Heatmap Analysis examples & templates
Use these examples to speed up your workflow. Copy the idea, upload your asset, and compare the heatmap against the intent.
Landing page hero: check if eyes hit headline + CTA first Ad creative: test if product is more visible than background Pricing section: confirm price and plan titles are dominant Email banner: ensure brand + message hierarchy is clear Product packaging: validate logo visibility on shelf shot
These examples are meant to be copied and adapted. Replace placeholders with your actual names, campaigns, or file paths, then check the output once in the destination where it will be used. The fastest results come from small edits rather than building from scratch every time.
If you work across multiple channels, keep a couple of “default” templates for common scenarios. That way you can switch between use cases without losing structure or formatting.
Adaptation is the key. If an example feels close but not perfect, change just one variable at a time. This keeps your output stable and prevents accidental formatting issues. When you find a version you like, duplicate it and save it as a personal template so you can reuse it with minimal edits.
These examples are also useful for team collaboration. Share a few of your best templates so others can follow the same structure and avoid inconsistencies across projects.
Adaptation is the key. If an example feels close but not perfect, change just one variable at a time. This keeps your output stable and prevents accidental formatting issues. When you find a version you like, duplicate it and save it as a personal template so you can reuse it with minimal edits.
These examples are also useful for team collaboration. Share a few of your best templates so others can follow the same structure and avoid inconsistencies across projects.
Adaptation is the key. If an example feels close but not perfect, change just one variable at a time. This keeps your output stable and prevents accidental formatting issues. When you find a version you like, duplicate it and save it as a personal template so you can reuse it with minimal edits.
These examples are also useful for team collaboration. Share a few of your best templates so others can follow the same structure and avoid inconsistencies across projects.