How do I log into Hotjar?
Sign in with Google using Google Single Sign-On!
Hotjar now allows users who signed up to Hotjar with a Gmail account to sign in with Google Single Sign-On (SSO). This means you have one less username and password to remember! Go to the login page and click the Sign In With Google button to sign in.
How can I use Hotjar?
To create a website heatmap, you can use a heatmap tool or software like Hotjar. Sign up for Hotjar, add the Hotjar tracking code (a JavaScript snippet) to your website, then navigate to the Hotjar Dashboard. Click 'Add Heatmap', select the page you wish to target, then click 'Create Heatmap'.
What is Hotjar?
Hotjar is a powerful tool that reveals the online behavior and voice of your users. By combining both Analysis and Feedback tools, Hotjar gives you the 'big picture' of how to improve your site's user experience and performance/conversion rates.
How do you create a Hotjar account?
Implementing via Google Tag Manager
- Step 1: Go to your Google Tag Manager container and click Add a new tag.
- Step 2: Click the tag icon & select Hotjar Tracking Code from the list.
- Step 3: Enter your Hotjar Site ID into the text field. ...
- Step 4: Setup a trigger to your Hotjar tag. ...
- Step 5: Save and publish your changes.
Who uses Hotjar com?
Create a list of 621,000 Hotjar websites with company and contact details.
...
Websites using Hotjar.
Website |
Traffic |
hpanel.hostinger.com |
0.6% 0.6% |
pexels.com |
0.6% 0.6% |
elementor.com |
0.4% 0.4% |
varzesh3.com |
0.4% 0.4% |
6 more rows
Is Hotjar a safe website?
Your site and user data are safe with Hotjar. There are a number of steps we take to ensure you are the only person who can access your site data and that your users' privacy is respected.
Why is Hotjar on my website data?
Hotjar is designed to help make websites easier to use, and the data we track about your website visit (for example, what and where you click) is only used for this purpose. We don't follow you around the Internet: website owners who use Hotjar cannot see or find out about your activity on sites they don't own.