Website analytics options

Analyzing websites for performance

Here are 10 of the most popular types of analytics platforms used by website owners to track performance, user behavior, and engagement:

The best analytics tool for your website will depend on your needs. Google Analytics is the go-to free choice for general data, while while Fathom, Jetpack, Plausible, and Matomo are ideal for privacy-conscious users. For visual insights, tools like Hotjar and Crazy Egg excel. Each platform offers unique features suited to different goals, so consider your specific requirements before choosing the right one!

1. Google Analytics

Google Analytics is the most widely used web analytics tool, providing comprehensive insights into traffic, user demographics, behavior flow, and conversions. It’s powerful for tracking website visits, user interactions, referral sources, and e-commerce data. The new GA4 dashboard can be confusing, but there are paid options (like MonsterInsights for WordPress users).

Why it’s popular: It’s free, highly customizable, and provides in-depth data for both small and large businesses.

2. Fathom Analytics

Fathom Analytics is a privacy-focused alternative to Google Analytics, offering straightforward, clean dashboards without collecting personal data or using cookies. It’s known for being user-friendly, lightweight, and compliant with privacy laws like GDPR, CCPA, and PECR.

Why it’s popular: Privacy-focused, simple to use, and fast-loading.

3. Jetpack Stats

Jetpack Stats is a WordPress plugin that offers built-in analytics for WordPress sites. It tracks basic site performance metrics, including page views, popular posts, and visitor sources. While not as robust as Google Analytics, it’s simple to use and integrates seamlessly with WordPress.

Why it’s popular: Easy integration with WordPress, no external setup needed.

4. Matomo (formerly Piwik)

Matomo is an open-source web analytics platform that emphasizes user privacy and data ownership. It offers similar functionality to Google Analytics, with detailed reports on user activity, heatmaps, session recordings, and goal tracking. It can be self-hosted or cloud-hosted.

Why it’s popular: Complete control over data, robust features, and strong privacy focus.

5. Hotjar

Hotjar is a behavior analytics tool that provides heatmaps, session recordings, and feedback tools. It helps website owners visualize how users interact with their site by showing where they click, scroll, and spend time. It also allows users to collect feedback through polls and surveys.

Why it’s popular: Visual tools for understanding user behavior and optimizing website design.

6. Crazy Egg

Crazy Egg offers heatmaps, scroll maps, and A/B testing to help website owners understand how visitors interact with their site. It provides a clear visual representation of what parts of a webpage users engage with most, which helps optimize design and layout.

Why it’s popular: User-friendly visual insights and A/B testing capabilities.

7. Mixpanel

Mixpanel is a product analytics tool focused on tracking user interactions and behaviors within web and mobile apps. It’s great for tracking specific events, user flows, and cohort analysis. Mixpanel is used for understanding how users engage with a product and can track retention and engagement over time.

Why it’s popular: Focus on product and user behavior analytics, event tracking.

8. Clicky

Clicky is a real-time web analytics tool that tracks individual visitors, page views, heatmaps, and goal completions. It offers features like uptime monitoring and on-site analytics, with the ability to drill down into individual user sessions.

Why it’s popular: Real-time tracking and easy-to-understand old-school interface.

9. Plausible Analytics

Plausible is a lightweight, open-source web analytics tool designed for simplicity and privacy. It doesn’t use cookies and is compliant with privacy regulations like GDPR. Plausible focuses on core metrics like page views, referral sources, and top pages.

Why it’s popular: Privacy-first, simple setup, and minimal tracking footprint.

10. Heap

Heap is a product analytics platform that automatically captures every user interaction on a website or app without needing manual event tracking. It allows businesses to analyze user behavior retroactively and build custom reports on the fly.

Why it’s popular: Automatic tracking of user interactions, no manual tagging required.


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Comments

6 responses to “Website analytics options”

  1. Sam Goldberg Avatar
    Sam Goldberg

    Hey Mary Jane Duford, really enjoying the dive into analytics tools here. I’ve been a Google Analytics user for ages, but I’m curious about Fathom Analytics. How does it hold up in terms of privacy compared to GA? Privacy’s a big deal for my clients.

    1. Mary Jane Duford Avatar
      Mary Jane Duford

      I really like Fathom and think the founder did a fantastic job with balancing user privacy with analytics for the website owner. I would definitely recommend Fathom if your clients are looking for a more privacy-focused analytics tool.

  2. Alex R. Avatar
    Alex R.

    matomo has been my go-to for a while now, its ability to run on my own servers means i’m in full control of the data without sending everything off to third parties. it’s a bit more work but totally worth it for user privacy and data ownership. anyone else running self-hosted analytics?

    1. RAHrah5 Avatar
      RAHrah5

      Same here, self-hosting Matomo for the win. It’s reassuring to know exactly where and how the data is handled.

    2. CHRISK Avatar
      CHRISK

      Do you find the setup process for Matomo challenging? Considering making the switch.

  3. Tara W. Avatar
    Tara W.

    This list is a goldmine, thanks for sharing! As someone just stepping into the realm of website analytics, it’s nice to get an overview of what’s out there besides Google Analytics. Excited to try out Jetpack Stats for my WordPress site. It sounds user-friendly for beginners like me.

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