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Blog of Simple Analytics

The EU wants to kill cookie banners Google is tracking you (even when you use DuckDuckGo) German court rules Meta’s tracking tech violates GDPR Closing the data gap - Simple Analytics x Usercentrics The EU-US data deal may be dead in the water You are missing 20% of your website data with GA4 How a reverse trial will push Simple Analytics to the next level Google will start tracking all your devices (WTF?) Big Tech Fails EU’s Digital Services Act: Only Wikipedia Passes the Test Meta fined $102 million by the Irish Data Protection Commission Europeans spend 575 Million hours per year clicking cookie banners The most interesting GDPR fines GDPR and fines: all there is to know Google loses key antitrust case Web Analytics for Crypto Companies Google pulls Uno Reverse card: Rolls back decision to kill third-party cookies Privacy Monthly July 2024 Privacy Perspectives June 2024 Privacy Monthly June APRA fumbles targeted advertising Privacy Monthly May Meta loses key privacy battle Google delays cookie phase-out once again Privacy Monthly April 2024 Web Analytics and Consent Cookies 101 Privacy Monthly March 2024 German authority cracks down on cookie banners Google Tag Manager vs Google Analytics Google search alternative Data retention in Google Analytics Guide to Google Analytics and Cookie consent What are Google Analytics' identifiers? How to export data from Google Analytics Privacy Monthly February 2024 The Criteo case: a big deal for Big Tech Privacy Monthy January 2024 What the Digital Markets Act means for privacy Google Settles in $5B Incognito Mode Lawsuit Legal troubles for Adobe Analytics Web analytics for nonprofits HIPAA and mental health Why Meta subscriptions are under attack, and why it matters for privacy Privacy Monthly: December Simple Analytics AI Host analytics on Cloudflare Zaraz Add Google Analytics to Convertkit Google Analytics Pricing - Paid vs Free Road to 1 Million ARR - October update CCPA and Data Protection: all there is to know Analytics without a cookie banner Enterprise Analytics Privacy Monthly: November 2023 Delete Act: all you need to know Mobile App Tracking Under Fire The road to 1 Million ARR - September Update Privacy Monthly: October 2023 HIPAA violations First challenge to the EU-US data transfer framework Direct Marketing under GDPR Road to 1 million ARR - August Update CCPA vs CPRA: what is new? Privacy Monthly: September 2023 A/B Testing with Simple Analytics Dobbs v. Jackson ruling is a privacy mess Privacy Monthly: August 2023 What are your rights under the CCPA? When does the CCPA apply? How does the HIPAA compare to the CCPA and GDPR? Why Meta is in a world of trouble CJEU: cookie-based analytics collects sensitive data Road to 1 million ARR - July update All about the new Data Transfer Framework Road to 1 Million ARR - June update What is PHI under HIPAA? Sweden declares Google Analytics illegal Searching for GA4 Alternatives? Top 10 Reliable Options for Google Analyticss Ultimate HIPAA Compliance Checklist: Essential Steps for Healthcare Providers Privacy Monthly: June 2023 More troubles for Google Analytics The path to 1M ARR - May Update Data Processing Agreements Minimal Product Analytics Facebook data transfers declared illegal Is Google Analytics CCPA-compliant? Help us with your input Cookie banners: How to stay GDPR compliant? GDPR Compliance Checklist Privacy Monthly: May 2023 Simple Analytics: Privacy-first website analytics Improve your e-commerce performance with analytics European Facebook blackout is closer than we think Know your website’s Carbon Emissions - and how to reduce it The path to 1M ARR - April 2023 How to add video tracking using Google Tag Manager? How to track form submissions using Google Tag Manager? Why is my Simple Analytics data different from Google Analytics? Debug Simple Analytics script How to Import Google Analytics Data to Simple Analytics
Web analytics for publishers
Iron Brands · 2024-08-07 · via Blog of Simple Analytics

For more than a decade now Google Analytics has been the go-to web analytics services for the Internet. But the winds are changing. Regulators across the world are getting serious about user privacy and restricting the use of cookies and other trackers.

Publishers that rely on traditional, cookie-based solutions are starting to see gaps in their data and increasingly turn to cookieless solutions as an addition or a supplement to their web analytics provider.

TL;DR

  • Publishers using Google Analytics need a cookiebanner
  • More and more people decline cookies
  • This leaves a traffic data gap
  • Cookieless analytics solutions like Simple Analytics run "in front of" the cookiebanner
  • Simple Analytics fixes your data traffic gap
  • Combining Google Analytics with Simple Analytics give you a 360 degrees view
  • Two analytics solutions sounds daunting? It isn't since Simple Analytics is intuitive and easy to implement.

Here is a detailed breakdown why reliance on cookies can be a liability and how a cookieless solution can fix that. Let’s dive in!

  1. Cookies: the good, the bad and the ugly
  2. Addressing the data gap
  3. Adapting to a cookieless future
  4. Going cookieless with Simple Analytics
    1. More privacy, less cookie banners
    2. An intuitive UI
    3. Easy integration
    4. You own your data
    5. Teamwork made easy
    6. We value your trust
    7. Compliance made easy
    8. Try it out!

The UK Government chose Simple AnalyticsJoin them

Cookies: the good, the bad and the ugly

The pros of cookies are well known to marketers and publishers by now. Cookies allow for accurate measurement of key web analytics metrics such as page views and unique visitors- at least in theory. On the other hand, cookies raise severe privacy concerns by harvesting user data. Things only get worse when personal information is used for retargeting.

Compliance requirements are problematic as well. Many countries around the world require cookie consent. Internet users are increasingly concerned with data privacy and often reject cookies or use ad blockers. This results in high rates of cookie rejection.

When half your user base rejects or blocks cookies, some trends in the data will be very difficult or outright impossible to spot. Cookie opt-out creates a massive data gap for traditional web analytics.

Addressing the data gap

  1. The simplest way to close the data gap is ignoring the law. You just write cookies in the browser no matter what the users and the law say (please don't actually do this).

This is a terrible idea for many reasons. This strategy is not only unethical but also a surefire way for organizations to get in trouble with privacy watchdogs. The EU even has an official cookie scanning tool, and its logs are easily used as proof in legal procedures.

  1. A second way to address the data gap is putting up a cookie wall: a publisher tells website visitors that they can only access an article after consenting to cookies. In other words, visitors can either pay with their money, pay with their data, or scram.

This strategy is not without drawbacks. Cookie walls are something of a legal gray area under the EU GDPR. Legal issues aside, a take-it-or-leave-it proposition can leave a sore taste in the user’s mouth and undermine trust in a publisher.

None of these options is really attractive. But there is a different path: publishers can adapt to the new regulatory requirements and ditch cookies- or at least, lessen their reliance on cookie-based analytics.

Adapting to a cookieless future

An increasing number of businesses rely on cookieless solutions. These tools come with pros and cons: avoiding cookies and other identifiers is a privacy-friendly approach but sacrifices some accuracy- at least on paper.

But in practice, the data gap for cookie banners is huge and getting bigger by the day. When rejection rates for cookies are high, having less fine-grained data for the entire user base enables better measurements than collecting detailed data for a portion of the user base only.

The choice between traditional and cookieless analytics is not black-and-white, either. Some businesses successfully use cookieless tools as a complement to cookie-based services such as Google Analytics and Adobe Analytics. This combination gives them the best of both worlds- they have fine-grained data from cookies along with 360 degrees vision on their user base.

Identifying trends is easier when the data at your disposal is both fine-grained and comprehensive. But because of cookie banners, you cannot have fine-grained data for the entire user base. The best you can do is collect fine grained data from users who accept cookies and more high-level data from the rest. This allows marketers to spot possible trends across two complementary data sets and opens the door to very powerful insight.

Can you spot the difference between the dashboards?

Going cookieless with Simple Analytics

Relying on two web analytics tools at the same time sounds daunting. But things don't have to be difficul. Simple Analytics is built with this scenario in mind. Simple Analytics isn’t just cookieless and privacy-friendly: it is a powerful, intuitive product that new users can learn quickly and integrate seamlessly with other tools.

We at Simple Analytics ditched cookies entirely. Our customers can use our service without having to display a cookie banner, or combine Simple Analytics with a traditional web analytics tool to mitigate the data loss from cookie opt-outs.

But we do more than just ditch cookies: we don’t collect any personal data at all-period. We do not track users based on IP, generate device fingerprints, or invade on the user’s privacy in any way.

Simple Analytics doesn’t exploit shady workarounds to track users. We offer true privacy instead. It’s as simple as that.

An intuitive UI

We designed our software to be as intuitive as possible for new users. All of the metrics you need fit in a clear, user-friendly dashboard that isn’t cluttered with useless options. We make web analytics simple- it’s in our name after all.

Easy integration

We made sure that Simple Analytics can be integrated with other software with no friction. You can import your Google Analytics data and use our plug-in library for integration with common services like Google Tag Manager, Google Looker Studio, WordPress, CloudFlare, and more. If we don’t have the right plug-in, the Simple Analytics API allows you to simply export raw and aggregated data.

You own your data

You own and control your Simple Analytics data. We do not use your data for any purpose, do not sell it to anyone, and do not store it if you leave Simple Analytics. You can export it at any time, and it is yours to keep if you stop using the service. We have absolutely no claim over it- full stop.

Teamwork made easy

Simple Analytics makes it easy to share the data with your team. You can forward reports to your team or grant them direct access to the data with team roles like Admin, Finance, or Developer. All these features can be managed seamlessly through your account with only a few clicks.

We value your trust

We honor our customers’ trust. We work non-stop to address any problems they might have and offer Enterprise-level customers full video support for any issue they might experience with Simple Analytics.

We also offer a Service level agreement where we commit to reliably providing a high quality service and ensuring the integrity and availability of customer data.

Compliance made easy

Not collecting personal data is a radical data minimization strategy that *eases the compliance burden on our customers. If you stop collecting personal data, you no longer need to worry about the GDPR, the CCPA, and other privacy legislations.

Additionally, Simple Analytics comes with extensive legal documentation and legal & compliance support for Enterprise customers.

Try it out!

If you are looking to ditch cookies or supplement a cookie-based solution, feel free to give Simple Analytics a try.

Additionally, if you want me to personally walk you through, schedule a meeting using my calendar link. I'm happy to help!