Statistics & Log-Based Website Operations Management
What Website Operators Actually Need
For enterprise website operators, statistics are not just about pageviews or colorful charts. What they truly need is a clear, immediate understanding of what is happening on their official website, without jumping between multiple external tools. More importantly, many organizations want to accumulate and retain their own operational data over time rather than relying solely on third-party analytics platforms.
This need becomes even more critical for enterprises operating under strict security policies, internal compliance requirements, or regional data regulations, where the use of external analytics tools may be limited or carefully controlled.
How Traditional CMS Platforms Handle Analytics — and Their Limits
Most CMS platforms rely almost entirely on external analytics tools, leaving enterprises without direct ownership of their website usage data.
| CMS | Availability | Implementation Method | Usability | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adobe Experience Manager | Yes | External analytics integration (Adobe Analytics, GA) | Medium | High cost, separate licenses required |
| Contentful | Yes | External script insertion (GA) | Low | No internal data accumulation |
| Drupal | Yes | Module-based GA integration | Medium | Limited server-level visibility |
| HubSpot CMS Hub | Yes | Built-in HubSpot Analytics | Medium | Strong vendor lock-in |
| Joomla | Partial | Plugin-based | Low | Accuracy and scalability issues |
| Sanity | Yes | External analytics integration | Low | Lacks operator-centric dashboards |
| Shopify Plus | Yes | GA + commerce analytics | Medium | Limited for corporate site analysis |
| Squarespace | Yes | Built-in stats + GA | Medium | No access to raw logs |
| Webflow | Yes | GA integration | Low | No server-side data ownership |
| WordPress VIP | Yes | GA + plugins | Medium | Difficult to maintain data consistency |
| Wix | Yes | Built-in analytics | Medium | Not suitable for enterprise-grade analysis |
What Makes Corpis Different
Corpis supports Google Analytics integration, but it does not depend on it.
In addition to GA, Corpis directly collects access logs through the server layer, capturing visit data, page access patterns, and traffic flows. These records are stored and accumulated within Corpis’s own database, turning website activity into a long-term corporate data asset.
Operators can review today’s visitors, pageviews, 7-day traffic trends, and top-performing content directly from the integrated dashboard. Because the data is internally managed, it remains stable regardless of changes to third-party analytics policies or pricing models.
Over time, this data can be analyzed by content type such as IR, ESG, recruitment, or newsroom content, providing a foundation for deeper operational insights.
Business Impact of Corpis Statistics & Log Management
By adopting Corpis, enterprises move away from analytics dependency toward data ownership. Website activity data becomes an internal asset that supports executive reporting, operational decision-making, and long-term strategy planning. The system also enables granular access control, allowing organizations to manage who can view or analyze data across regions, departments, or subsidiaries.
This architecture makes Corpis particularly suitable for global enterprises and organizations with strict governance or security standards.
Feedback from Real Operational Teams
- Digital Strategy Team, Enterprise Group A “Having our own server-based metrics alongside GA has clarified our internal reporting standards.”
- IR Team, Enterprise B “We can now compare IR content performance over time without relying on external dashboards.”
- IT Operations Team, Enterprise C “Corpis reduced our dependency on third-party analytics while still giving us all the insights we need.”