| name | assessing-heatmaps |
| description | Assesses what a page's heatmap is telling you and recommends concrete changes. Pulls click / rageclick / scroll-depth data for a URL, names the hot elements by cross-referencing autocapture events on the same page, and can create a saved heatmap the user opens in PostHog, then summarizes the behavior and proposes improvements.
TRIGGER when: user asks what a heatmap shows, why people aren't clicking something, where users rage-click, how far they scroll, what to change on a page based on heatmap/click data, or to 'analyze/assess/review the heatmap' for a URL.
DO NOT TRIGGER when: the user only wants to create a saved heatmap screenshot with no analysis (use heatmaps-saved-create directly), or is asking about session replay in general (use investigating-replay). |
Assessing heatmaps
A heatmap answers "where do people interact with this page?" — clicks, rage clicks, mouse movement, and how
far down they scroll. The data is pure geometry: pointer_relative_x (0..1 across the viewport), pointer_y
(absolute pixels down the page), and a count per spot. It does not know what was clicked. Turning
"lots of clicks at (0.5, 220)" into "lots of clicks on the Pricing nav link" is the whole job, and it comes
from cross-referencing autocapture on the same URL.
Core principle: coordinates + meaning
You can't see the page — there is no screenshot in your context. A good assessment fuses two sources and
leans on autocapture to supply the layout/identity you can't see:
- Heatmap data — where interactions land and how far people scroll (
heatmaps-list).
- Autocapture — what element sits under the hot spots, by element text / selector on the same page. This
is what turns coordinates into meaning; without it you only have dots.
When the user wants to see the heatmap, create a saved heatmap (Step 4) — that renders the page with the
data overlaid for them to open in PostHog. You reason from the data; they look at the picture.
The flow
Step 1: Pin the page and window
You need an exact url_exact (one page) or a url_pattern (regex, to aggregate across query strings). Confirm
the URL with the user if ambiguous. Default to the last 7 days; widen to 30 if volume is low. Heatmap data is
retained for 90 days.
Step 2: Pull the data
Call heatmaps-list once per signal you care about (or query the heatmaps table directly via SQL — see the
querying-posthog-data skill, models-heatmaps):
type: "click" — the primary "what draws attention" map.
type: "rageclick" — repeated frustrated clicks. The single strongest "something is broken or
misleading" signal. Any meaningful rageclick cluster deserves a callout.
type: "scrolldepth" — how far people get. Use it to find the fold and spot CTAs that sit below where most
people ever scroll.
Use aggregation: "unique_visitors" when you care about how many people (not how many clicks); total_count
exaggerates a few heavy clickers.
Step 2b: Above the fold — read the fold summary
For the click types, heatmaps-list returns a fold object alongside results:
pct_below_fold — share of non-fixed interactions that landed below the user's initial viewport (they
had to scroll to reach them). This is one of the highest-value findings: content people actively click that
sits below the fold is a prime candidate to move up.
below_fold_count / total_count — the raw counts behind the percentage (fixed-position elements are
excluded, since they're always on screen).
median_viewport_height — the typical fold line in CSS pixels, to recommend against.
Report it concretely, e.g. "the fold is ~600px for most visitors, yet 35% of clicks land below it, so users
scroll before interacting — that content is a candidate for the first screen." Segment by device with
viewport_width_min/viewport_width_max (desktop and mobile have very different folds) and read fold per
band rather than blending them.
Need a distribution rather than a single percentage (e.g. clicks bucketed by how far below the fold)? Drop to
SQL on the raw heatmaps table, which has y and viewport_height in the same scaled units — see the
querying-posthog-data skill, models-heatmaps.
Step 3: Name the hot elements (autocapture overlap)
For each notable cluster, find what's actually there. Query autocapture on the same URL — either via the
exploring-autocapture-events skill or directly:
SELECT properties.$el_text AS text, count() AS clicks
FROM events
WHERE event = '$autocapture'
AND properties.$current_url = 'https://example.com/pricing'
AND timestamp >= now() - INTERVAL 7 DAY
GROUP BY text
ORDER BY clicks DESC
LIMIT 25
elements_chain gives the selector/DOM path when you need to disambiguate two elements with the same text.
Match autocapture's top elements to the heatmap's hot coordinates: clicks concentrated on something that is
not a link or button (plain text, an image, a disabled control) is a classic "users expect this to be
clickable" finding.
Step 4: Give the user a heatmap to look at (optional)
You can't see the page, but the user can. When a visual would help them follow your findings, create a saved
heatmap so they can open the rendered page with the data overlaid in PostHog:
heatmaps-saved-create with the page url (type defaults to screenshot). This enqueues a headless
render — it is asynchronous. Pass widths matching the viewport band you analyzed in Step 2.
- Poll
heatmaps-saved-get (by the returned short_id) until status is completed, then tell the user
it's ready to view in PostHog.
This is for the human's benefit — your own reasoning still comes from the Step 2 data and the Step 3
autocapture identity, not from the picture.
Step 5: Drill into hotspots (when you need the "why")
For a surprising cluster, heatmaps-events returns the individual sessions behind specific points. Hand the
session IDs to the investigating-replay skill to watch what people actually did.
Step 6: Summarize and recommend
Produce a short, concrete report:
- What the heatmap shows — top engaged elements, dead zones, scroll reach, and the above/below-the-fold
click split (e.g. "viewport is ~600px for most visitors, yet 35% of clicks land below it").
- Problems, ranked by signal strength — rage-click clusters first, then clicks on non-interactive
elements, then important CTAs sitting below the scroll cliff, then ignored primary actions.
- Recommendations tied to evidence — move/raise a CTA above the fold, make a clicked-but-dead element a
real link, cut competing elements near a rage-click cluster, etc. Every recommendation should cite the
signal it came from.
Reading the signals
| Signal | Likely meaning | Typical recommendation |
|---|
| Rage clicks on an element | Broken, slow, or looks-clickable-but-isn't | Fix the handler, add feedback, or make it actually interactive |
| Many clicks on non-link text/image | Users expect it to be clickable | Make it a link/button, or remove the affordance |
| Primary CTA gets few clicks | Buried, low-contrast, or out-competed | Raise it, increase contrast, reduce nearby noise |
| Scroll cliff before key content | Content/CTA is below where people stop | Move it up or add a reason to scroll |
| High % of clicks below the fold | Engaged content sits below the initial viewport — users scroll before interacting | Move the most-clicked elements onto the first screen |
| Hot clicks on nav, cold body | Page isn't delivering; people bail to nav | Re-evaluate the page's core content |
Gotchas
- Heatmaps must be opted in (
Team.heatmaps_opt_in). If heatmaps-list returns nothing for a page that
clearly gets traffic, capture may be off or the URL is wrong — check both before concluding "no
engagement".
- Coordinates are scaled by a factor of 16 in storage; the API already returns CSS-pixel
pointer_y and
relative x, so use the API/tool values directly rather than the raw table columns.
- You can't see the screenshot. The saved-heatmap render is for the user to open in PostHog; don't claim
to have looked at the page. Ground every layout claim in autocapture identity + coordinates, not vision.
- Saved-heatmap rendering is async. After
heatmaps-saved-create, poll heatmaps-saved-get until
status is completed before telling the user it's viewable. Only screenshot-type heatmaps render an
image; iframe and recording types do not.
- Mind the viewport. A desktop click map and a mobile one are different pages' worth of behavior — filter
with
viewport_width_min/viewport_width_max rather than blending them.