CoNote
CoNoteWeather

When the weather moves your numbers, it’s already on the page.

A heatwave empties your stores; a storm spikes online orders. Weather logs the unusual days in your market — heatwaves, cold snaps, storms, heavy rain or snow — so when a metric jumps, you can rule the sky in or out. Normal weather logs nothing.

Weatherpublished a change
Your timelineToday

Heatwave — 38°C, 7° above the seasonal average

Weather· 06:00

Spring sale — daily budget raised to $450

Google Ads· 10:12

What it watches

What Weather logs.

Only the days that break the pattern — the ones your customers actually felt.

  • Anomalies only — heatwaves, cold snaps, storms, heavy rain or snow
  • Tied to your market, so it’s the weather your customers actually saw
  • Normal days never hit the timeline — no noise to scroll past
  • Lined up against your sales, traffic, and campaigns, automatically

On the timeline

What lands on your timeline.

The unusual day, on the page — so a strange number has an obvious suspect.

Sunday, July 14

  • Heatwave — 38°C, 7° above the seasonal average

    06:00 · Weather

  • Severe thunderstorm warning issued

    18:00 · Weather

Sound familiar?

The day you’ll wish it was written down.

#retailTuesday, 17:30
CK

Clara17:30

Footfall halved today. Did we do something wrong?
MK

Mia17:34

It was 38°C outside — nobody’s shopping in that. But who logged the weather?
CK

Clara17:38

Exactly. By next week nobody will remember it was a heatwave.

The reason evaporates with the heat.

With Weather, the heatwave is already on the timeline — “38°C, 7° above average” — sitting on the exact day footfall halved.

Setup

On in a minute.

  1. 01

    Set your market

    Tell CoNote where your customers are — the region whose weather actually matters.

  2. 02

    Only anomalies count

    CoNote watches for the unusual — heatwaves, storms, heavy rain or snow.

  3. 03

    Strange days log themselves

    When the weather breaks the pattern, it lands on your timeline next to your metrics.

Questions

Weather on the timeline, answered.

Only anomalies — heatwaves, cold snaps, storms, heavy rain or snow. An ordinary day never hits your timeline, so the weather that does show up is the weather worth correlating against.

Your market’s. You set the region your customers are in, and Weather logs the unusual days there — the conditions your audience actually experienced.

Because the sky moves real numbers — footfall, delivery times, online orders. When a metric jumps, having the heatwave or the storm already on the page lets you rule the weather in or out instead of guessing.

Open the logbook.

Free plan, no card. Connect your first source and the timeline fills itself.

Start your logbook