I've used Google Analytics for a while now, and it's pretty good for a high level view. But when I want to dig into the numbers a bit more, everything gets kind of vague. I also don't like that it takes so long to update. Are there any better options?
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Better is relative to what you are looking for. Google Analytics is pretty feature rich but there are a lot of alternatives. I would break them down into the following buckets with an example of each:
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...to cite Avinash Kaushik. Whenever it comes to questions like your one taking a look at Occam's Razor, the blog of Analytics legend Avinash Kaushik (currently @Google) is really helpfull. There is an older but still good article you might benefit (even if you accepted an answer): Web Analytics Tools Comparison: A Recommendation Avinash lists some questions "10 Questions to ask Vendors" or "Three Questions to ask Yourself" that get you even more ideas. |
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Another good service would be reinvigorate (reinvigorate.net). They used to have a free plan available, but since they were bought by Webtrends a couple of days ago the free plan disappeared. Their tracking is awesome though and it's not as expensive as other paid services. |
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10 Promising Free Web Analytics Tools
from |
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www.mixpanel.com is free for low volume. If you put their badge on your site, you get the $50 plan free |
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Piwik: Open source real time analytics. I don't use this, but I have a friend who does and he really likes it. It does look pretty nice and with something like this you can do all sorts of other things with the data (such as your own real time stats on the website). Also, here is a list of alternatives. It has log file analyzers, like Analog or AWStats, remote services, like stat24 and Yahoo Analytics, and self hosted, like Open Web Analytics and FireStats. |
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Google's Urchin is available for purchase, and might be useful because of the log file based nature (no problem if the client has javascript disabled, or the site is entirely internal with no provision for accessing the google servers, etc), but whether it is worth the cost compared to Analytics is up to you (there is a 30 day demo available). |
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I use awstats and munin. They are both on my server and hence avoid issues with privacy problems that outside solutions can bring. |
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Clicky sets itself apart from Google Analytics in some very intriguing ways.
These are just a few highlights - it is a very nice tool! It's only free for a single site, but very affordable for to add more. |
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Some folks like http://haveamint.com/ too. |
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You missed the #1 alternative: mint analytics haveamint.com Most of the aftermarket tools available for iOS, for example, support GA or Mint |
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There are anothers, but everyone has its limitations. i remember xiti from http://www.atinternet.com/ omniture from adobe, and there are some open source solutions that will work if you don't have a very large site like piwik.org Someones do something better than others, but in my experience google analytics outperforms the other in price/cost, because it's almost free (you have to have a linked adword account with a expenditure of at least 1 euro a day to remove some limits) and you can do almost anything that you wan't to do with an analytics tool. The only thing that bugs me in google analytics it's the 50.000 thousand limit in every dimension, that it's that if you have more than 50.000 diferent pages in your site, just the first 50.000 are going to be tracked with the page name, and all the others are going to be in a "(other)" clause. |
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