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  • Organiser par catégorie

    17 mai 2013, par

    Dans MédiaSPIP, une rubrique a 2 noms : catégorie et rubrique.
    Les différents documents stockés dans MédiaSPIP peuvent être rangés dans différentes catégories. On peut créer une catégorie en cliquant sur "publier une catégorie" dans le menu publier en haut à droite ( après authentification ). Une catégorie peut être rangée dans une autre catégorie aussi ce qui fait qu’on peut construire une arborescence de catégories.
    Lors de la publication prochaine d’un document, la nouvelle catégorie créée sera proposée (...)

  • Récupération d’informations sur le site maître à l’installation d’une instance

    26 novembre 2010, par

    Utilité
    Sur le site principal, une instance de mutualisation est définie par plusieurs choses : Les données dans la table spip_mutus ; Son logo ; Son auteur principal (id_admin dans la table spip_mutus correspondant à un id_auteur de la table spip_auteurs)qui sera le seul à pouvoir créer définitivement l’instance de mutualisation ;
    Il peut donc être tout à fait judicieux de vouloir récupérer certaines de ces informations afin de compléter l’installation d’une instance pour, par exemple : récupérer le (...)

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

Sur d’autres sites (4700)

  • Use nvidia hardware acceleration to merge webms with pngs in ffmpeg

    2 février, par Joshi234

    So I need to merge around 18000 webms with with pngs, however on software encoding it's really slow, so I'm trying to use hardware acceleration to make this faster.

    


    I tried a lot of different stuff but none of them seems to work and it gives me generic errors to what I couldn't find anything relavant.

    


    This is the most "succesful" try I had :
ffmpeg -hwaccel cuvid -c:v vp9_cuvid  -i lightray.webm -i card.png -filter_complex "[1]format=argb,colorchannelmixer=aa=0.35[ol];[0][ol]overlay" -colorspace 5 -c:a copy output.webm

    


    Which gives me this error :

    


    ffmpeg version n7.0.1-ffmpeg-windows-build-helpers Copyright (c) 2000-2024 the FFmpeg developers
  built with gcc 10.2.0 (GCC)
  configuration: --pkg-config=pkg-config --pkg-config-flags=--static --extra-version=ffmpeg-windows-build-helpers --enable-version3 --disable-debug --disable-w32threads --arch=x86_64 --target-os=mingw32 --cross-prefix=/home/runner/work/ffmpeg-stable-autobuild/ffmpeg-stable-autobuild/sandbox/cross_compilers/mingw-w64-x86_64/bin/x86_64-w64-mingw32- --enable-libcaca --enable-gray --enable-libtesseract --enable-fontconfig --enable-gmp --enable-libass --enable-libbluray --enable-libbs2b --enable-libflite --enable-libfreetype --enable-libfribidi --enable-libgme --enable-libgsm --enable-libilbc --enable-libmodplug --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libopencore-amrnb --enable-libopencore-amrwb --enable-libopus --enable-libsnappy --enable-libsoxr --enable-libspeex --enable-libtheora --enable-libtwolame --enable-libvo-amrwbenc --enable-libvorbis --enable-libwebp --enable-libzimg --enable-libzvbi --enable-libmysofa --enable-libopenjpeg --enable-libopenh264 --enable-libvmaf --enable-libsrt --enable-libxml2 --enable-opengl --enable-libdav1d --enable-gnutls --enable-libsvtav1 --enable-libvpx --enable-libaom --enable-nvenc --enable-nvdec --extra-libs=-lz --extra-libs=-lpng --extra-libs=-lm --extra-libs=-lfreetype --extra-libs=-lshlwapi --extra-libs=-lmpg123 --extra-libs=-lpthread --extra-cflags=-DLIBTWOLAME_STATIC --extra-cflags=-DMODPLUG_STATIC --extra-cflags=-DCACA_STATIC --enable-amf --enable-libmfx --enable-libaribcaption --enable-gpl --enable-frei0r --enable-librubberband --enable-libvidstab --enable-libx264 --enable-libx265 --enable-avisynth --enable-libaribb24 --enable-libxvid --enable-libdavs2 --enable-libxavs2 --enable-libxavs --extra-cflags='-mtune=generic' --extra-cflags=-O3 --enable-static --disable-shared --prefix=/home/runner/work/ffmpeg-stable-autobuild/ffmpeg-stable-autobuild/sandbox/cross_compilers/mingw-w64-x86_64/x86_64-w64-mingw32 --enable-nonfree --enable-libfdk-aac --enable-decklink
  libavutil      59.  8.100 / 59.  8.100
  libavcodec     61.  3.100 / 61.  3.100
  libavformat    61.  1.100 / 61.  1.100
  libavdevice    61.  1.100 / 61.  1.100
  libavfilter    10.  1.100 / 10.  1.100
  libswscale      8.  1.100 /  8.  1.100
  libswresample   5.  1.100 /  5.  1.100
  libpostproc    58.  1.100 / 58.  1.100
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 3 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Not all references are available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 1 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Requested reference 6 not available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 4 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Requested reference 6 not available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 3 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Not all references are available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 12 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Requested reference 6 not available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 4 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Not all references are available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 1 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Not all references are available
    Last message repeated 1 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Requested reference 6 not available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 1 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Requested reference 6 not available
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Invalid frame marker
    Last message repeated 1 times
[vp9 @ 000001baa2891400] Not all references are available


    


    I'm by no means an expert in ffmpeg or in video encoding in general, so I have no idea what this is supposed to mean.

    


  • 16 Website Metrics to Track If You Want to Grow Your Business

    9 avril 2024, par Erin

    Conversion rate.

    Bounce rate.

    Sessions.

    There are dozens of metrics to keep up with in web analytics. It can be confusing at times trying to keep up with everything.

    But, if you want to improve your website performance and grow your business, you need to know what they are and how they work.

    Why ?

    Because what you measure gets managed. This is true in your personal life and business. You must track various website metrics to help your business reach new heights.

    In this guide, you’ll learn about the most important website metrics, why they’re important and how to track them to grow your brand.

    What are website metrics ?

    Your website is your digital headquarters.

    It’s not a static place. Instead, it’s a vibrant, interactive hub your visitors and customers can engage with daily.

    Every time a user interacts with your website, you can track what’s happening.

    Website metrics help you measure how much your visitors and customers interact with your website. 

    These engagement metrics help you understand what your visitors are doing, where they’re coming from, how they’re moving on your website and how long they stay. They can even give you insights into what their goals are.

    What are website metrics?

    If you aren’t tracking your website metrics, you won’t know how effective your website is.

    By paying close attention to your key metrics within a web analytics platform like Matomo, you’ll be able to see how well your marketing is doing and how your visitors are engaging so you can improve the user experience and increase conversions.

    16 website metrics to track

    Here are the top 16 website metrics you need to be tracking if you want to grow your business :

    1. Pageviews

    A pageview is the number of times a web page has been viewed. 

    Many pageviews can indicate a successful search engine optimisation (SEO) or marketing campaign — it can be used to show positive results for these initiatives.

    It can also help you determine various issues on individual pages. For instance, performance issues or poor website structure can cause visitors to get lost or confused while navigating your website.

    Screenshot example of the Matomo dashboard

    2. Average time on page

    Average time on a page is simply the time visitors spend on a specific page (not the entire website) ; tracking users’ time on various pages throughout your website can give you insights that can help you improve certain pages.

    If you get tons of traffic to a particular page, but the average time a visitor stays on that page is minimal, the content may need some work.

    Tracking this data can help determine if your website is engaging for your visitors or if you need to modify certain aspects to increase your visitors’ stay. Increasing the average time on the page will help boost your conversions and search engine rankings.

    3. Actions per visit

    Actions per visit is a key metric that tracks the average number of actions a visitor takes every time they visit your website. This data can help you track your audience engagement and the effectiveness of your content across your entire website.

    An action is any activity performed by your visitors on your website like :

    • Outlinks
    • Downloads
    • Page views
    • Internal site searches

    The higher your actions per visit, the more engaging your audience finds your website content. A side effect of increased actions is staying longer on the site and more likely to convert to your email list as a subscriber or pay for products as a customer.

    4. Bounce rate

    Like a bouncy ball, your website’s bounce rate measures how many users entered your site and “bounced” out without clicking on another page. This metric can be extremely helpful in determining user interest in your content. 

    You might be getting many visitors to your website, but if they “bounce” after visiting the first page they land on, that’s a great indicator that your content is not resonating with your audience.

    Remember, this metric should be taken with a grain of salt. 

    Your bounce rate may indicate that visitors are finding the exact information that they wanted and leaving pleased, so it’s not a black-and-white metric.

    For example, if you have a landing page with a high bounce rate, then that’s likely not a sign of a good user experience. But, if you have a knowledge base article and they just need to find some quick information, then it could be a good indicator.

    5. Conversions

    The first step in tracking conversions is defining what a conversion is for your website. 

    Do you want your audience to :

    • View a blog post
    • Purchase a product
    • Download an eBook
    • Sign up for a consultation call

    Determine what that conversion is and track how often users take that action on your website.

    This helps you understand if your marketing and content strategies are working toward your pre-defined conversion goal.

    Matomo track conversions.

    6. Conversion rate

    A conversion rate is the percentage of visits that triggered a conversion. Knowing this metric lets you plan, budget, and forecast future growth.

    For example, 5% of your website visitors take action and convert to customers. With this information, you can make better informed financial decisions regarding your marketing efforts on your website to help increase traffic and future conversions.

    While there are basic conversion rate benchmarks to strive toward, it ultimately depends on your goals and the specific conversions you decide to track that are best for your business. 

    That being said, Matomo has some best practices to help you optimise your conversion rates, no matter what conversion metric you are tracking.

    7. Exit rate

    While “bounce rate” and “exit rate” are similar, “exit rate” is the percentage of visits to a website that ended on a particular page.

    Knowing which pages have the highest percentage of visitors exiting your website gives you key information on the pages that may need to be improved.

    If you see that your “exit rate” is highest on pages before the checkout (or other CTA’s you have established), you will want to dive into what’s causing visitors to leave from that page. For example, maybe it’s the content, the copy or even a broken link.

    This is a great metric to help determine where you have breakdowns between you and your visitors. Improving your exit rate can help guide visitors through your website funnel more easily and boost your conversion rates. 

    Matomo track pageviews

    8. Top pages

    The top pages on your website are the pages that receive the most visits. Understanding what your top pages are can be crucial in planning and guiding your marketing strategies moving forward.

    Your top pages can help you determine the most engaging content for your audience. This can be extremely helpful in guiding your visitors to certain pages that other users find more valuable.

    It also helps you determine if you need to focus more attention on different parts of your website to increase user engagement in those areas.

    For example, maybe your most-viewed pages have less copy and more photos or videos. Understanding this lets you know that incorporating more media into other pages will boost future engagement.

    9. Traffic sources

    Your traffic sources are the channels that are driving visitors to your website. The four most common traffic sources are :

    • Direct Entry : Typing your website URL into their browser or visiting via a bookmark they saved
    • Websites/Referral : Clicking on a link to your site from another website
    • Search Engines : Using search engines (Google, Bing or Yahoo) to find your website
    • Campaigns : Visitors directed to your website through specific marketing campaigns, such as email newsletters, Google Ads, promotional links, etc.
    • Social Networks : Visitors accessing your website by clicking on links shared on social media platforms like Facebook, X (Twitter), LinkedIn, etc.

    Understanding where your visitors are coming from can help you focus your marketing efforts on the traffic sources with the highest conversion rates. 

    Suppose your email marketing campaign isn’t driving any traffic to your website, but your ad campaign is responsible for over 25% of your conversions. In that case, you might consider doubling your advertising efforts.

    10. Form average time spent

    Forms are a crucial part of your website’s marketing strategy. Forms can help you :

    • Learn more about your visitors
    • Gather feedback from your audience
    • Convert visitors into email subscribers
    • And more

    Form average time spent is the average amount of time a visitor spends on a specific form on your website. The time is calculated as the difference between the first interaction with a form field (for example, a field focus) and the last interaction with a form.

    Want to convert more visitors into leads ? Then, you need to understand your form analytics better. Learn more here.

    11. Play rate

    If you want to keep your audience engaged (and convert more visitors), you need to publish different types of media.

    But if your video or audio content isn’t performing well, then you’re wasting your time.

    That’s where play rate comes in. It’s calculated by analysing visitors who watched or listened to a specific media after they have visited a web page.

    With play rate, you can track any video, podcast, or audiobook plays.

    You can easily track it within Matomo’s Media Analytics. The best part ? This feature works out of the box, so you don’t need to configure it to start leveraging the analytics.

    Try Matomo for Free

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

    No credit card required

    12. Returning visitors

    Returning visitors are users who visit your website more than once over a specific time.

    You will want to measure the number of returning visitors to your website, as this information can give you additional insights into your marketing strategies, company branding and content.

    It can also help you better understand your customer base, giving you a clearer sense of their top desires and pain points.

    13. Device type

    Device type tracks the different devices visitors use to visit your website. These could be :

    • Tablets
    • Mobile phones
    • Desktop computers

    Knowing what your visitors are using to access your website can help you improve the overall user experience.

    For example, if 80% of your visitors use mobile phones, you could think about optimising your web pages to format with mobile devices. 

    Screenshot of Matomo dashboard

    14. Top exit pages

    Top exit pages are the pages that a visitor leaves your website from the most.

    Each web page will have a specific exit rate percentage based on how many people leave the website on a particular page.

    This can be quite helpful in understanding how visitors interact with your website. It can also help you uncover and fix any issues with your website you may not be aware of.

    For instance, one of your product pages has the highest exit rate on your website. By looking into why that is, you discover that your “Add to Cart” button isn’t functioning correctly, and your visitors can’t buy that particular product, so they exit out of frustration.

    15. Marketing attribution

    Marketing attribution (multi-touch attribution) helps you see which touchpoints have the greatest impact on conversions.

    Within Matomo, revenue attribution involves assigning credit for revenue across multiple touchpoints that contribute to a conversion.

    Matomo’s multi-touch attribution models use different weighting factors, like linear or time decay, to allocate credit to each touchpoint based on its influence.

    Matomo’s multi-touch attribution reports provide insights into how revenue is distributed across different touchpoints, marketing channels, campaigns, and actions. These reports allow you to analyse the contribution of each touchpoint to revenue generation and identify the most influential interactions in the customer journey.

    Try Matomo for Free

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

    No credit card required

    16. Event tracking

    Every website has multiple actions a user can perform called “events”. These could be downloading a template, submitting contact information, signing up for a newsletter or clicking a link.

    Tracking events can give you additional context into what your visitors are interested in or don’t care about. This allows you to target them better through those events, potentially creating new, unique conversions and boosting the growth of your business.

    It can also lead to discovering potential issues within your website if you notice visitors aren’t taking action on certain CTAs, such as broken links or lack of content on certain pages. By uncovering these issues, you can quickly fix them to increase your conversions.

    Matomo track events

    Start tracking your website metrics with Matomo today

    There’s much to consider when creating and running your website, such as the design, copy and flow. 

    While these are necessary, tracking your website’s data is one of the most important aspects of running a site. It’s crucial in helping you optimise your site’s performance and create a great experience for your visitors.

    Every interaction a visitor has on your site is unique and leaves valuable clues you can use to improve all aspects of your site experience. 

    Understanding what your visitors like, what website performance issues they’re running into and how they interact across your website is crucial to improving your marketing and sales efforts.

    While tracking this much data can feel overwhelming, having all your key metrics in one place and broken down into easy-to-understand benchmarks can help alleviate the stress and headache of data tracking. 

    That’s where a web analytics platform like Matomo comes in.

    With Matomo, you can easily track, store and analyse every piece of data on your website automatically to improve your site performance and user experience and drive conversions. 

    With Matomo, you can take back control with a platform that gives you 100% data ownership.

    Used on over 1 million websites in over 190 countries, Matomo gives you :

    • Accurate data (no data sampling)
    • Privacy-friendly and GDPR-compliant analytics
    • Open-source access to create a custom solution for you

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

  • How to Implement Cross-Channel Analytics : A Guide for Marketers

    17 avril 2024, par Erin

    Every modern marketer knows they have to connect with consumers across several channels. But do you know how well Instagram works alongside organic traffic or your email list ? Are you even tracking the impacts of these channels in one place ?

    You need a cross-channel analytics solution if you answered no to either of these questions. 

    In this article, we’ll explain cross-channel analytics, why your company probably needs it and how to set up a cross-channel analytics solution as quickly and easily as possible.

    What is cross-channel analytics ? 

    Cross-channel analytics is a form of marketing analytics that collects and analyses data from every channel and campaign you use.

    The result is a comprehensive view of your customer’s journey and each channel’s role in converting customers. 

    Cross-channel analytics lets you track every channel you use to convert customers, including :

    • Your website
    • Social media profiles
    • Email
    • Paid search
    • E-commerce
    • Retargeting campaigns

    Cross-channel analytics solves one of the most significant issues of cross-channel or multi-channel marketing efforts : measurement. 

    Research shows that only 16% of marketing tech stacks allow for accurate measurement of multi-channel initiatives across channels. 

    That’s a problem, given the staggering number of touchpoints in a typical buyer’s conversion path. However, it can be fixed using a cross-channel analytics approach that lets you measure the performance of every channel and assign a dollar value to its role in every conversion. 

    The difference between cross-channel analytics and multi-channel analytics

    Cross-channel analytics and multi-channel analytics sound very similar, but there’s one key difference you need to know. Multi-channel analytics measures the performance of several channels, but not necessarily all of them, nor the extent to which they work together to drive conversions. Conversely, cross-channel analytics measures the performance of all your marketing channels and how they work together. 

    What are the benefits of cross-channel analytics 

    Cross-channel analytics offers a lot of marketing and business benefits. Here are the ones marketing managers love most.

    Get a complete view of the customer journey

    Implementing a cross-channel analytics solution is the only way to get a complete view of your customer journey. 

    Cross-channel marketing analytics lets you see your customer journey in high definition, allowing you to build comprehensive customer profiles using data from multiple sources across every touchpoint

    A diagram showing how complex customer journeys are

    The result ? You get to understand how every customer behaves at every point of the customer journey, why they convert or leave your funnel, and which channels play the biggest role. 

    In short, you get to see why customers convert so you can learn how to convert more of them.

    Personalise the customer experience

    According to a McKinsey study, customers demand personalisation, and brands that excel at it generate 40% more revenue. Deliver the personalisation they desire and reap the benefits with cross-channel analytics. 

    When you understand the customer journey in detail, it becomes much easier to personalise your website and marketing efforts to their preferences and behaviours.

    Identify your most effective marketing channels

    Cross-channel marketing helps you understand your marketing efforts to see how every channel impacts conversions. 

    Take a look at the screenshot from Matomo below. Cross-channel analytics lets you get incredibly granular — we can see the number of conversions of organic search drives and the performance of individual search engines. 

    A Matomo screenshot showing channel attribution

    This makes it easy to identify your most effective marketing channels and allocate your resources appropriately. It also allows you to ask (and answer) which channels are the most effective.

    Try Matomo for Free

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

    No credit card required

    Attribute conversions accurately 

    An attribution model decides how you assign credit for each customer conversion to different touchpoints on the customer journey. Without a cross-channel analytics solution, you’re stuck using a standard attribution model like first or last click. 

    These models will show you how customers first found your brand or which channel finally convinced them to convert, but it doesn’t help you understand the role all your channels played in the conversion. 

    Cross-channel analytics solves this attribution problem. Rather than attributing a conversion to the touchpoint that directly led to the sale, cross-channel data gives you the real picture and allows you to use multi-touch attribution to understand which touchpoints generate the most revenue.

    How to set up cross-channel analytics

    Now that you know what cross-channel analytics is and why you should use it, here’s how to set up your solution. 

    1. Determine your objectives

    Defining your marketing goals will help you build a more relevant and actionable cross-channel analytics solution. 

    If you want to improve marketing attribution, for example, you can choose a platform with that feature built-in. If you care about personalisation, you could choose a platform with A/B testing capabilities to measure the impact of your personalisation efforts. 

    1. Set relevant KPIs

    You’ll want to track relevant KPIs to measure the marketing effectiveness of each channel. Put top-of-the-funnel metrics aside and focus on conversion metrics

    These include :

    • Conversion rate
    • Average visit duration
    • Bounce rate
    1. Implement tracking and analytics tools

    Gathering customer data from every channel and centralising it in a single location is one of the biggest challenges of cross-channel analytics. Still, it’s made easier with the right tracking tool or analytics platform. 

    The trick is to choose a platform that lets you measure as many of your channels as possible in a single platform. With Matomo, for example, you can track search, paid search, social and email campaigns and your website analytics.

    1. Set up a multi-touch attribution model

    Now that you have all of your data in one place, you can set up a multi-touch attribution model that lets you understand the extent to which each marketing channel contributes to your overall success. 

    There are several attribution models to choose from, including :

    Image of six different attribution models

    Each model has benefits and drawbacks, so choosing the right model for your organisation can be tricky. Rather than take a wild guess, evaluate each model against your marketing objectives, sales length cycle and data availability.

    For example, if you want to focus on optimising customer acquisition costs, a model that prioritises earlier touchpoints will be better. If you care about conversions, you might try a time decay model. 

    1. Turn data into insights with reports

    One of the big benefits of choosing a tool like Matomo, which consolidates data in one place, is that it significantly speeds up and simplifies reporting.

    When all the data is stored in one platform, you don’t need to spend hours combing through your social media platforms and copying and pasting analytics data into a spreadsheet. It’s all there and ready for you to run reports.

    Try Matomo for Free

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

    No credit card required

    1. Take action

    There’s no point implementing a cross-channel analytics system if you aren’t going to take action. 

    But where should you start ?

    Optimising your budgets and prioritising marketing spend is a great starting point. Use your cross-channel insights to find your most effective marketing channels (they’re the ones that convert the most customers or have the highest ROI) and allocate more of your budget to them. 

    You can also optimise the channels that aren’t pulling their weight if social media is letting you down ; for example, experiment with tactics like social commerce that could drive more conversions. Alternatively, you could choose to stop investing entirely in these channels.

    Cross-channel analytics best practices

    If you already have a cross-channel analytics solution, take things to the next level with the following best practices. 

    Use a centralised solution to track everything

    Centralising your data in one analytics tool can streamline your marketing efforts and help you stay on top of your data. It won’t just save you from tabbing between different browsers or copying and pasting everything into a spreadsheet, but it can also make it easier to create reports. 

    Think about consumer privacy 

    If you are looking at a new cross-channel analytics tool, consider how it accounts for data privacy regulations in your area. 

    You’re going to be collecting a lot of data, so it’s important to respect their privacy wishes. 

    It’s best to choose a platform like Matomo that complies with the strictest privacy laws (CCPA, GDPR, etc.).

    Monitor data in real time

    So, you’ve got a holistic view of your marketing efforts by integrating all your channels into a single tool ?

    Great, now go further by monitoring the impact of your marketing efforts in real time.

    A screenshot of Matomo's real-time visitor log

    With a web analytics platform like Matomo, you can see who visits your site, what they do, and where they come from through features like the visits log report, which even lets you view individual user sessions. This lets you measure the impact of posting on a particular social channel or launching a new offer. 

    Try Matomo for Free

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

    No credit card required

    Reallocate marketing budgets based on performance

    When you track every channel, you can use a multi-touch attribution model like position-based or time-decay to give every channel the credit it deserves. But don’t just credit each channel ; turn your valuable insights into action. 

    Use cross-channel attribution analytics data to reallocate your marketing budget to the most profitable channels or spend time optimising the channels that aren’t pulling their weight. 

    Cross-channel analytics platforms to get started with 

    The marketing analytics market is huge. Mordor Intelligence valued it at $6.31 billion in 2024 and expects it to reach $11.54 billion by 2029. Many of these platforms offer cross-channel analytics, but few can track the impact of multiple marketing channels in one place. 

    So, rather than force you to trawl through confusing product pages, we’ve shortlisted three of the best cross-channel analytics solutions. 

    Matomo

    Screenshot example of the Matomo dashboard

    Matomo is a web analytics platform that lets you collect and centralise your marketing data while giving you 100% accurate data. That includes search, social, e-commerce, campaign tracking data and comprehensive website analytics.

    Better still, you get the necessary tools to turn those insights into action. Custom reporting lets you track and visualise the metrics that matter, while conversion optimisation tools like built-in A/B testing, heatmaps, session recordings and more let you test your theories. 

    Google Analytics

    A screenshot of Google Analytics 4 UI

    Google Analytics is the most popular and widely used tool on the market. The level of analysis and customisation you can do with it is impressive for a free tool. That includes tracking just about any event and creating reports from scratch. 

    Google Analytics provides some cross-channel marketing features and lets you track the impact of various channels, such as social and search, but there are a couple of drawbacks. 

    Privacy can be a concern because Google Analytics collects data from your customers for its own remarketing purposes. 

    It also uses data sampling to generate wider insights from a small subset of your data. This lack of accurate data reporting can cause you to generate false insights.

    With Google Analytics, you’ll also need to subscribe to additional tools to gain advanced insights into the user experience. So, consider that while this tool is free, you’ll need to pay for heatmaps, session recording and A/B testing tools to optimise effectively.

    Improvado

    A screenshot of Improvado's homepage

    Improvado is an analytics tool for sales and marketing teams that extracts thousands of metrics from hundreds of sources. It centralises data in data warehouses, from which you can create a range of marketing dashboards.

    While Improvado does have analytics capabilities, it is primarily an ETL (extraction, transform, load) tool for organisations that want to centralise all their data. That means marketers who aren’t familiar with data transformations may struggle to get their heads around the complexity of the platform.

    Make the most of cross-channel analytics with Matomo

    Cross-channel analytics is the only way to get a comprehensive view of your customer journey and understand how your channels work together to drive conversions.

    Then you’re dealing with so many channels and data ; keeping things as simple as possible is the key to success. That’s why over 1 million websites choose Matomo. 

    Our all-in-one analytics solution measures traditional web analytics, behavioural analytics, attribution and SEO, so you have 100% accurate data in one place. 

    Try it free for 21 days. No credit card required.