The Analytics Platform Built for Content Teams.
Detect outliers and which content drives engagement. No cookies and fully compliant with GDPR, CCPA, and PECR
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Maker
📌
Hey Product Hunt!
I'm launching Pulse, an analytics tool I've built solo to solve my own problems as a blogger of 20+ years.
Beyond the standard metrics offered by traditional web analytics platform, Pulse actually analyzes the content itself to identify outliers and provide actionable insights: "this content performs well for SEO", "this one underperforms for these specific reasons", etc.
I created this tool because existing solutions gave me numbers but not enough context on the "why" behind performance. Pulse is specifically designed for content creators who want actionable data, not just graphs.
If you're a blogger or manage a site with regular content, I'd love your feedback. What's missing from your current analytics tools?
An analytical service like no other! Well done!@hugo_lassiege
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Hakanai user here 👋 I started a month and a half ago. The tool was very easy to set up, no configuration needed to make it work. It catches new pages automatically as soon as they are published. I first used it to improve each blog post individually but there are new high-level blog insights available now "viral VS evergreen article" or "most views VS most read" that are very handy. Well done!
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User of the service for 3 months now.
Was tired of the more complete alternatives with 90% of pages / analytics that are useful for big businesses but useless for a tech blogger like me.
All the data is useful, to the point.
Really love how the insights page recent additions (and reading the comments here I see I'm not the only one).
This hits home—numbers without narrative are just noise. Curious, does Pulse adapt its analysis based on content type (e.g. tutorials vs opinion pieces), or is it a one-size-fits-all model?
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Maker
@shreyans_assistiv Pulse does not detect item type. But it can indicate which content is “permanent”, i.e. has regular traffic, and which content is “temporary”, i.e. performs well over a short period of time. And there is some insights on engagement (reading time, clicks..)
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MyTeslaMate
An analytical service like no other! Well done!@hugo_lassiege
Hakanai user here 👋
I started a month and a half ago. The tool was very easy to set up, no configuration needed to make it work. It catches new pages automatically as soon as they are published. I first used it to improve each blog post individually but there are new high-level blog insights available now "viral VS evergreen article" or "most views VS most read" that are very handy. Well done!
User of the service for 3 months now.
Was tired of the more complete alternatives with 90% of pages / analytics that are useful for big businesses but useless for a tech blogger like me.
All the data is useful, to the point.
Really love how the insights page recent additions (and reading the comments here I see I'm not the only one).
AskCodi
This hits home—numbers without narrative are just noise. Curious, does Pulse adapt its analysis based on content type (e.g. tutorials vs opinion pieces), or is it a one-size-fits-all model?
@shreyans_assistiv Pulse does not detect item type. But it can indicate which content is “permanent”, i.e. has regular traffic, and which content is “temporary”, i.e. performs well over a short period of time. And there is some insights on engagement (reading time, clicks..)