Every WordPress LMS keeps a tidy record of what happens inside its own system — enrolments, completions, quiz scores. The problem is that none of them speak to each other. LearnDash data looks nothing like Tutor LMS data, which looks nothing like LifterLMS. The moment you want to ask a question that crosses the boundary, or one that goes deeper than a completion percentage, you are exporting CSVs and squinting at a spreadsheet on a Friday afternoon.
And if you ever switch platforms, all of that history just walks out the door with the old plugin. Years of learner data, gone, because the new LMS has never heard of the old one. If you are trying to decide between two platforms in the first place, there is no neutral ground to compare them on. And if you look after several client sites running different platforms, you are logging into a different dashboard for every one of them, none of which agree on what a number even means.
This is the problem I kept running into, so I built a tool that sits above the LMS instead of inside it. Geitoq reads from LearnDash, LifterLMS, Tutor LMS, and LearnPress, then gives you one reporting interface that looks the same no matter what is running underneath. It keeps its own activity tables, so your reporting history belongs to you rather than to whichever plugin happened to record it. You get the deeper view too: cohort comparison across intakes of the same course, quiz analysis that tells you which questions people are failing and not just the final score, alerts for learners who have gone quiet before they finish, and a scheduled email digest so the numbers come to you instead of you going to find them.
The name is a Scandinavian word for goat. Goats go anywhere, over any terrain, and they are not fussy about the ground under their feet. That is the whole idea.
Geitoq is not vaporware. It is running in production right now as the reporting layer for a multi-platform training site, which is the best testing it could get. The public release, though, is not ready, and I would rather ship it slowly and get it right than ship it on a date.
So there is nothing to download yet. When there is, it will live on GitHub at https://github.com/thisismyurl/geitoq, and this page will point you straight at it.
Check back. The goat is still finding its footing.