Easily illustrated heatmaps will accurately show where people are clicking (even if not a link) CrazyEgg (Update
Easily illustrated heatmaps will accurately show where people are clicking (even if not a link) Crazy Egg (updated-Crazy Egg is no longer free now, $9/month, it's relatively cheap. Google Analytics can tell you what links people have clicked on the website, but Crazy Egg will tell you where visitors are on your webpage.
"Heatmaps", which is easy to describe, will accurately show where people are clicking (even if not a link) Crazy Egg(Update-Crazy Egg is no longer free now, $9/month, relatively cheap)
Google Analytics can tell you what links people have clicked on the website, but Crazy Egg will tell you where visitors have clicked on your webpage, no matter whether there is any link there. The visitor's click activity is displayed as a "heat map" [thermal map], for example:
Crazy Egg has several advantages:
(I) Crazy Egg can display events that happen in areas where you cannot click. You will find that visitors often click places that are not links. Maybe you should place a resource link in that place. For example, if you find that people are always clicking on a product image, you may think that they may want to see a large image or learn more about the product. Similarly, they may mistakenly think that a special image is a navigation link.
(Ii) heat maps also tell you which parts of the page attract the attention of most visitors. This is useful to webmasters or administrators who have no experience in web data analysis.
(Iii) If you have multiple links pointing to the same URL on a page, for example, if three links in different locations are directed to the same specific product page, crazy Egg will show which link your visitor prefers to click. This will help you improve the webpage design and make it more user-friendly, but some settings are required to implement this function.
Our suggestions:Install the Crazy Egg tracking code on your most important page [generate a page for revenue and traffic], and install them on pages that you think may have availability problems.