
Recherche avancée
Médias (91)
-
DJ Z-trip - Victory Lap : The Obama Mix Pt. 2
15 septembre 2011
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Matmos - Action at a Distance
15 septembre 2011, par kent1
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
DJ Dolores - Oslodum 2004 (includes (cc) sample of “Oslodum” by Gilberto Gil)
15 septembre 2011, par kent1
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Danger Mouse & Jemini - What U Sittin’ On ? (starring Cee Lo and Tha Alkaholiks)
15 septembre 2011, par kent1
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Cornelius - Wataridori 2
15 septembre 2011, par kent1
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
The Rapture - Sister Saviour (Blackstrobe Remix)
15 septembre 2011, par kent1
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (70)
-
Websites made with MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, par kent1This page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.
-
Possibilité de déploiement en ferme
12 avril 2011, par kent1MediaSPIP peut être installé comme une ferme, avec un seul "noyau" hébergé sur un serveur dédié et utilisé par une multitude de sites différents.
Cela permet, par exemple : de pouvoir partager les frais de mise en œuvre entre plusieurs projets / individus ; de pouvoir déployer rapidement une multitude de sites uniques ; d’éviter d’avoir à mettre l’ensemble des créations dans un fourre-tout numérique comme c’est le cas pour les grandes plate-formes tout public disséminées sur le (...) -
Ajouter des informations spécifiques aux utilisateurs et autres modifications de comportement liées aux auteurs
12 avril 2011, par kent1La manière la plus simple d’ajouter des informations aux auteurs est d’installer le plugin Inscription3. Il permet également de modifier certains comportements liés aux utilisateurs (référez-vous à sa documentation pour plus d’informations).
Il est également possible d’ajouter des champs aux auteurs en installant les plugins champs extras 2 et Interface pour champs extras.
Sur d’autres sites (3432)
-
9 Form Optimisation Tips to Convert More Visitors
15 février 2024, par ErinForms might seem boring — that is, until you realise how powerful they are.
No forms mean no leads.
No leads mean no sales.
No sales means you’ll run out of business.
So, what do you do ?
Optimise forms to land more leads.
They’re a critical part of the sales funnel.
Forms have many different purposes and can be used to :
- Contact a company
- Sign up for a newsletter
- Request a demo
- Start a free trial
- And more
If you want to get more leads (and ultimately more sales), then you need to optimise your forms.
This guide will show you exactly how to do that (so you can start getting more conversions today).
What is form optimisation ?
Before we dive into form optimisation, let’s back up a bit.
Form conversion is our primary focus.
Your form conversion rate is the percentage of visitors who submit a form divided by the total number of visitors who started the form times one hundred.
For example, if 5,000 people started filling out your form this month and 350 submitted the form, the conversion rate would be :
350 / 5,000 x 100 = 7%
So, what’s form optimisation ?
It’s simply improving your forms to increase conversion rates.
For most people, form conversion is all about increasing leads.
Before you begin optimising your forms, it’s important you understand what’s good (and what’s not good) when it comes to form conversions.
The average form conversion rate across all industries is 2.9%.
This means you should expect about 3 out of every 100 visitors who start your form to submit it.
If your form conversion is lower — or hovering around this number — then it’s important to start optimising now.
With Matomo, you can track your form conversions with Matomo Form Analytics. Gain powerful insights into how your visitors interact with your forms with our intuitive dashboard.
Why it’s important to optimise your forms
Most people hear the word “forms” and think it’s boring.
But forms are the doorway to leads.
If you want to generate more sales, then you need to generate great forms.
Here are five reasons you need to optimise your forms today :
1. Improve conversions
Form optimisation is really just conversion optimisation.
But, instead of optimising and improving your site to directly improve sales conversions, you’re increasing lead conversions.
Every smart website owner uses forms to draw people in further.
The reality is that most of your website visitors will never return to your site.
This means you need to do everything you can to grab their contact information so you can continue marketing to them day in and day out.
Otherwise, you’ll lose them forever.
When you know how to optimise your forms, you’ll be able to get a higher percentage of form viewers to fill it out.
Higher conversions mean you get more leads, more customers, and ultimately more revenue.
2. Capture more leads
When you can increase your form conversion rate from 1% to 2%, it may seem insignificant.
What’s a measly percentage point in conversions ?
It’s a lot.
When you’re dealing with traffic in the tens or hundreds of thousands each month, an increase in conversion rate by a whole percentile is massive.
Let’s say you take your conversion rate from 2% to 3% on your form, and you have 70,000 visitors view the form each month.
Well, if 1,400 people used to sign up to your email list each month at a 2% conversion rate, then at a 3% conversion rate, you’d get 2,100 new email signups every month.
That’s a major difference.
When you can improve your signup forms, you improve your lead generation (which is conversion rate optimisation). And the more leads you have, the more sales you’ll make in the long run.
3. Get the most out of your traffic
If your forms don’t perform well, then you’re wasting your time (and your traffic).
By analysing your form data, you can quickly see what’s working and what’s not so you can optimise and improve the user experience (and your forms).
For most people, this means getting more form viewers to fill out the form with their email and name.
If 50,000 people visit your site each month, but only 1% of them fill out your form, you’re only getting 500 email signups per month.
Rather than paying money to generate more traffic, why not just work on improving your website by implementing a better form ?
If you can increase your form conversion rate to 2%, you will immediately go from 500 new subscribers per month to 1,000 per month.
4. Spend less on acquisition
If you’re able to get more form signups without having to generate more traffic, you just solved a pricey problem : acquisition costs.
If you can now get 1,000 of your 50,000 visitors to sign up to your email list through a better form, then you doubled your signups.
But that’s not all. You just cut your acquisition costs in half.
If you spend $2,000 per month on acquisition but you’re able to get twice as many leads, then your acquisition costs are at 50% of what they used to be.
This means you can pay the same amount but get twice as many leads.
Or, you can pour even more money into acquisition since it’s now twice as effective so you can fuel growth even more.
5. Grow revenue
Forms generate revenue. It may not be direct (although, in some cases, it is).
But, forms will lead to sales.
By placing optimised forms throughout your website at the right places, you will be able to capture a percentage of your visitors as leads, which means you’ll eventually make more sales.
13 tips to optimise your forms for more conversions
Now that you know what forms can do and why they’re important to grow your business, it’s time to dive into the best practices.
Follow these 13 tips to ensure you’re getting the most out of your forms :
1. Set form goals
Your forms are hopeless without a goal.
Before you set up a form on your website, ask yourself, “What am I trying to accomplish with this form ?”
It could be :
- Encouraging customers to reach out through a contact form
- To get visitors to leave feedback on your product/service
- Convert visitors into leads by giving you their email
No matter what your goal is, make sure you’re clear on it ; otherwise, you won’t be as targeted and specific with your forms.
Matomo Goals helps you set specific objectives for your marketing campaigns so you’re able to easily track conversions. Whether you’re looking to capture feedback or generate leads, you can leverage Matomo to see what’s working and what’s not in seconds.
2. Remove or improve fields with high average time spent and high drop-off rates
Delving into your Form Analytics provides invaluable insights into individual field performance. A crucial metric to focus on is the Average Time Spent.
If a field stands out with a significantly higher average time spent and experiences a high drop-off rate compared to others in the form, it’s a clear indicator that it’s causing frustration or confusion for your visitors.
To address this, consider improving the field by converting it into a dropdown menu for easier completion or providing helpful text prompts. Alternatively, if the field isn’t essential, you might opt to remove it altogether.
When you cut down on time spent and drop-offs, you’ll see your conversion rates go up.
Here’s a standout example from Matomo’s Form Analytics feature : the “Overview of your needs” field is taking on average 1 minute and 37 seconds to complete.
To streamline this, we might want to consider a simple fix like converting it into a dropdown menu. This change would offer visitors a clearer and quicker way to select from options.
Likewise, we observe that the “Overview of your needs” field experiences the highest drop-off rate, totaling 1,732 drop-offs.
With Form Analytics, it becomes clear what is needed to optimise forms and increase conversions.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
3. Start with the CTA
When crafting and optimising your forms, you need to start with the end in mind. That’s why you need to start with your business goals.
What are you trying to do with this form ? If you want to capture more emails, then make sure that’s very clear with the call to action (CTA).
Start building your form by beginning with the CTA.
For example : “Sign Up Now.”
Once you have the action you want your potential customers to take, place it on the form. Then, you can work towards crafting the rest of the form.
4. Put it above the fold
If your visitors can’t find your form, they won’t fill it out. It’s plain and simple.
You need to make sure your form is visible above the fold. This is the part of the screen that’s visible to your visitors once they land on your site (without needing to scroll down).
Always remember to test this out on both desktop and mobile to ensure anyone (using laptops or a mobile device) will see your form upon landing on your site or page.
Don’t forget about your mobile users. More people view mobile forms than desktop forms.
5. Put a CTA in the headline
Your form needs to be clear.
You have 1-3 seconds to communicate with your site visitors what your form is all about.
For example, if you’re trying to get email signups with a lead magnet, then tell them the benefit quickly and concisely with a CTA in the headline, like this one :
“Subscribe to Save 10% On Your Next Order”
This is a great example of a headline-CTA combo that tells the visitor what to do and what they get out of it.
Matomo’s behaviour analytics features like Session Recordings let you see where visitors are clicking and spending time. For example, if people are reading the headline, but not scrolling down to read the form, it’s probably a sign you need to test a different headline.
6. Ensure you have the right fields
Your form fields matter.
What information are you trying to capture from your audience ?
One beginner mistake people make is requiring too much information and including many fields in a form.
You want to get as much data on your audience as possible, right ? Wrong.
If you ask for too much information, people won’t fill it out, and it will harm the user experience. You need to make it super easy.
If you want more emails to grow your list, then stick with someone’s email (and possibly their name as well). One line for a name. One line for an email address. Keep it simple.
If you’re after SMS as well, don’t include it on the form. Instead, create a two-step form that pops up an SMS form after someone fills out the email form.
Multi-step forms enable you to capture those emails easily (and still get a percentage to fill out the second form) without making it seem like too much work for your audience.
Another path is to include optional fields (that users don’t have to fill out to click submit).
Just keep in mind that shorter forms perform better than longer ones.
If you make them too long, it feels like work for the user and will lead to lower completion rates.
7. Always capture email address
If you’re unsure of what information to capture (i.e. name, number, email, occupation, age, etc.), always stick to email.
Email is used by over 4 billion people every single day, and it’s not going away anytime soon.
When determining which fields to include, start with email.
8. Test different buttons and copy
You need to track your form performance if you want to get the best conversions.
One of the best form elements to start testing is your button copy.
In most cases, form completion buttons will have the word “submit” on them.
But you don’t have to stick with this word.
You can (and should) experiment with different submit button copy.
Here are a few examples of replacement words for your action button :
- Complete
- Sign Up
- Join now
- Get started
Remember to experiment with your action button. Try a different copy. Just keep it short.
You can also try A/B testing your form by experimenting with different colours, copy, and more.
In the example above from Matomo’s A/B testing feature, we found that changing the wording of our call to action made a big difference. The new “Apply Now” button performed much better, with a 3.6% conversion rate compared to just 1.7% for the original one.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
9. Test static vs. popup
There are various types of online forms.
The most common is the static form that just sits in one place and is always there.
Another popular form type is the popup.
This is where a form will appear based on a certain trigger like :
- A certain amount of time on page
- A certain distance scrolling down the page
- If someone is a new or returning visitor
Depending on the form software you use, you may be able to add conditional logic.
Start tracking your form conversions
Form optimisation is all about conversion rate optimisation.
If you want to increase your conversions and generate more revenue, then you need to test out different forms and know how to optimise them.
With Matomo, you can easily track, manage, and A/B test your forms so you can improve your conversions.
Try Matomo free for 21 days. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.
-
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.
Try Matomo for Free
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.
-
What is White Label Analytics ? Everything You Need to Know
6 février 2024, par ErinReports are a core part of a marketing agency’s offering. It’s how you build trust with clients by highlighting your efforts and demonstrating your results.
But all too often, those reports deliver a jarring and incohesive experience. The culprit ? The logos, colours and names of third-party brands your agency uses to deliver work and create the reports.
Luckily, there’s a way to make sure your reports elevate your agency’s stature ; not undermine it.
By white labelling your tools, you can deliver a clear and cohesive brand experience — one that strengthens the client relationship rather than diminishing it.
In this article, we explain what white label analytics tools are, why it’s important to white label your analytics solution and how you can do it using Matomo.
What is white label analytics ?
White labelling is the process of redesigning a product or service using your company’s brand. The term comes from the act of putting a white label on a product that covers the original branding and allows the reseller to personalise the product.
White label analytics, then, is a way to customise your analytics software with your agency’s logo and colours. When you white label your analytics, you ensure your reports, dashboards and interface provide a consistent and familiar user experience.
The alternative is to provide your clients with an analytics report containing the logo and branding of your analytics software provider — whether that’s Google Analytics, Matomo, or another tool.
For some clients, it can create a confusing experience that takes attention away from your agency’s results.
Why white label analytics is important
There are plenty of reasons to white label your analytics tool, from improving your client’s experience to generating additional revenue. Here are four of the most important benefits to know :
Improve the client experience
You want your clients to have a seamless user experience with your agency’s brand, whether they visit your website, log into their client portal, or read one of your reports.
By white labelling your analytics platform, you can give your clients a visually appealing experience that stays in line with the rest of your branding and doesn’t leave them confused about who they are interacting with or which company is providing the service they pay for.
This is especially important if your agency uses other third-party tools like a client portal or productivity platform that also allows for custom branding.
Strengthen client relationships
When you use white labelling to remove solution providers’ logos, you ensure your brand gets all of the credit for the hard work you’ve been doing. This can strengthen the agency-client relationship and reaffirm the importance of your agency.
But, white labelling allows you to tell a better story through your reports and increases the perceived value you offer. There are no other brands, logos, or names to confuse the narrative or detract from your key points — or to stop the client from understanding just how much value you provide.
Save time and increase productivity
White labelling your analytics platform can save your team a significant amount of time when creating client reports.
There’s no need to carefully screenshot graphs to add them to your own branded report. You can simply email clients a report using your white labelled analytics platform, assuring them of a seamlessly branded experience.
The upshot is that your team can spend more time on billable work, improving the value they deliver to existing clients or opening up capacity to take on even more work.
Increase monetisation opportunities
Whether you are an agency or consultant, white labelling an analytics solution gives you the opportunity to package and sell analytics as part of your own services. This can open up new revenue streams, help you to diversify your income, and reach a wider audience.
The beauty of a white label offering is that there is no allusion to the company providing the underlying service.
The most important elements of an analytics platform to white label
A white label analytics solution should offer a broad range of customisation options that range from surface-level branding to functional elements like tracking codes.
Below we take a look at the top components you should be able to customise with your chosen platform.
Logo and Favicon
The logo is the first thing clients will see when they open up their analytics platform or look at your reports. It should make your services instantly recognisable, which is why it’s so jarring when clients read a report with another company’s brand slapped on every chart.
This should be the very first thing you change since it will be on almost every page and report your client views. Don’t stop there, however. If you send clients web-based reports, you’ll also want to change the platform’s favicon — the small logo you see next to your website in a browser.
Customising both your logo and favicon is easy with Matomo.
Just head to Administration, then General Settings and click Use a custom Logo under Brand settings.
Upload your brand, click Save, and it will automatically populate your brand in place of the Matomo logo across the platform, just like in the image above.
Brand name
Most analytics platforms will mention their brand names repeatedly across the site, so it’s important to change these, too.
Otherwise, you risk clients reading your analytics reports in detail or playing around with your platform’s settings and getting confused when another seemingly unrelated name keeps popping up.
Again, this is easily done with Matomo’s White Label plugin.
Head to Administration, then General Settings. Scroll to the bottom of the page to find WhiteLabel settings.
Enter your brand or product name in the first box and click Save.
Just like your logo, this will replace every instance of Matomo’s brand name with your own.
Brand colours
Changing your analytics platform’s colours to match your own is almost as important as swapping out the logo.
Failure to do so could mean the charts and graphs you add to your client reports could cause confusion.
You can also use Matomo’s WhiteLabel settings to change the platform’s background and font colours.
Just enter a new header background and font colour using hexadecimal values.
This change will also apply to automated email reports.
Custom tracking
Tracking requests and links are an overlooked element of analytics when it comes to white labelling. Most people wouldn’t think twice about them, but they are an easy way for someone in the know to identify which platform you are using.
With Matomo’s White Label plugin, it’s possible to customise every request Matomo makes to your clients’ websites.
If left unbranded, tracking requests contain the following references : matomo.js and matomo.php.
By clicking the Whitelabel tracking endpoint box on the WhiteLabel settings page, those references will be replaced with js/tracker.js and js/tracker.php
You’ll need to update your tracking code to reflect these changes, otherwise, requests will still contain Matomo branding.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Links
Finally, you’ll want to remove any links to any additional content offered by the analytics company. These are usually included to improve the user experience, but they are best removed if you are letting clients access your platform.
With Matomo, you can remove all links by clicking the relevant box in WhiteLabel settings.
You can also use the Show Marketplace only to Super Users checkbox to limit the visibility of Matomo’s Marketplace to everyone bar Super Users.
Can you white label Google Analytics ?
In a word : no.
Google Analytics might be the most popular analytics platform, but it comes up short if you want to customise its appearance.
This can be a particular problem for agencies that need to stand out from competitors offering the same generic reports. You can add more context, detail and graphs to your analytics reports, of course. But you’ll never be able to create completely custom, brand-cohesive reports using Google Analytics.
3 analytics platforms you can white label
While you can’t white label Google Analytics, there are several web analytics providers that do offer a white labelling service. Here are three of the best :
Matomo
As you’ve already seen, Matomo is the ideal web analytics platform if you want to let your own brand shine through. Matomo lets you personalise the entire dashboard and all of your reports. That includes :
- Adding your brand logo and favicon
- Changing the font and background colours
- Removing third-party links
- Tracking using custom URLs
- Develop your own custom theme
Matomo offers a 21-day free trial (no credit card required). If you want to get remove the Matomo branding, you need the White Label plugin, which starts at just $179 per year after a free trial.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Clicky
Clicky is a simple, privacy-focused web analytics platform with a white label offering. Like Matomo, you can add your logo and change the platform’s colours.
Clicky offers a seven-day free trial and charges a $99 setup fee, with prices starting from $49 and rising to $399.
Plausible
Plausible is another privacy-focused Google Analytics alternative that offers white labelling. The difference here is that it’s pretty complex to set up.
Rather than customising Plausible’s platform, for instance, you need to embed its dashboard into your own user interface. If you want to create your own custom dashboard, you’ll need to use an API.
Plausible offers a 30-day free trial.
Leverage white label analytics today with Matomo
Don’t put up with confusing unbranded clients a moment longer. White label your analytics platform so the next time you sit down to share insights with your clients, they’ll only see one brand : yours.
Matomo makes it quick and easy to customise the look of your analytics platform and all of the reports you generate. If you already use Matomo, try the White Label plugin free for 30 days.
If not, try Matomo with a free 21-day trial. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.