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13 mai 2011, par kent1MédiaSPIP ne modifie jamais le document original mis en ligne.
Pour chaque document mis en ligne il effectue deux opérations successives : la création d’une version supplémentaire qui peut être facilement consultée en ligne tout en laissant l’original téléchargeable dans le cas où le document original ne peut être lu dans un navigateur Internet ; la récupération des métadonnées du document original pour illustrer textuellement le fichier ;
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1er décembre 2010, par kent1La gestion de la ferme passe par l’exécution à intervalle régulier de plusieurs tâches répétitives dites Cron.
Le super Cron (gestion_mutu_super_cron)
Cette tâche, planifiée chaque minute, a pour simple effet d’appeler le Cron de l’ensemble des instances de la mutualisation régulièrement. Couplée avec un Cron système sur le site central de la mutualisation, cela permet de simplement générer des visites régulières sur les différents sites et éviter que les tâches des sites peu visités soient trop (...) -
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12 avril 2011, par kent1Il est également possible d’activer l’inscription des visiteurs ce qui permettra à tout un chacun d’ouvrir soit même un compte sur le canal en question dans le cadre de projets ouverts par exemple.
Pour ce faire, il suffit d’aller dans l’espace de configuration du site en choisissant le sous menus "Gestion des utilisateurs". Le premier formulaire visible correspond à cette fonctionnalité.
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Sur d’autres sites (9625)
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How to Increase Conversions With Form Analysis
30 janvier 2024, par ErinForms are one of the most important elements of your website. They are also one of the most difficult elements to analyse and improve.
Unlike a webpage, forms aren’t all that easy to analyse with standard web analytics tools. You need to learn how to conduct form analysis if you want to improve your forms’ conversion rates and increase revenue.
In this article, we’ll explain what form analysis is and why conducting a thorough form analysis is so important.
What is form analysis ?
Form analysis is a process that measures the effectiveness of your forms. Form analysis uses several tools and techniques like a form analytics platform, heatmaps, and session recordings to collect user data and understand how visitors behave when filling in forms.
The goal is to improve the design and effectiveness of your forms, reducing abandonment rate and encouraging more users to submit them.
There are plenty of reasons visitors could be having trouble with your forms, from confusing form fields to poor design and lengthy verification processes. Form analytics can help you pinpoint why your form’s conversion rate is so low or why so many users abandon your form halfway through filling it in.
Why is form analysis important ?
Website forms have some of the highest bounce rates and abandonments of any website element. By analysing your forms, you can achieve the following outcomes :
Reduce form abandonment
When it’s tough enough to get users to start filling in your form, the last thing you want them to do is abandon it halfway through. But that’s probably what your users are doing more than you’d like to think.
Why are they abandoning it ? Even if you’re humble enough to admit you didn’t create the greatest form the world’s ever seen, it can still be incredibly difficult to pin down why users give up on your form.
That’s unless you conduct a form analysis. By analysing metrics and user behaviour, you can pinpoint and rectify the issues that cause users to abandon your form.
Improve the user experience
Best practices will only take you so far. How users behave when filling in a form on your website may be completely different to how they behave on another site. That’s why you need to use form analysis to understand how users behave specifically on your website — and then use that information to optimise the design, layout, and content of the form to better suit them.
If one field is regularly left empty, for example, you can delete it. If users spend several minutes filling out a form with a high abandonment rate, you could shorten it.
The goal isn’t to make the best form ever but to make the best form for your audience.
Increase conversions
Ultimately, form analysis helps you improve your form’s most important metric : conversions. Reducing your abandonment rate will naturally lead to more completions, but so will taking advantage of other optimisation opportunities that only become clear with form analysis. This can include optimisations like :
- Moving the form higher up on the page
- Shortening the form
- Changing the heading and CTAs
- Renaming field labels
A thorough form analysis process can ensure your forms generate as many conversions as possible.
Why do users abandon forms ?
Are you already suffering from high form abandonment rates ? Don’t worry, you’re not alone. Marketers regularly make the same mistakes when creating forms that cause users to give up halfway through completion.
Here are some of the most common reasons for form abandonment :
- There are too many steps. If you’re telling users they’ve just completed step 2 of 12, you can bet they won’t bother finishing your form.
- They ask for too much information. No one wants to fill out a long form, and often, users won’t have the information on hand if you ask for too much. Just look at the rate left blank from the Unneeded Fields report in the screenshot below :
- The form is confusing. Unclear form fields or directions can put users off.
- All the fields are free text and time-consuming. Filling out forms with long text fields takes too much time. To speed things up, use dropdown options in the fields, but keep the options to a minimum. This not only helps users finish the form faster but also makes it easier to analyse the data later because it keeps the data format consistent so you can organise the information more efficiently.
- Users don’t trust the form. This is a particular problem on checkout pages where users are entering sensitive information.
How to conduct form analysis
You need to collect user behaviour data to effectively analyse your forms. But a lot of traditional website analytics tools won’t have the required functionality.
Matomo is different. Our web analytics solution offers comprehensive web analytics as well as additional features like Heatmaps, Session Recordings, A/B Testing, and Form Analytics to provide all the functionality you need.
Now if you don’t use Matomo, you can try it free for 21 days (no credit card required) to see if it’s the right tool for you.
Whether you use Matomo or not is up to you. But, once you have a suitable tool in place, just follow the steps below to conduct a form analysis.
Check your analytics
Tracking and analysing specific form metrics should be the first place you start. We recommend collecting data on the following metrics :
- Form starter rate : the percentage of visitors who actually start to fill in your form
- Completion rate : the percentage of visitors who complete the form
- Form abandonment rate : the percentage of users who gave up filling in your form
- Time spent completing your form : the average length of time users spend on your form
Let’s look at these metrics are in Matomo’s Form Analytics :
The dashboard shows an overview of these metrics over a given period, allowing you to see at a glance whether there are issues you need to rectify.
Next, deep dive into the performance of each form to see things like :
- Drop off fields
- Unused fields
- Entry field
- Most corrected fields
You can even use Matomo’s visitor log to see who’s behind every submission.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Use a heatmap
A heatmap is a colour-based graphical representation of data. A heatmap will show what users to do on your website, including :
- How far they scroll
- Which buttons they click on
- Where they focus their attention
When used on a webpage with a form, you’ll be able to see how often users interact with your form based on the heatmap colour, with warmer colours representing greater engagement levels.
Let’s look at a heatmap in Matomo :
This heatmap is showing us how far down users have scrolled. It’s clear that only 63% of visitors are reaching the point above our call to action to see all features. We might want to consider moving that call to action up in order to get more engagement.
A heatmap is a great way to see whether your form’s placement gets the level of attention you want from visitors and to what extent visitors interact with your field.
Record user sessions
Session replays go even further than heatmaps, recording a real-life user interacting with your site. It’s like looking over a visitor’s shoulder while they use your site.
With Matomo, you can record any sessions where the user takes a certain action (like starting to fill in a form), allowing you to build a rich library of qualitative data.
You can then replay a recorded session at your leisure to understand exactly how users interact with your forms.
Segment users
If you really want to understand how visitors use your forms, then it’s essential to segment your data.
You can segment all Form Analytics reports by over 100 pre-built segments in Matomo.
One way to segment your data is by comparing the average time on form of those who completed the form with those who abandoned it.
If users abandon a form quickly, that could indicate your form is irrelevant to this audience or too long. If users spend a lot of time on the form, however, it’s probably safe to assume that it is relevant but there is something wrong with the form itself.
Looking at the Field Timings report will help you pinpoint which field visitors are spending the most time on and causing frustration.
The Field Timings example report in Matomo above, it’s evident that the “Overview of your needs” field takes up the most time (avg. time spent is 1 min 40s). To improve this, we might want to change it to a dropdown field. This way, users can quickly select options, and if necessary, provide additional details.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
Another way is to segment data by traffic source and compare each source’s conversion rate. This will show whether one traffic source converts better than another or if one source isn’t interested in your form at all.
How to optimise web forms
Want to implement what you’ve learnt from your form analysis ? Follow these steps to optimise your existing web forms.
Define your form’s purpose
The first step in optimising your existing web forms is to give a clear and definitive purpose to every single one.
When you have a defined goal, creating a form users will complete is much easier. After all, if you don’t know why people should fill in one of your forms, how would a visitor possibly know ?
Take a look at one of our forms below :
The purpose of this form is to get users to sign up for a free trial of our web analytics platform, and every element works towards that goal :
- The headline directs the user to take action
- The copy explains that it’s a free trial that doesn’t require credit card details
- The green call-to-action button reinforces the action and benefit
- There is validation to support this under the form – “Trusted on over 1 million websites in over 190+ countries”
Our clear instructions leave users no doubt about why they should fill in the form or what will happen.
Choose the right type of form
You can use several forms on your website, each with different designs, form fields, and goals.
For example :
- Registration forms are fairly minimalist and designed to collect the least amount of data possible.
- Contact forms are concise so that it’s easy for potential customers to reach your team.
- Checkout forms balance a need to collect important data with a streamlined design that doesn’t put users off.
- Lead generation forms are compelling and usually include qualifying questions so sales teams can score leads.
Make sure you are using the right type of form to avoid abandonments and other issues. For example, requiring users to fill in a lengthy lead generation-style form when you want them to sign up for a free trial will probably kill your conversion rate.
Test form elements
If your form analysis has shed light on one or two issues, you can use A/B or multivariate testing to trial new elements or designs and see how they compare.
There’s no shortage of elements you can test, including the form’s :
- Headline
- Placement
- Design
- CTA button
- Colour-scheme
- Length
- Form fields
Matomo makes it easy to create and run A/B tests on your website’s forms.
Move your form above the fold
One of the simplest ways to optimise your web form is to move it above the fold — that’s the section of the screen users see when they load your page.
Why ? Well, the more people who see your form, the more people will fill it in. And when it’s above the fold, users can’t help but see it.
Conclusion
Forms are one of the most important elements on your website, so why not treat them as such and regularly run a thorough form analysis ? By doing so, you’ll identify ways to optimise your form, improve the user experience, and improve conversions.
Matomo is the best platform for conducting form analysis. Our combination of web analytics, Form Analytics, Session Recordings, and Heatmaps means you have all the tools you need to learn exactly how visitors interact with your forms.
See just how powerful Matomo’s tools are by starting a free 21-day trial, no credit card required.
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21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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Data Privacy Issues to Be Aware of and How to Overcome Them
9 mai 2024, par ErinData privacy issues are a significant concern for users globally.
Around 76% of US consumers report that they would not buy from a company they do not trust with their data. In the European Union, a 2021 study found that around 53% of EU internet users refused to let companies access their data for advertising purposes.
These findings send a clear message : if companies want to build consumer trust, they must honour users’ data privacy concerns. The best way to do this is by adopting transparent, ethical data collection practices — which also supports the simultaneous goal of maintaining compliance with regional data privacy acts.
So what exactly is data privacy ?
Data privacy refers to the protections that govern how personal data is collected and used, especially with respect to an individual’s control over when, where and what information they share with others.
Data privacy also refers to the extent to which organisations and governments go to protect the personal data that they collect. Different parts of the world have different data privacy acts. These regulations outline the measures organisations must take to safeguard the data they collect from their consumers and residents. They also outline the rights of data subjects, such as the right to opt out of a data collection strategy and correct false data.
As more organisations rely on personal data to provide services, people have become increasingly concerned about data privacy, particularly the level of control they have over their data and what organisations and governments do with their data.
Why should organisations take data privacy issues seriously ?
Organisations should take data privacy seriously because consumer trust depends on it and because they have a legal obligation to do so. Doing so also helps organisations prevent threat actors from illegally accessing consumer data. Strong data privacy helps you :
Comply with data protection acts
Organisations that fail to comply with regional data protection acts could face severe penalties. For example, consider the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), which is the primary data protection action for the European Union. The penalty system for GDPR fines consists of two tiers :
- Less severe infringements — Which can lead to fines of up to €10 million (or 2% of an organisation’s worldwide annual revenue from the last financial year) per infringement.
- More severe infringements — This can lead to fines of up to €20 million (or 4% of an organisation’s worldwide annual revenue from the last financial year) per infringement.
The monetary value of these penalties is significant, so it is in the best interest of all organisations to be GDPR compliant. Other data protection acts have similar penalty systems to the GDPR. In Brazil, organisations non-compliant with the Lei Geral de Proteção de Dados Pessoais (LGPD) could be fined up to 50 million reals (USD 10 million) or 2% of their worldwide annual revenue from the last financial year.
Improve brand reputation
Research shows that 81% of consumers feel that how an organisation treats their data reflects how they treat them as a consumer. This means a strong correlation exists between how people perceive an organisation’s data collection practices and their other business activities.
Data breaches can have a significant impact on an organisation, especially their reputation and level of consumer trust. In 2022, hackers stole customer data from the Australian private health insurance company, Medibank, and released the data onto the dark web. Optus was also affected by a cyberattack, which compromised the information of current and former customers. Following these events, a study by Nature revealed that 83 percent of Australians were concerned about the security of their data, particularly in the hands of their service providers.
Protect consumer data
Protecting consumer data is essential to preventing data breaches. Unfortunately, cybersecurity attacks are becoming increasingly sophisticated. In 2023 alone, organisations like T-Mobile and Sony have been compromised and their data stolen.
One way to protect consumer data is to retain 100% data ownership. This means that no external parties can see your data. You can achieve this with the web analytics platform, Matomo. With Matomo, you can store your own data on-premises (your own servers) or in the Cloud. Under both arrangements, you retain full ownership of your data.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, while respecting user privacy.
What are the most pressing data privacy issues that organisations are facing today ?
Today’s most pressing data privacy challenges organisations face are complying with new data protection acts, maintaining consumer trust, and choosing the right web analytics platform. Here is a detailed breakdown of what these challenges mean for businesses.
Complying with new and emerging data protection laws
Ever since the European Union introduced the GDPR in 2018, other regions have enacted similar data protection acts. In the United States, California (CCPA), Virginia (VCDPA) and Colorado have their own state-level data protection acts. Meanwhile, Brazil and China have the General Data Protection Law (LGPD) and the Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL), respectively.
For global organisations, complying with multiple data protection acts can be tough, as each act interprets the GDPR model differently. They each have their own provisions, terminology (or different interpretations of the same terminology), and penalties.
A web analytics platform like Matomo can help your organisation comply with the GDPR and similar data protection acts. It has a range of privacy-friendly features including data anonymisation, IP anonymisation, and first-party cookies by default. You can also create and publish custom opt-out forms and let visitors view your collected data.
Today’s most pressing data privacy challenges organisations face are complying with new data protection acts, maintaining consumer trust, and choosing the right web analytics platform. Here is a detailed breakdown of what these challenges mean for businesses.
Complying with new and emerging data protection laws
Ever since the European Union introduced the GDPR in 2018, other regions have enacted similar data protection acts. In the United States, California (CCPA), Virginia (VCDPA) and Colorado have their own state-level data protection acts. Meanwhile, Brazil and China have the General Data Protection Law (LGPD) and the Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL), respectively.
For global organisations, complying with multiple data protection acts can be tough, as each act interprets the GDPR model differently. They each have their own provisions, terminology (or different interpretations of the same terminology), and penalties.
A web analytics platform like Matomo can help your organisation comply with the GDPR and similar data protection acts. It has a range of privacy-friendly features including data anonymisation, IP anonymisation, and first-party cookies by default. You can also create and publish custom opt-out forms and let visitors view your collected data.
Try Matomo for Free
Get the web insights you need, while respecting user privacy.
Maintaining consumer trust
Building (and maintaining) consumer trust is a major hurdle for organisations. Stories about data breaches and data scandals — notably the Cambridge Analytical scandal — instil fear into the public’s hearts. After a while, people wonder, “Which company is next ?”
One way to build and maintain trust is to be transparent about your data collection practices. Be open and honest about what data you collect (and why), where you store the data (and for how long), how you protect the data and whether you share data with third parties.
You should also prepare and publish your cyber incident response plan. Outline the steps you will take to contain, assess and manage a data breach.
Choosing the right web analytics platform
Organisations use web analytics to track and monitor web traffic, manage advertising campaigns and identify potential revenue streams. The most widely used web analytics platform is Google Analytics ; however, many users have raised concerns about privacy issues.
When searching for a Google Analytics alternative, consider a web analytics platform that takes data privacy seriously. Features like cookieless tracking, data anonymisation and IP anonymisation will let you track user activity without collecting personal data. Custom opt-out forms will let your web visitors enforce their data subject rights.
What data protection acts exist right now ?
As time goes on and more countries introduce their own data privacy laws, it becomes harder for organisations to adapt. Understanding the basics of each act can help streamline compliance. Here is what you need to know about the latest data protection acts.
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR)
The GDPR is a data protection act created by the European Parliament and Council of the European Union. It comprises 11 chapters covering the general provisions, principles, data subject rights, penalties and other relevant information.
The GDPR established a framework for organisations and governments to follow regarding the collection, processing, storing, transferring and deletion of personal data. Since coming into effect on 25 May 2018, other countries have used the GDPR as a model to enact similar data protection acts.
General Data Protection Law (LGPD)
The LGPD is Brazil’s main data protection act. The Federal Republic of Brazil signed the act on August 14, 2018, and it officially commenced on August 16, 2020. The act aimed to unify the 40 Brazilian laws that previously governed the country’s approach to processing personal data.
Like the GDPR, the LGPD serves as a legal framework to regulate the collection and usage of personal data. It also outlines the duties of the national data protection authority, the Autoridade Nacional de Proteção de Dados (ANPD), which is responsible for enforcing the LGPD.
Privacy Amendment (Notifiable Data Breaches) for the Privacy Act 1988
Established by the Australian House of Representatives, the Privacy Act 1988 outlines how organisations and governments must manage personal data. The federal government has amended the Privacy Act 1988 twice — once in 2000, and again in 2014 — and is committing to a significant overhaul.
The new proposals will make it easier for individuals to opt out of data collection, organisations will have to destroy collected data after a reasonable period, and small businesses will no longer be exempt from the Privacy Act.
United States
The United States does not have a federally mandated data protection act. Instead, each state has been gradually introducing its data protection acts, with the first being California, followed by Virginia and Colorado. Over a dozen other states are following suit, too.
- California — The then-Governor of California Jerry Brown signed the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) into law on June 28, 2018. The act applies to organisations with gross annual revenue of more than USD 25 million, and that buy or sell products and services to 100,000 or more households or consumers.
- Virginia — The Virginia Consumer Data Protection Act (VCDPA) took effect on January 1, 2023. It applies to organisations that process (or control) the personal data of 100,000 or more consumers in a financial year. It also applies to organisations that process (or control) the personal data of 25,000 or more consumers and gain more than 50% of gross revenue by selling that data.
- Colorado — Colorado Governor Jared Polis signed the Colorado Privacy Act (ColoPA) into law in July 2021. The act applies to organisations that process (or control) the personal data of 100,000 or more Colorado residents annually. It also applies to organisations that earn revenue from the sale of personal data of at least 25,000 Colorado residents.
Because the US regulations are a patchwork of differing legal acts, compliance can be a complicated endeavour for organisations operating across multiple jurisdictions.
How can organisations comply with data protection acts ?
One way to ensure compliance is to keep up with the latest data protection acts. But that is a very time-consuming task.
Over 16 US states are in the process of signing new acts. And countries like China, Turkey and Australia are about to overhaul — in a big way — their own data privacy protection acts.
Knowledge is power. But you also have a business to run, right ?
That’s where Matomo comes in.
Streamline data privacy compliance with Matomo
Although data privacy is a major concern for individuals and companies operating in multiple parts of the world — as they must comply with new, conflicting data protection laws — it is possible to overcome the biggest data privacy issues.
Matomo enables your visitors to take back control of their data. You can choose where you store your data on-premises and in the Cloud (EU-based). You can use various features, retain 100% data ownership, protect visitor privacy and ensure compliance.
Try the 21-day free trial of Matomo today, start your free analytics trial. No credit card required.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.
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16 Website Metrics to Track If You Want to Grow Your Business
9 avril 2024, par ErinConversion 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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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.
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.
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Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.
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.
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.
Try Matomo for Free
21 day free trial. No credit card required.