Loading...
Answers
MenuCan I recreate the Kissmetric error identification analysis feature with a WordPress plugin?
I like what Kissmetrics is doing on their landing page. It asks you to submit your website URL and identifies errors before your actual opt-in. How can I create this myself for my website?
Answers
To read data from another URL and analyze it is possible to create as a WordPress plugin. However, very little of the actual code in the plugin would be WordPress-related.
Does the Kissmetrics site ACTUALLY analyze your site? Or is it "identifying improvement opportunities" and requesting you email for more info? (Neil Patel does this; if you enter the same URL twice, you'll get different results from his "analysis".)
So the short answer is yes. Medium answer is that it's not going to have much to do with WordPress. Long answer is that the function you're looking to mimic might actually just be marketing smoke and mirrors.
If you'd like to get a full technical breakdown of how the plugin can be built, I'd be happy to work through it with you. Request a call and we'll set it up.
Good luck!
I believe that you should not jump straight away. You must learn about the thing before creating a plugin.
KISSmetrics is a powerful web analytics tool that delivers key insights and user interaction on your website. It defines a clear picture of users’ activities on your website and collects acquisition data of every visitor. KISSmetrics helps in improving sales by knowing cart-abandoned products. By default, KISSmetrics sets two events for you − visited site and search engine hit.
You can read more here: https://www.tutorialspoint.com/web_analytics/web_analytics_kissmetrics.htm
Besides if you do have any questions give me a call: https://clarity.fm/joy-brotonath
Yes, you can create a Kissmetrics error identification and analysis feature using a WordPress plugin. This would involve integrating Kissmetrics’ analytics capabilities into a custom plugin or enhancing an existing plugin to analyze and report errors in your WordPress site.
Steps to Create the Feature
1. Understand Kissmetrics API
Review the Kissmetrics API documentation to understand how to integrate with their service. The API can be used to track user interactions, events, and errors.
2. Plan the Plugin’s Functionality
Decide the scope of your plugin:
• Identify types of errors to track (e.g., JavaScript errors, 404 pages, server errors).
• Define how error data will be sent to Kissmetrics (e.g., custom events or properties).
• Create an admin dashboard in WordPress to display and analyze the error data.
3. Create a Custom WordPress Plugin
• Set up a basic plugin structure:
my-kissmetrics-plugin/
├── my-kissmetrics-plugin.php
├── includes/
├── admin/
└── assets/
• Register scripts for capturing errors and interacting with Kissmetrics.
• Use hooks and filters to track errors like 404s or PHP warnings.
4. Error Tracking and Reporting
• Add JavaScript code to capture frontend errors:
window.onerror = function(message, source, lineno, colno, error) {
const errorData = {
message,
source,
lineno,
colno,
error: error ? error.stack : null
};
// Send error data to Kissmetrics
_kmq.push(['record', 'Error Occurred', errorData]);
};
• Use WordPress hooks like template_redirect or wp_die_handler to track backend errors.
5. Integrate with Kissmetrics
Add the Kissmetrics tracking code to your plugin and ensure it’s initialized correctly:
function my_kissmetrics_tracking_code() {
?>
<script type="text/javascript">
var _kmq = _kmq || [];
var _kmk = '<YOUR_KISSMETRICS_API_KEY>';
(function(d, t) {
var g = d.createElement(t), s = d.getElementsByTagName(t)[0];
g.async = true;
g.src = '//i.kissmetrics.io/i.js';
s.parentNode.insertBefore(g, s);
})(document, 'script');
</script>
<?php
}
add_action('wp_head', 'my_kissmetrics_tracking_code');
6. Display Error Analytics in WordPress Admin
Use the Kissmetrics API to fetch error data and display it in a user-friendly format on your WordPress admin dashboard.
7. Test and Optimize
• Test the plugin thoroughly to ensure it captures all relevant errors.
• Optimize the plugin for performance and compatibility with other WordPress plugins and themes.
Considerations
• Ensure compliance with privacy laws like GDPR when tracking user data.
• Use Kissmetrics API sparingly to avoid rate limits.
• If you’re not a developer, consider hiring a professional to build this plugin.
Let me know if you’d like help with any specific part of the process!
Related Questions
-
How can I make a small, profitable business on Wordpress?
It sounds like you have plenty of skills to get started now. There's no need to keep re-training in different areas when you have experience to get started today. My suggestion would be to pick a niche and try and become the go-to guy in that particular niche. Let's say, for example, you are interested in men's fashion. You have experience in creating Wordpress ecommerce sites. You could call up maybe 10-15 of the local businesses in that niche in your local city/state and offer to make their website and get them in on a set-up fee and then a monthly maintenance retainer. This approach would be lower stress (because it's something you're interested in) and also because you could create a methodical framework that you could apply to other businesses in that niche. That's just one idea. Second idea - create a course on WooCommerce development and put it on Udemy (or Coursera etc). Note down 10 of the biggest obstacles you've had to overcome when building sites for friends and family and then note down 10 of the most important considerations people should consider before people get started. Now you've got 20 video lessons for your course. Charge for the course on Udemy or use it as a marketing tool to get more b2b development work. Idea 3: Go make money on freelancer.com, peopleperhour etc. Perhaps you've tried this already? Skills like yours are in demand on those platforms. Idea 4: Take the things I noted in the second idea above, and turn it into a handbook. Sell that book via Amazon. Idea 5: Go on Tweetdeck. Create a column that searches for people who are using keywords like "Wordpress woocommerce issue" "Wordpress woocommerce help" "WordPress woocommerce problem". Give them your clairty.fm link and tell them you'd be happy to have 5 minute discussion to see if you could help them resolve their problem. Idea 6: Find 10 major theme development companies. Sign up to their help or support forums. Do a similar thing to what's noted above on Twitter and offer to have a quick call via clarity.fm to see if you could help. Idea 7: Go down the route of finding existing Wordpress/Woocommerce blogs. Write posts for them about specific WooCommerce issues, problem solving or project management tips. Do this with the aim of improving your inbound consulting gigs. Idea 8: Do the exact opposite of whatever those friends are telling you. Idea 9: With your skills you could easily start a dropshipping company. I won't go into all the details here but just start looking at sites like Clickbank or Product Hunt to get a feel for something you're interested in. Build your site and start dropshipping products. https://www.woothemes.com/2015/06/dropshipping-beginners-guide/ Wordpress consulting alone, yeah it's probably quite competitive, but that doesn't mean there aren't plenty of opportunities for revenue. I think you will be even more motivated, successful and less stressed if you pick a niche industry, product or service to focus on. Enjoy it!SC
-
I want to build a expert marketplace directory listing website, which wordpress theme I should use?
Checkout is a high-quality WordPress theme by Array built for marketplaces of any kind. https://arraythemes.com/themes/checkout-wordpress-theme/ Let me know if you have any questions about implementation, and I'd be happy to setup a call.LL
-
Is it possible in woocommerce to display Shipping methods first on the checkout page?
Yes. https://docs.woothemes.com/document/configuring-woocommerce-settings/SN
-
How can I create a searchable large (3 million record) searchable database in WordPress?
Well first off I wouldn't recommend trying to power your client's database with the standard WordPress database instance. They can use WordPress for the website all they like. But with millions of records like that, you really don't want to move those data in with WordPress. For that matter, you're probably gonna want a dedicated database server to answer those questions, if the client doesn't already have one. You might also need to investigate something like Elastic Search, depending on what your search requirements are and what sort of database they are using (pay close attention to whether or not it provides full text search ability). Beyond that, and somewhat obviously, you're also gonna want SSL on the website and to make sure you're up to date on federal and state privacy requirements for data like this, as well as best practices for securely transferring data over the web (port configuration, ssh keys, etc). The privacy concerns would raise a flag for me. If those data have anything personally identifiable in them - which they very probably do - then you're really gonna want to make sure you do your research on security of personally identifiable information. Government specific privacy /security /auditability requirements may also apply, so double check that too.EV
-
What Wordpress Plugins is the best for creating a Multi-Level Affiliate Marketing program?
There is a lot of points in your question which unless someone has the exact same setup as you - I don't think you will get the answers you are looking for. I believe you should limit it by asking yourself: What is the ONE thing the MLM plugin I am looking for can do so that it achieves the maximum amount of result to my business by using it? IMHO - it would be the ability to set commissions for the products you sell and award commissions to those affiliates that actually earn you sales. All other features, while nice, are ancillary features that from the perspective of the affiliate - don't really need in order to be successful. In that regard - I would suggest https://affiliatewp.com/. When it comes to running affiliate programs on WP sites, it wins out as the best in my experience. Hope this helps! Glad to assist any further if you need help.TB
the startups.com platform
Copyright © 2025 Startups.com. All rights reserved.