM — a steel manufacturing company. Their niche isn’t typically exciting. Yet, their homepage design stops you in your tracks and tinkers your curiosity to discover more (even if you aren’t shopping for metalware). 

    ICAM homepage example

    The interesting part is that ICAM uses a rather standard homepage layout. You have a hero image in the first screen, followed by a multi-column layout of their industry expertise and an overview of manufacturers. 

    But this homepage design feels fresh because the company uses plenty of white space, bold typography and vibrant visuals. Also, they delay the creative twist (horizontal scrolling area) to the bottom of the homepage, meaning that it’s less likely to intimidate less confident web users. 

    2. Decide On The Optimal Homepage Layout 

    In web design, a homepage layout is your approach to visually organising different information on the screen. 

    Observant folks will notice that good homepage designs often have the same layout. For example, include a split-view “hero” screen with a call to action on the left and visuals (photo or video) on the left. 

    Ecommerce Homepage Design Example
    SOURCE : shopify.com / SOURCE : squareup.com

    The reason for using similar layouts for website homepage design isn’t a lack of creativity. On the contrary, some layouts have become the “best practice” because they :

    • Offer a great user experience (UX) and don’t confuse first-time visitors 
    • Feel familiar and create a pleasurable sense of deja-vu among users 
    • Have proven to drive higher conversion rates through benchmarks and tests 

    Popular types of website homepage layouts : 

    • Single column – a classic option of presenting main content in a single, vertical column. Good choice for blogs, personal websites and simple corporate sites. 
    • Split screen layout divides the page in two equal areas with different information present. Works best for Ecommerce homepages (e.g., to separate different types of garments) or SaaS websites, offering two product types (e.g., a free personal product version and a business edition). 
    • Asymmetrical layout assumes dividing your homepage into areas of different size and styles. Asymmetry helps create specific focal points for users to draw their attention to the most prominent information. 
    • Grid of cards layout helps present a lot of information in a more digestible manner by breaking down bigger bulks of text into smaller cards — a graphic element, featuring an image and some texts. By tapping a card, users can then access extra content. 
    • Boxes are visually similar to cards, but can be of varying shape. For example, you can have a bigger header-width box area, followed by four smaller boxes within it. Both of these website layouts work well for Ecommerce. 
    • Featured image layout gives visuals (photos and videos) the most prominent placement on the homepage, with texts and other graphic design elements serving a secondary purpose. 
    • F-pattern layout is based on the standard eye movement most people have when reading content on the website. Eye tracking studies found that we usually pay the most attention to information atop of the page (header area), then scan horizontally before dripping down to the next vertical line until we find content that captures our attention. 

    User behaviour analytics (UBA) tools are the best way to determine what type of layout will work for your homepage. 

    For example, you can use Matomo Heatmaps and Session Recording to observe how users navigate your homepage, which areas or links they click and what blockers they face during navigation.

    Matomo Heatmaps

    Matomo can capture accurate behavioural insights because we track relative positions to elements within your websites. This approach allows us to provide accurate data for users with different browsers, operating systems, zoom-in levels and fonts. 

    The best part ? You can collect behavioural data from up to 100 different user segments to understand how different audience cohorts engage with your product.

    3. Include a One-Sentence Tagline

    A tagline is a one-line summary of what your company does and what its unique sales proposition (USP) is. It should be short, catchy and distinguish you from competitors.

    A modern homepage design practice is to include a call to action in the first screen. Why ? Because you then instantly communicate or remind of your value proposition to every user — and provide them with an easy way to convert whenever they are ready to do business with you. 

    Here’s how three companies with a similar product, a project management app, differentiate themselves through homepage taglines. 

    Monday.com positions itself as an operating system (OS) for work. 

    monday.com homepage

    Basecamp emphasises its product simplicity and openly says that they are different from other overly-complex software. 

    Asana, in turn, addresses a familiar user pain point (siloed communication) that it attempts to fix with its product. 

    asana.com homepage

    Coming up with the perfect homepage tagline is a big task. You may have plenty of ideas, but little confidence in what version will stick. 

    The best approach ? Let a series of A/B tests decide. You can test a roaster of homepage slogans on a rotating bi-weekly/monthly schedule and track how copy changes affect conversion rates. 

    With Matomo A/B test feature, you can create, track and manage all experiments straight from your web analytics app — and get consolidated reports on total page visitors and conversion rates per each tested variation. 

    Matomo A/B Test feature

    Beyond slogans, you can also run A/B tests to validate submission form placements, button texts or the entire page layout. 

    For instance, you can benchmark how your new homepage design performs compared to the old version with a subset of users before making it publicly available. 

    4. Highlight The Main Tasks For The User

    Though casual browsing is a thing, most of us head to specific websites with a clear agenda — find information, compare prices, obtain services, etc. 

    Thus, your homepage should provide clear starting points for users’ main tasks (those you’ve also identified as conversion goals on your customer journey maps !).

    These tasks can include : 

    • Account registration 
    • Product demo request 
    • Newsletter sign-up 

    The best website homepage designs organically guide users through a set number of common tasks, one screen at a time. 

    Let’s analyse Sable homepage design. The company offers a no-fee bank account and a credit card product for soon-to-be US transplants. The main task a user has : Decide if they want to try Sable and hopefully open an account with them. 

    Sable Example Homepage

    This mono-purpose page focuses on persuading a prospect that Sable is right for them. 

    The first screen hosts the main CTA with an animated drop-down arrow to keep scrolling. This is likely aimed at first-time visitors that just landed on the page from an online ad or social media post. 

    The second screen serves the main pitch — no-fee, no-hassle access to a US banking account that also helps you build your credit score. 

    The third screen encourages users to learn more about Sable Credit — the flagship product. For the sceptics, the fourth screen offers several more reasons to sign up for the credit product. 

    Then Sable moves on to pitching its second offering — a no-fee debit card with a cashback. Once again, the follow-up screen sweetens the deal by bringing up other perks (higher cashback for popular services like Amazon) and overcoming objections (no SSN required and multi-language support available). 

    The sequence ends with side-by-side product comparison and some extra social proof. 

    In Sable’s case, each homepage screen has a clear purpose and is designed to facilitate one specific user action — account opening. 

    For multi-product companies, the above strategy works great for designing individual landing pages. 

    5. Design Proper Navigation Paths

    All websites have two areas reserved for navigation : 

    • Header menu 
    • Footer menu 

    Designing an effective header menu is more important since it’s the primary tool visitors will use to discover other pages. 

    Your header menu can be :

    • Sticky — always visible as the person keeps scrolling. 
    • Static — e.g., a hidden drop-down menu. 

    If you go for a static header and have a longer homepage layout (e.g., 5+ screens), you also need to add extra navigation elements somewhere mid-page. Or else users might not figure out where to go next and merely bounce off. 

    You can do this by : 

    • Promoting other areas of your website (e.g., sub-category pages) by linking out to them 
    • Adding a carousel of “recent posts”, “recommended reads” and “latest products” 
    • Using buttons and CTAs to direct users towards specific actions (e.g., account registration) or assets (free eBook)

    For instance, cosmetics brand Typology doesn’t have a sticky header on the homepage. Instead, they prompt discovery by promoting different product categories (best sellers, bundles, latest arrivals) and their free skin diagnostic quiz — a great engagement mechanism to retain first time users.

    Typology Homepage Example

    Once the user scrolls down to the bottom of the page, they should have an extra set of navigational options — aka footer links. 

    Again, these help steer the visitor towards discovering more content without scrolling back up to the top of your homepage. 

    Nielsen Norman Group says that people mostly use footers as :

    • A second chance to be convinced — after reading the entire homepage, the user is ready to give your product a go.
    • The last resort for hard-to-find content that’s not displayed in global header navigation (e.g., Terms and Conditions or shipping information pages).

    As a rule of thumb, you should designate the following information to the footer : 

    • Utility links (Contact page, Terms & Conditions, Privacy Policy, etc.) 
    • Secondary-task links (e.g., Career page, Investor Details, Media contacts, etc.) 
    • Brands within the organisation (if you operate several) 
    • Customer engagement link (email newsletters and social media buttons)

    The key is to keep the area compact — not more than one standard user screen resolution of 1280×720. 

    6. Show Users What’s Clickable (Or Not) 

    A homepage invites your site visitors on a journey. But if they don’t know which elements to click, they aren’t going to get anywhere.

    Good homepage design makes it obvious which page elements are clickable, i.e., can take the user to a new page or another segment of the homepage. 

    Here are several must-know homepage design tips for better on-page navigation : 

    • Use colour and underline or bold to highlight clickable words. Alternatively, you can change the browser cursor from a standard arrow into another element (e.g., a larger dot or a pointy finger) to indicate when the cursor hovers over a clickable website area. 
    • Make descriptive button texts that imply what will happen when a user clicks the page. Instead of using abstract and generic button texts like “see more” or “learn more”, try a more vibrant language like “dive in” for clicking through to a spa page. 
    • Use a unified hover area to show how different homepage design elements represent a single path or multiple navigation paths. When multiple items are encapsulated in one visual element (e.g., a box), users may be reluctant to click the image because they aren’t sure if it’s one large hit area leading to a single page or if there are multiple hit areas, leading to different pages. 

    Homepage of BEAUSiTE — a whimsical hotel in the Swiss Alps – embodies all of the above design principles. They change the cursor style whenever you scroll into a hit area, use emotive and creative micro-copy for all button texts and clearly distinguish between different homepage elements.

    Beausite Homepage Example

    How to Make Your Homepage Design Even More Impactful ? 

    Website homepage design is roughly 20% of pure design work and 80% of behind-the-scenes research. 

    To design a high-performing homepage you need to have data-backed answers to the following questions : 

    • Who are your primary and secondary target audiences ? 
    • Which tasks (1 to 4) you’d want to help them solve through your homepage ?

    You can get the answers to both questions from your web analytics data by using audience segmentation and page transition (behaviour flow) reports in Matomo. 

    Based on these, you can determine common user journeys and tasks people look to accomplish when visiting your website. Next, you can collect even more data with UBA tools  like heatmaps and user session recordings. Then translated the observed patterns into working homepage design ideas. 

    Improve your homepage design and conversion rates with Matomo. Start your free 21-day trial now ! 

  • Nginx rtmp module - on_publish fires multiple time instead of once

    29 juillet 2017, par Stephen Wright

    This is copy and pasted from the bug report I created on the rtmp-module by Arut, I am not completely sure if it is a bug or me not understanding how the module works, I have read the whole directives of module as from https://github.com/arut/nginx-rtmp-module/wiki/Directives

    Proper explanation, if code is not displayed properly I will edit and fix

    Hi, been using the module and finding it very very good !

    Think I have found a issue though, although it may be me misunderstanding the directives.

    Essentially I wish to fire a script (/usr/local/bin/make_thumbnail.sh) which creates a thumbnail automatically from a stream (using ffmpeg), the idea is to have this done for every stream as soon as it is published in order to create a function a bit like twitch tv where the streamer will not have to specify any thumbnail image, authenticated users simply start a stream (which will later be authenticated but is not yet) The script does also write data into the database however this stage works fine and I don’t believe the issue is related, if I comment out these lines then the thumbnail creation still works and my issue continues.

    Initially this was done using the "exec" command as I believe I mis-read the documentation and I believe the exec command doesn’t work for my problem as ". When publishing stops the process is terminated." does this mean it will continually execute until stream stops ?

    I have started using the exec_publish command to try and fix this issue however the same issue seems to occur. The entire script repeats approximately every 15-17 seconds, a new thumbnail is created and a new database entry is create with all the correct information.

    Below is the nginx.conf line. Please ignore if indentation is incorrect couldn’t see a way to indent blocks of code and it’s late here, assume all code is indented correctly unless you believe that could be the issue in which case I will post it indented as early as I can.

    application live {
    allow play all;
    live on;
    record all;
    record_path /var/stream/video_recordings/;
    record_unique on;
    hls on;
    hls_nested on;
    hls_path /var/stream/HLS/live;
    hls_fragment 10s;

    #on publish create thumbnail using first second of stream and save in
    /var/stream/video_recordings/thumbnails
    exec_publish usr/local/bin/make_thumbnail.sh $name;

    The rest can be pasted or attached if needed but is working nginx config for rtmp + website

    The most simple version of the make_thumbnail..sh is pasted below, I have omitted the variables that I have used for database entryys obviously but as the script works without fail from terminal I believe this to be an nginx issue (if I run the command manually under the nginx user e.g. sudo -u nginx /usr/local/bin/make_thumbnail.sh with a name the same as any running stream, it works and only executes once as would expect, all permissions in script are ok and tested.

    make_thumbnail.sh

    #!/bin/bash

    TIME=$(date +%s)
    NAME=$1
    echo "time: "
    FILENAME=${TIME}_${NAME}

    ffmpeg -i rtmp://192.168.0.98:1935/live/$1 -vframes 1 -s 150x150 -ss 10 -
    strftime 1 /var/stream/video_recordings/thumbnails/"$FILENAME.jpg";

    #Writes path to video into database
    mysql --user=$DB_USER --password=$DB_PASSWD $DB_NAME << EOF
    INSERT INTO $TABLE3 (thumbnailfile) VALUES ('$FILENAME');
    set @last_id_in_thumbnails = LAST_INSERT_ID();
    INSERT INTO $TABLE (created_at, updated_at, thumnailID) VALUES
    (NOW(),NOW(),@last_id_in_thumbnails);
    SET @last_id_in_livestreams = LAST_INSERT_ID();
    INSERT INTO $TABLE2 (created_at, updated_at, filename,liveID) VALUES
    (NOW(),NOW(),'$FILENAME',@last_id_in_livestreams);
    EOF

    I have not got the nginx rtmp logs installed, I can obviously do this however some of the logs appear in the nginx error.log, strangely the latest stream I tried did not update in the access log, however I think this is because I did not attempt to connect to it via any method. I don’t fully understand the error.log, in my stupidity I decided to use nginx with which I am quite inexperienced and I am finding it very difficult to troubleshoot this issue, it appears to me that as part of the RTMP protocol or my streaming software (OBS) is either directly pinging the rtmp stream or is being pinged by the server to ensure the connection is still there. And this ping is

    I have left a stream running from approx 4 minutes without interacting with the server, streaming software, computer running the stream, I have ensured the internet connection is constant as my first though was the connection dropped, however on inspecting the database the executing is done always after at least 11 seconds however usually this is 16, I can’t seem to figure out how to select the closest dates from the database however there has been at least a few 17 second differences (potentially when
    I am unsure if this is an issue or if it is intended behavior but I do require this to finish a university degree, I’m not asking for answers but if it is a legitimate issue then I would be happy to spend as much time I can commit to it if some insight into what is causing it, or if there is a workaround I believe it should be documented somewhere, I have googled into making any exec commands run only once on publish

    I can’t seem to pinpoint where in the log the issue is happening however think it is something to do with the below exceprts I would attach the file but can’t seem to select all lines after the timestamp upon starting a stream

    2017/07/26 18:17:35 [info] 1451#0: *2229 exec: starting managed child
    'ffmpeg', client: 192.168.0.78, server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:35 [info] 1451#0: *2412 client connected '192.168.0.98'
    2017/07/26 18:17:35 [info] 1451#0: *2412 connect: app='live' args=''
    flashver='LNX 9,0,124,2' swf_url='' tc_url='rtmp://192.168.0.98:1935/live'
    page_url='' acodecs=4071 vcodecs=252 object_encoding=0, client:
    192.168.0.98, server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:35 [info] 1451#0: *2412 createStream, client: 192.168.0.98,
    server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:35 [info] 1451#0: *2412 play: name='newname' args=''
    start=-2000 duration=0 reset=0 silent=0, client: 192.168.0.98, server:  
    0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:36 [info] 1451#0: *2410 recv() failed (104: Connection  
    reset by peer), client: 192.168.0.98, server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:36 [info] 1451#0: *2410 disconnect, client: 192.168.0.98,
    server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:36 [info] 1451#0: *2410 deleteStream, client: 192.168.0.98,
    server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:36 [notice] 1451#0: signal 17 (SIGCHLD) received
    2017/07/26 18:17:36 [notice] 1451#0: unknown process 10487 exited with code
    0
    2017/07/26 18:17:36 [info] 1451#0: *2229 exec: child 10487 exited; ignoring,
    client: 192.168.0.78, server: 0.0.0.0:1935

    ver: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:41 [info] 1451#0: *2229 exec: starting managed child
    'usr/local/bin/make_thumbnail.sh', client: 192.168.0.78, server:  
    0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:41 [info] 1451#0: *2413 client connected '192.168.0.98'
    2017/07/26 18:17:41 [info] 1451#0: *2413 connect: app='live' args=''
    flashver='LNX 9,0,124,2' swf_url='' tc_url='rtmp://192.168.0.98:1935/live'
    page_url='' acodecs=4071 vcodecs=252 object_encoding=0, client:
    192.168.0.98,
    server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:41 [info] 1451#0: *2413 createStream, client: 192.168.0.98,
    server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:41 [info] 1451#0: *2413 play: name='newname' args=''
    start=-2000 duration=0 reset=0 silent=0, client: 192.168.0.98, server:
    0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:43 [info] 1451#0: *2229 exec: starting managed child
    'ffmpeg',
    client: 192.168.0.78, server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    2017/07/26 18:17:43 [info] 1451#0: *2414 client connected '192.168.0.98'
    2017/07/26 18:17:43 [info] 1451#0: *2414 connect: app='live' args=''
    flashver='LNX 9,0,124,2' swf_url='' tc_url='rtmp://192.168.0.98:1935/live'
    page_url='' acodecs=4071 vcodecs=252 object_encoding=0, client:
    192.168.0.98,
    server: 0.0.0.0:1935
    @