Analytics & Reporting Comparisons
Head-to-head Analytics & Reporting tool comparisons to help you make the right choice for your stack.
GA4 collects the data for free. Two Minute Reports moves that data, plus 30+ other sources, into Google Sheets and Looker Studio on a schedule, starting at $9 a month.
GA4 is free and tracks every website or app on the planet. Usermaven charges from $84 a month to connect ad spend and CRM deals to actual closed revenue for B2B SaaS teams.
One is the default analytics tool for the entire web, the other is an open-source challenger betting on privacy and price. Here is where each one actually wins.
GA4 tells you what happened on your site. Wicked Reports tells you which ad actually earned you a new customer and which ones just recycled your existing buyers.
Both were acquired by Contentsquare, but they still answer different questions: Heap tells you what users did and why it matters statistically, Hotjar shows you the session so you can watch it happen.
Heap tells you what users did across your entire product history, even retroactively. Humblytics tells you which page variant actually made money, tied directly to Stripe.
Heap records every user interaction automatically and lets you analyze it retroactively. Looker Studio does not collect any data itself; it visualizes what other tools, including Heap, have already captured.
Heap records every interaction automatically and lets you define events after the fact. Mixpanel asks you to design your event schema upfront and rewards that discipline with a genuinely generous free tier and session replay included.
These two tools rarely compete for the same budget line. Heap explains what users do inside your product; Northbeam explains which ad channel got them there in the first place.
One records everything automatically and asks you to talk to sales once you outgrow the free tier. The other is open-source, self-hostable, and prices transparently from $2.50 a month.
Heap wants to record every interaction inside your product and negotiate pricing once you outgrow the free tier. Pirsch wants to remove your cookie banner and hand you a $6 invoice with no sales call.
Heap wants to record everything a user does inside your product. Plausible wants to tell you, on a single page and with no cookie banner, where your traffic came from and whether it converted.
One autocaptures every user interaction to answer product questions you have not asked yet. The other turns any data source, including Heap's own export, into governed company-wide dashboards.
One autocaptures everything a user does inside your product. The other closes the loop between marketing touchpoints and revenue that closes in a CRM months later.
One records everything a user does inside your product without any setup. The other measures which ad channels actually drive incremental revenue and lets AI agents act on the answer.
One autocaptures every click and interaction to explain product behavior in depth. The other deliberately does one thing, counting visitors accurately without cookies, on a single clean dashboard.
Two Analytics & Reporting tools that rarely compete for the same budget line. One captures every product interaction automatically, the other turns any dataset into a dashboard analysts can explore by hand.
One autocaptures every interaction inside any digital product. The other is built specifically for Shopify brands trying to fix ROAS numbers that iOS 14 broke.
These two tools solve different problems under the same category label. One autocaptures every click inside your product, the other pipes ad and ecommerce data into Google Sheets and Looker Studio.
One captures everything a user does inside your product with no setup. The other connects ad spend and CRM deal data to prove which campaigns actually closed revenue.
One is a Contentsquare-owned platform built for enterprise product teams with sales-led pricing. The other is a $5-a-month open-source tool combining web and product analytics without cookies.
These two rarely compete for the same budget line. Heap explains what users do inside your product, Wicked Reports explains which ads actually brought them there in the first place.
One shows you where people click and lets you ask them why, free for up to 200,000 sessions a month. The other scores every A/B test by the Stripe revenue it actually produced, and charges from the first day.
Hotjar shows you what visitors do on a page with heatmaps and session replay. Looker Studio is a free dashboard builder that visualizes data you already have in GA4, Search Console, or Ads, with no capture layer of its own.
Hotjar shows you what happened on a page in minutes with heatmaps and replay. Mixpanel tells you precisely which events drove a conversion, retention curve, or drop-off, once you have instrumented it properly.
Hotjar shows what happens on a page with heatmaps and replay from a free, self-serve tier. Northbeam models where ad spend actually drives revenue across channels, built for DTC brands with real media budgets and a demo-required sales process.
Hotjar captures heatmaps and session replay from a single script tag with a generous free tier. OpenPanel is an open-source, event-based analytics platform you can self-host, starting at $2.50/month on its cloud plan.
Hotjar shows you what users do on a page. Pirsch tells you how many visitors showed up and where from, without a cookie banner. Different jobs, different budgets.
Hotjar shows you the session. Plausible shows you the one-page traffic dashboard without a cookie banner. Most teams that need both end up running them side by side.
Hotjar tells you why a visitor bounced off a landing page. Power BI tells your finance team why revenue is down across three regions. They are almost never bought to solve the same problem.
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