Skip to content
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
rawr logo short
  • Home
  • About
  • Solutions
    colorized icons 04
    B2B Marketing
    colorized icons 05
    B2C Marketing
    colorized icons 06
    Online Visibility Management
  • Industries
    colorized icons 07
    Healthcare
    colorized icons 08
    Manufacturing
    colorized icons 10
    Home Services
    colorized icons 09
    Professional Services (B2B)
    colorized icons 11
    Retail
  • Services
    colorized icons 01
    Brand Strategy
    • Graphic Design
    • Corporate Brand Identity
    • Sales Enablement
    • Editorial Calendar Management
    colorized icons 02
    Website Design
    • WordPress Website Development
    • Conversion Rate Optimization
    • eCommerce Development
    • Content Strategy & Copywriting
    colorized icons 03
    Digital Marketing
    • Digital Marketing Strategy
    • Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
    • Pay-Per-Click (PPC) Management
    • Content Marketing & Digital PR
    • Account Based Marketing (B2B)
    • Marketing Automation
    • Social Media Management
  • Blog
  • Contact
Let's Talk

Microsoft Clarity, the company’s tool for visualizing user experience, is out of beta

Clarity stats 467x600 2
  • October 28, 2020
  • General
  • Agency
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Microsoft Clarity, a free product to help site owners better understand visitor behavior so that they can improve their user experiences, is out of beta and now generally available, the company announced Wednesday. First launched as a closed beta in 2018, Microsoft Clarity provides site owners with visual heatmaps that illustrate user engagement, individual session replays, a dashboard to help them get an overall understanding of user interactions and filters to drill down on various types of interactions.

The dashboard. The Microsoft Clarity dashboard provides an overview of how many users were clicking on non-existent links, the number of users that scrolled up and down on a page in search of something they couldn’t easily locate, how much time the average user spends navigating your site and so on. 

The Microsoft Clarity dashboard. Image: Microsoft.

Two types of heatmaps: clickmaps and scrollmaps. Clickmaps can help point out which content on your page visitors are interacting with the most. Conversely, scrollmaps can tell you whether visitors are actually seeing the content you want them to see. 

An example of a clickmap within Microsoft Clarity. Areas indicated in red have the highest frequency of clicks. Image: Microsoft.

Session playbacks. The ability to view recordings of individual sessions allows site owners and designers to examine user behavior as it occurred. This may also help identify edge cases and inform better site design decisions.

Filtering mechanisms. In addition to the typical filters (timeframe, browser, OS, country, etc.), Microsoft Clarity also uses machine learning to identify “rage clicks,” “dead clicks,” and “excessive clicking” across the dashboard, session recordings and heatmaps. 

“Rage clicks” are when users repeatedly click on a section of the page, presumably because they think there’s a hyperlink there when there actually isn’t. This may help distinguish parts of a page that are counterintuitive for users.

Why we care. While attracting visitors to your site is the primary objective for SEOs, that traffic isn’t going to help you meet business objectives if users can’t find what they’re looking for. Being able to identify which sections of your crucial pages are turning users away and which sections are performing well can help you improve your user experience, which can also lead to more conversions.

For example, using heatmap and scrollmap data to inform your site’s design can help to ensure that your high-value content is front and center for your users. Similarly, “rage click” information can enable you to make more intuitive pages. And, this data can be provided to stakeholders to justify design decisions.

Clarity is designed to have a low impact on your page load times, but you’ll want to test this to ensure that any additional load times aren’t a significant factor for your users.

The post Microsoft Clarity, the company’s tool for visualizing user experience, is out of beta appeared first on Search Engine Land.


Source: IAB

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Recent Blog Posts

9 Hidden Revenue Blockers Every CRO Needs to Eliminate

February 3, 2025

What Is B2B Appointment Setting?

November 29, 2024

Leveraging LinkedIn for Targeted Growth

November 12, 2024

Mastering B2B Prospecting: Key Strategies for Sales Success

November 4, 2024

Maximize Marketing ROI: How Cost per Lead Can Fuel Your Business Growth

June 13, 2024
View More
rawr logo short
Facebook-f Twitter Instagram Linkedin-in
Get In Touch
  • Texas | Arizona | Virginia | Idaho | Illinois
  • (888) 705-0930
  • info@therawragency.com
Send An Email

"*" indicates required fields

Copyright 2025 | The RAWR Agency, LLC. |

Sitemap | Privacy Policy

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.OkNo