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NEW: One Page Google Analytics Dashboard 🤩 Understanding website analytics has become a real challenge! Google Analytics, used to be perfect … but after the release of GA4, it’s become too difficult to use for small business owners. Many users asked me to share a Google Analytics alternative, but...

42,391 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

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Syed Balkhi profil fotoğrafı
Syed Balkhi1 yıl önce

Also for more on the background story, check out the announcement post on WPBeginner:

Devin Walker profil fotoğrafı
Devin Walker1 yıl önce

Great idea. Simplify something overly complex for the real-world person. Brilliant!

Syed Balkhi profil fotoğrafı
Syed Balkhi1 yıl önce

Yup really solving our own problems. I find GA4 reports to be quite complicated and requires way too many clicks.

Mike Stott profil fotoğrafı
Mike Stott1 yıl önce

Looks cool, but I get a blank dash with an error

Holistic Revival profil fotoğrafı
Holistic Revival1 yıl önce

What a game-changer, Syed! Simplifying analytics is a must for small business owners. I've seen how overwhelming data can be, especially when it comes to making sense of it all. Have you considered the impact of digital overwhelm on our mental well-being? Perhaps we can explore some mindfulness techniques to help navigate the noise?

Joe Youngblood profil fotoğrafı
Joe Youngblood1 yıl önce

This is now #1 on every list on WP Beginner isn't it?

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Here is how Marc could improve the landing page: First, even tho the initial audience was Indie Makers, it's not the one that brings the most $$ (as per Marc). So, we need to make it super clear who is the landing page for. The "problem" is that there are multiple audiences, and we can't niche down the main landing page yet. It means the main landing will be more generalist to appeal to more people, but will be slightly less impactful as a result. The solution for this is to create multiple landing pages for specific audiences with super precise headlines For our general landing page, we want: - What is it - Who is this for - Make it clear what the main benefits are What is it -> Analytics app Who is this for -> Online businesses Main benefit -> Simple to use/setup (no code), accurate revenue tracking, it's modern, unlike what they use at the moment (Google Analytics) Headline: - "Modern analytics for online businesses" (if we position against Google Analytics and other bloated apps) - "Easy analytics for online businesses" 👉 You might want to A/B test them eventually Now, it would be even BETTER if we had data on WHY they want to track revenues (ex: Measure ROI, find opportunities, etc), but for now, we can stay generic and then test different ones later As for the audience-specific landing pages, you can mention the name of the audience directly to make it relevant to them: - The analytics platform for marketplaces - The analytics platform for course creators - etc... Subheadline: - Accurate revenue tracking without a line of code Bullet points (all 3): - Integrates with 50+ platforms - Accurate revenue tracking & funnels - Setup in 5 minutes Call to action: - "Start 14-day trial" implies a payment will be needed, which creates friction at some point - Better have something neutral ("Start For Free", "Get Started Now") or action-focused (in this case "Create your project" or "Setup my website") Then we have the big image section. Right now, it occupies lots of space and provide little value. What would be better here is to either have an interactive embedding or a video showcasing the main features of the app. And in both case, you want to make it smaller, and interactive As for the signup page: Right now it's very austere, and the video on the left side catch the attention more than the form. I showed examples in the video, but you want to have a step by step guided onboarding that doesn't feel like people are creating accounts. No one like creating accounts, it creates additional friction. So I would start by asking the website URL, THEN ask for the email (and no need for email verification, just create the account and log them in automatically). That way you remove friction and then can jump straight to installing the code snippet (which is the point where they start getting value from the product) Obviously there is waaaaaay more things to do, and ultimately, especially since I don't have all the relevant data What I mentioned above are mainly good practices, and you will want to talk with users, A/B test and see what works the best :)

Nico

39,251 görüntüleme • 9 ay önce

Today we’re introducing Heatmap Web Analytics! Let me guess… you’re frustrated with GA4, stuck setting up custom code, and getting delayed (often inaccurate) data? Miss good ol’ UA? Ecommerce friends, now you have it back and SO MUCH MORE. Here’s how: 1️⃣ 2 minutes to install, NO CUSTOM CODE. You shouldn’t need developers just to see your web analytics! Everything will work for you, out of the box, with a single copy-paste. I had my mom install it on a Shopify store to make sure it was easy lol. If she can do it, I believe in you! 2️⃣ Just the reports that matter You can get lost in the weeds of charts and tables, but Heatmap’s web analytics are just like UA. You have the most important charts, tables, and funnels with as many filters as you want. Fully customizable, and we’re guiding you right to your source of revenue loss. 3️⃣ AI that SLAPS HeatmapAI is KNOWN as one of the most powerful recommendation engines in the CRO space, and we had to double-down. It’s backed by trillions of datapoints and obnoxiously clear on exactly what you need to do to make more 💰 4️⃣ ZERO cookies or PII Heatmap proudly uses no cookies, abides by every bit of GDPR, and will likely be the most compliant software in your tech stack. We’re here for a decade, not for a year. Come join us. 5️⃣ Only $29 bucks a month! Yes… Our Web Analytics are $29/month, no matter how large your company is. Web analytics are a foundation for any successful Ecommerce business so we want to make sure you have them. We’ve got features 10x more powerful, but not 10x the price either. Start with Heatmap’s web analytics, fall in love, and we’ll grow together. We ship new features every month. GO SIGN UP! Heatmap .com orrrrr more fun??? If you’re still reading, I’ll take a minute to say hi 👋 I’m Dylan, the founder of Heatmap (dot) com. I recently built and sold one of the largest CRO agencies and optimized billions in Ecommerce revenue. I’m working like im 21 again (I’m not 😅) building Heatmap, because this data needs to be everywhere and accessible for the Ecommerce community. Every ecom brand growing in 2025 focuses on their website for growth. I personally invested 7-figures of my own money into this vision. Now we’re a rockstar team of 52. I’m the one who gets the pleasure of writing this tweet, but there’s 51 AMAZING, talented, dedicated team members who made this product release happen, even more than me. And if you’re STILL reading, you’re just awesome and I think we’re friends by now lol my DMs are open, I’m always happy to support, and GO SIGN UP! WEB ANALYTICS ARE BACK!!!

Dylan Ander | CRO & SplitTesting

42,968 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce

Google is making $62 billion a quarter destroying the websites it NEEDS to survive. This is literally a death spiral that ends with Google killing itself. Let me explain what's going on... Google added AI summaries to the top of every search result in 2024. When you Google something now, the answer sits right there on Google's page. You never have to click anywhere. Google took the information from someone else's website, summarized it, and kept you inside Google's ecosystem. The result: 60% of all Google searches now end without a single click to any website. Small publishers lost 60% of their traffic in one year. Medium publishers lost 47%. Even the biggest names in media, the New York Times, the Washington Post, Business Insider, all saw traffic fall between 22% and 55%. The Axios CEO called it "a referral extinction event for the ad-supported web." Google's response to all of this was to tell publishers they can "opt out" of having their content summarized. But opting out also REMOVES your description from normal search results. So the choice Google gives you is let us steal your content for free, or become invisible on the internet. That's extortion. The Washington Post laid off another round of journalists this year because of it. Stereogum, one of the most respected music publications on the internet, had to BEG readers for donations. Business Insider cut 21% of its staff. Dozens of smaller publishers have shut down entirely. The people who actually CREATE the information Google summarizes are going bankrupt while Google posts record revenue. But here's where this gets interesting and where everyone stops thinking: Google's AI summaries are only as good as the content they summarize. If the publishers who write the original articles, run the original investigations, and create the original data go out of business, there is nothing left for Google to summarize. The AI starts recycling old information, the answers get stale, the quality drops, and users start noticing that Google's summaries are increasingly wrong, outdated, or useless. Google is essentially strip-mining the internet for short-term revenue. They are extracting all the value from content creators without paying for it, driving those creators out of business, and then wondering why the quality of their own product is declining. This is exactly what Napster did to the music industry in the early 2000s: Made content free, creators went broke, and quality collapsed. It took a decade to rebuild. Google is doing the same thing to the entire internet at 100x the scale. Rolling Stone, Variety, Deadline, The Hollywood Reporter, and Billboard are now suing Google for antitrust violations. Chegg, the education platform, lost 49% of its traffic and is suing too. The UK's competition authority just ordered Google to let publishers opt out without being punished. The DOJ already ruled Google is an illegal monopoly. And Google's defense in court is genuinely unbelievable. They argue that publishers CHOOSE to let Google index their content and can leave anytime they want. That's like saying you choose to pay protection money to the mob because technically you could close your business and move to another city. Google controls 90% of search. Leaving Google means leaving the internet. Meanwhile Google is investing billions in custom AI chips to make these summaries cheaper at scale. Every quarter the problem gets worse. The internet as we've known it for 25 years ran on a simple deal: Publishers make content. Google sends traffic. Advertisers pay for the traffic. Everyone wins. But Google just BROKE that deal and kept all the money.

Ricardo

248,641 görüntüleme • 24 gün önce