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  • Six Best Amplitude Alternatives

    10 décembre 2024, par Daniel Crough

    Product analytics is big business. Gone are the days when we could only guess what customers were doing with our products or services. Now, we can track, visualise, and analyse how they interact with them and, with that, constantly improve and optimise. 

    The problem is that many product analytics tools are expensive and complicated — especially for smaller businesses. They’re also packed with functionality more attuned to the needs of massive companies. 

    Amplitude is such a tool. It’s brilliant and it has all the bells and whistles that you’ll probably never need. Fortunately, there are alternatives. In this guide, we’ll explore the best of those alternatives and, along the way, provide the insight you’ll need to select the best analytics tool for your organisation. 

    Amplitude : a brief overview

    To set the stage, it makes sense to understand exactly what Amplitude offers. It’s a real-time data analytics tool for tracking user actions and gaining insight into engagement, retention, and revenue drivers. It helps you analyse that data and find answers to questions about what happened, why it happened, and what to do next.

    However, as good as Amplitude is, it has some significant disadvantages. While it does offer data export functionality, that seems deliberately restricted. It allows data exports for specific events, but it’s not possible to export complete data sets to manipulate or format in another tool. Even pulling it into a CSV file has a 10,000-row limit. There is an API, but not many third-party integration options.

    Getting data in can also be a problem. Amplitude requires manual tags on events that must be tracked for analysis, which can leave holes in the data if every possible subsequent action isn’t tagged. That’s a time-consuming exercise, and it’s made worse because those tags will have to be updated every time the website or app is updated. 

    As good as it is, it can also be overwhelming because it’s stacked with features that can create confusion for novice or inexperienced analysts. It’s also expensive. There is a freemium plan that limits functionality and events. Still, when an organisation wants to upgrade for additional functionality or to analyse more events, the step up to the paid plan is massive.

    Lastly, Amplitude has made some strides towards being a web analytics option, but it lacks some basic functionality that may frustrate people who are trying to see the full picture from web to app.

    Snapshot of Amplitude alternatives

    So, in place of Amplitude, what product analytics tools are available that won’t break the bank and still provide the functionality needed to improve your product ? The good news is that there are literally hundreds of alternatives, and we’ve picked out six of the best.

    1. Matomo – Best privacy-focused web and mobile analytics
    2. Mixpanel – Best for product analytics
    3. Google Analytics – Best free option
    4. Adobe Analytics – Best for predictive analytics
    5. Umami – Best lightweight tool for product analytics
    6. Heap – Best for automatic user data capture

    A more detailed analysis of the Amplitude alternatives

    Now, let’s dive deeper into each of the six Amplitude alternatives. We’ll cover standout features, integrations, pricing, use cases and community critiques. By the end, you’ll know which analytics tool can help optimise website and app performance to grow your business.

    1. Matomo – Best privacy-friendly web and app analytics

    Privacy is a big concern these days, especially for organisations with a presence in the European Union (EU). Unlike other analytics tools, Matomo ensures you comply with privacy laws and regulations, like the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and California’s Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA).

    Matomo helps businesses get the insights they need without compromising user privacy. It’s also one of the few self-hosted tools, ensuring data never has to leave your site.

    Matomo is open-source, which is also rare in this class of tools. That means it’s available for anyone to adapt and customise as they wish. Everything you need to build custom APIs is there.

    Image showing the origin of website traffic.
    The Locations page in Matomo shows the countries, continents, regions, and cities where website traffic originates.

    Its most useful capabilities include visitor logs and session recordings to trace the entire customer journey, spot drop-off points, and fine-tune sales funnels. The platform also comes with heatmaps and A/B testing tools. Heatmaps provide a useful visual representation of your data, while A/B testing allows for more informed, data-driven decisions.

    Despite its range of features, many reviewers laud Matomo’s user interface for its simplicity and user-friendliness. 

    Why Matomo : Matomo is an excellent alternative because it fills in the gaps where Amplitude comes up short, like with cookieless tracking. Also, while Amplitude focuses mainly on behavioural analytics, Matomo offers both behavioural and traditional analytics, which allows more profound insight into your data. Furthermore, Matomo fully complies with the strictest privacy regulations worldwide, including GDPR, LGPD, and HIPAA.

    Standout features include multi-touch attribution, visits log, content engagement, ecommerce, customer segments, event tracking, goal tracking, custom dimensions, custom reports, automated email reports, tag manager, sessions recordings, roll-up reporting that can pull data from multiple websites or mobile apps, Google Analytics importer, Matomo tag manager, comprehensive visitor tracking, heatmaps, and more.

    Integrations with 100+ technologies, including Cloudflare, WordPress, Magento, Google Ads, Drupal, WooCommerce, Vue, SharePoint and Wix.

    Pricing is free for Matomo On-Premise and $23 per month for Matomo Cloud, which comes with a 21-day free trial (no credit card required).

    Strengths

    • Privacy focused
    • Cookieless consent banners
    • 100% accurate, unsampled data
    • Open-source code 
    • Complete data ownership (no sharing with third parties)
    • Self-hosting and cloud-based options
    • Built-in GDPR Manager
    • Custom alerts, white labelling, dashboards and reports

    Community critiques 

    • Premium features are expensive and proprietary
    • Learning curve for non-technical users

    2. Mixpanel – Best for product analytics

    Mixpanel is a dedicated product analytics tool. It tracks and analyses customer interactions with a product across different platforms and helps optimise digital products to improve the user experience. It works with real-time data and can provide answers from customer and revenue data in seconds.

    It also presents data visualisations to show how customers interact with products.

    Screenshot reflecting useful customer trends

    Mixpanel allows you to play around filters and views to reveal and chart some useful customer trends. (Image source)

    Why Mixpanel : One of the strengths of this platform is the ability to test hypotheses. Need to test an ambitious idea ? Mixpanel data can do it with real user analytics. That allows you to make data-driven decisions to find the best path forward.

    Standout features include automatic funnel segment analysis, behavioural segmentation, cohort segmentation, collaboration support, customisable dashboards, data pipelines, filtered data views, SQL queries, warehouse connectors and a wide range of pre-built integrations.

    Integrations available include Appcues, AppsFlyer, AWS, Databox, Figma, Google Cloud, Hotjar, HubSpot, Intercom, Integromat, MailChimp, Microsoft Azure, Segment, Slack, Statsig, VWO, Userpilot, WebEngage, Zapier, ZOH) and dozens of others.

    Pricing starts with a freemium plan valid for up to 20 million events per month. The growth plan is affordable at $25 per month and adds features like no-code data transformations and data pipeline add-ons. The enterprise version runs at a monthly cost of $833 and provides the full suite of features and services and premium support.

    There’s a caveat. Those prices only allow up to 1,000 Monthly Tracked Users (MTUs), calculated based on the number of visitors that perform a qualifying event each month. Beyond that, MTU plans start at $20,000 per year.

    Strengths

    • User behaviour and interaction tracking
    • Unlimited cohort segmentation capabilities
    • Drop-off analysis showing where users get stuck
    • A/B testing capabilities

    Community critiques 

    • Expensive enterprise features
    • Extensive setup and configuration requirements

    3. Google Analytics 4 – Best free web analytics tool

    The first thing to know about Google Analytics 4 is that it’s a web analytics tool. In other words, it tracks sessions, not user behaviours in app environments. It can provide details on how people found your website and how they go there, but it doesn’t offer much detail on how people use your product. 

    There is also an enterprise version, Google Analytics 360, which is not free. We’ve broken down the differences between the two versions elsewhere.

    Image showing audience-related data provided by GA4

    GA4’s audience overview shows visitors, sessions, session lengths, bounce rates, and user engagement data. (Image source)

     

    Why Google Analytics : It’s great for gauging the effectiveness of marketing campaigns, tracking goal completions (purchases, cart additions, etc.) and spotting trends and patterns in user engagement.

    Standout features include built-in automation, customisable conversion goals, data drill-down functionality, detailed web acquisition metrics, media spend ROI calculations and out-of-the-box web analytics reporting.

    Integrations include all major CRM platforms, CallRail, DoubleClick DCM, Facebook, Hootsuite, Marketo, Shopify, VWO, WordPress, Zapier and Zendesk, among many others.

    Pricing is free for the basic version (Google Analytics 4) and scales based on features and data volume. The advanced features (in Google Analytics 360) are pitched at enterprises, and pricing is custom.

    Strengths

    • Free to start
    • Multiple website management
    • Traffic source details
    • Up-to-date traffic data

    Community critiques 

    • Steep learning curve 
    • Data sampling

    4. Adobe Analytics – Best for predictive analytics

    A fully configured Adobe Analytics implementation is the Swiss army knife of analytics tools. It begins with web analytics, adds product analytics, and then wraps it up nicely with predictive analytics.

    Unlike all the Amplitude alternatives here, there’s no free version. Adobe Analytics has a complicated pricing matrix with options like website analytics, marketing analytics, attribution, and predictive analytics. It also has a wide range of customisation options that will appeal to large businesses. But for smaller organisations, it may all be a bit too much.

    Mixpanel allows you to play around filters and views to reveal and chart some useful customer trends. (Image source)

    Screenshot categorising online orders by marketing channel

    Adobe Analytics’ cross-channel attribution ties actions from different channels into a single customer journey. (Image source)

     

    Why Adobe Analytics : For current Adobe customers, this is a logical next step. Either way, Adobe Analytics can combine, evaluate, and analyse data from any part of the customer journey. It analyses that data with predictive intelligence to provide insights to enhance customer experiences.

     

    Standout features include AI-powered prediction analysis, attribution analysis, multi-channel data collection, segmentation and detailed customer journey analytics, product analytics and web analytics.

     

    Integrations are available through the Adobe Experience Cloud Exchange. Adobe Analytics also supports data exchange with brands such as BrightEdge, Branch.io, Google Ads, Hootsuite, Invoca, Salesforce and over 200 other integrations.

     

    Pricing starts at $500 monthly, but prospective customers are encouraged to contact the company for a needs-based quotation.

     

    Strengths

    • Drag-and-drop interface
    • Flexible segmentation 
    • Easy-to-create conversion funnels
    • Threshold-based alerts and notifications

    Community critiques 

    • No free version
    • Lack of technical support
    • Steep learning curve

    5. Umami – Best lightweight tool for web analytics

    The second of our open-source analytics solutions is Umami, a favourite in the software development community. Like Matomo, it’s a powerful and privacy-focused alternative that offers complete data control and respects user privacy. It’s also available as a cloud-based freemium plan or as a self-hosted solution.

     

    Image showing current user traffic and hourly traffic going back 24 hours

    Umami’s dashboard reveals the busiest times of day and which pages are visited when.(Image source)

     

    Why Umami : Unami has a clear and simple user interface (UI) that lets you measure important metrics such as page visits, referrers, and user agents. It also features event tracking, although some reviewers complain that it’s quite limited.

    Standout features can be summed up in five words : privacy, simplicity, lightweight, real-time, and open-source. Unami’s UI is clean, intuitive and modern, and it doesn’t slow down your website. 

    Integrations include plugins for VuePress, Gatsby, Craft CMS, Docusaurus, WordPress and Publii, and a module for Nuxt. Unami’s API communicates with Javascript, PHP Laravel and Python.

    Pricing is free for up to 100k monthly events and three websites, but with limited support and data retention restrictions. The Pro plan costs $20 a month and gives you unlimited websites and team members, a million events (plus $0.00002 for each event over that), five years of data and email support. Their Enterprise plan is priced custom.

    Strengths

    • Freemium plan
    • Open-source
    • Lightweight 

    Community critiques 

    • Limited support options
    • Data retention restrictions
    • No funnel functionality

    6. Heap – Best for automatic data capture

    Product analytics with a twist is a good description of Heap. It features event auto-capture to track user interactions across all touchpoints in the user journey. This lets you fully understand how and why customers engage with your product and website. 

    Using a single Javascript snippet, Heap automatically collects data on everything users do, including how they got to your website. It also helps identify how different cohorts engage with your product, providing the critical insights teams need to boost conversion rates.

    Image showing funnel and path analysis data and insights

    Heap’s journeys feature combines funnel and path analysis. (Image source)

     

    Why Heap : The auto-capture functionality solves a major shortcoming of many product analytics tools — manual tracking. Instead of having to set up manual tags on events, Heap automatically captures all data on user activity from the start. 

    Standout features include event auto-capture, session replay, heatmaps, segments (or cohorts) and journeys, the last of which combines the functions of funnel and path analysis tools into a single feature.

    Integrations include AWS, Google, Microsoft Azure, major CRM platforms, Snowflake and many other data manipulation platforms.

    Pricing is quote-based across all payment tiers. There is also a free plan and a 14-day free trial.

    Strengths

    • Session replay
    • Heatmaps 
    • User segmentation
    • Simple setup 
    • Event auto-capture 

    Community critiques 

    • No A/B testing functionality
    • No GDPR compliance support

    Choosing the best solution for your team

    When selecting a tool, it’s crucial to understand how product analytics and web analytics solutions differ. 

    Product analytics tools track users or accounts and record the features they use, the funnels they move through, and the cohorts they’re part of. Web analytics tools focus more on sessions than users because they’re interested in data that can help improve website usage. 

    Some tools combine product and web analytics to do both of these jobs.

    Area of focus

    Product analytics tools track user behaviour within SaaS- or app-based products. They’re helpful for analysing features, user journeys, engagement metrics, product development and iteration. 

    Web analytics tools analyse web traffic, user demographics, and traffic sources. They’re most often used for marketing and SEO insights.

    Level of detail

    Product analytics tools provide in-depth tracking and analysis of user interactions, feature usage, and cohort analysis.

    Web analytics tools provide broader data on page views, bounce rates, and conversion tracking to analyse overall site performance.

    Whatever tools you try, your first step should be to search for reviews online to see what people who’ve used them think about them. There are some great review sites you can try. See what people are saying on Capterra, G2, Gartner Peer Insights, or TrustRadius

    Use Matomo to power your web and app analytics

    Web and product analytics is a competitive field, and there are many other tools worth considering. This list is a small cross-section of what’s available.

    That said, if you have concerns about privacy and costs, consider choosing Matomo. Start your 21-day free trial today.

  • avfilter/xpsnr : avoid division by zero

    27 janvier, par Gyan Doshi
    avfilter/xpsnr : avoid division by zero
    

    The ref input may have its frame rate unset, which would then lead to
    SIGFPE. So fall back to the main link frame rate. If that too is unset,
    default to 0.

    Related to #11428

    • [DH] libavfilter/vf_xpsnr.c
  • A Primer to Ethical Marketing : How to Build Trust in a Privacy-First World

    11 mars, par Alex Carmona — Marketing, Privacy, ethical marketing

    Imagine a marketing landscape where transparency replaces tactics, where consumer privacy is prioritised over exploitation, and where authentic value builds genuine relationships.

    This isn’t just an ideal—it’s the future of marketing. And it starts with ethical marketing practices.

    76% of consumers refuse to buy from companies they do not trust with their data. Ethical marketing has become essential for business survival. As privacy regulations tighten and third-party cookies phase out, marketers face a critical question : how can they balance effective, personalised campaigns whilst respecting privacy ?

    This comprehensive guide explores what ethical marketing is, the key principles behind ethical marketing practices, and practical strategies to implement an ethical approach that builds trust while driving growth.

    What is ethical marketing ? A comprehensive definition

    Ethical marketing places respect for consumer boundaries at its core whilst delivering genuine value. It prioritises transparent practices, honest communication, and fair value exchange with consumers. This approach represents a significant shift from traditional marketing, which often relied on collecting vast amounts of user data through invasive tracking methods and obscure policies.

    The modern approach to ethical marketing creates a foundation built on three key pillars :

    • User Control : Giving people genuine choice and agency over their data
    • Fair Value : Providing clear benefits in exchange for any data shared
    • Transparency : Being honest about how data is collected, used, and protected
    ethical marketing guide ad

    Key principles of ethical marketing

    Transparency

    Transparency means being clear and forthright about your marketing practices, data collection policies, and business operations. It involves :

    • Using plain language to explain how you collect and use customer data
    • Being upfront about pricing, product limitations, and terms of service
    • Disclosing sponsored content and affiliate relationships
    • Making privacy policies accessible and understandable

    When Matomo surveyed 2,000 consumers, 81% said they believe an organisation’s data practices reflect their overall treatment of customers. Transparency isn’t just about compliance—it’s about demonstrating respect.

    Honesty

    While similar to transparency, honesty focuses specifically on truthfulness in communications :

    • Avoiding misleading claims or exaggerations about products and services
    • Not manipulating statistics or research findings to support marketing narratives
    • Representing products accurately in advertisements and marketing materials
    • Acknowledging mistakes and taking responsibility when things go wrong

    Social responsibility

    Ethical marketing requires consideration of a brand’s impact on society as a whole :

    • Considering environmental impacts of marketing campaigns and business practices
    • Promoting diversity and inclusion in marketing representations
    • Supporting social causes authentically rather than through “purpose-washing”
    • Ensuring marketing activities don’t promote harmful stereotypes or behaviours

    Ethical marketing dilemmas : Navigating complex business decisions

    Data privacy concerns

    The digital marketing landscape has been transformed by increasing awareness of data privacy issues and stricter regulations like GDPR, CCPA, and upcoming legislation. Key challenges include :

    • The phase-out of third-party cookies, impacting targeting and measurement
    • Growing consumer resistance to invasive tracking technologies
    • Balancing personalisation with privacy (71% of consumers expect personalised experiences, yet demand privacy)
    • Ensuring compliance across different jurisdictional requirements

    Cultural sensitivity

    Global brands must navigate complex cultural landscapes :

    • Avoiding cultural appropriation in marketing campaigns
    • Understanding varied cultural expectations around privacy
    • Respecting local customs and values in international marketing
    • Adapting messaging appropriately for diverse audiences

    Environmental sustainability

    The environmental impact of marketing activities is under increasing scrutiny :

    • Digital carbon footprints from ad serving and website hosting
    • Waste generated from physical marketing materials
    • Promoting sustainable products honestly without greenwashing
    • Aligning marketing messages with actual business practices

    The benefits of ethical marketing

    For years, digital marketing has relied on third-party data collection and broad-scale tracking. However, new regulations such as GDPR, CCPA, and the end of third-party cookies are pushing brands to adopt ethical data practices.

    Increased customer loyalty

    Ethical marketing fosters deeper relationships with customers by building trust. Research consistently shows that consumers are more loyal to brands they trust, with 71% indicating they would stop buying from a brand if trust is broken.

    These trust-based relationships are more resilient during business challenges. When customers believe in a company’s integrity, they’re more likely to give the benefit of the doubt during controversies or service issues. They’re also more likely to provide constructive feedback rather than simply leaving for competitors.

    Perhaps most importantly, loyal customers become advocates, sharing positive experiences with others and defending the brand against criticism. This organic advocacy is far more powerful than paid promotions and reduces customer acquisition costs significantly over time.

    Enhanced brand reputation

    A strong ethical stance improves overall brand perception across multiple dimensions. Media outlets are increasingly focused on corporate behaviour, providing positive coverage for ethical practices that extends a brand’s reach organically.

    Social conversations about ethical brands tend to be more positive, with consumers sharing experiences and values rather than just discussing products. This creates a halo effect that benefits all aspects of the business.

    This enhanced reputation also provides resilience during public relations challenges. Organisations with strong ethical foundations find it easier to navigate controversies because they’ve built a reservoir of goodwill with customers, employees, and other stakeholders.

    Competitive advantage

    Ethical marketing provides several distinct competitive advantages in modern markets. It helps brands access privacy-conscious consumer segments that actively avoid companies with questionable data practices. These segments often include higher-income, educated consumers who are valuable long-term customers.

    Ethical approaches also reduce vulnerability to regulatory changes and potential penalties. As privacy laws continue to evolve globally, organisations with strong ethical foundations find compliance easier and less disruptive than those scrambling to meet minimum requirements.

    Perhaps most significantly, ethical marketing supports more sustainable growth trajectories. While manipulative tactics might drive short-term results, they typically lead to higher churn rates and increasing acquisition costs. Ethical approaches build foundations for long-term success and stable growth.

    For a detailed roadmap, download the Ethical Marketing Guide.

    Case studies : Ethical marketing in action

    Patagonia : Purpose-driven marketing

    Patagonia integrates sustainability into its marketing, reinforcing its commitment to ethical business practices. By aligning with social causes, the brand strengthens customer loyalty.

    Apple : Privacy as a competitive advantage

    Apple positions itself as a leader in consumer privacy, ensuring data protection remains central to its marketing strategy. This commitment has become a key differentiator in the tech industry.

    Matomo : The ethical analytics tool

    Matomo offers privacy-first analytics that prioritise data ownership and compliance. Businesses using Matomo benefit from accurate insights while respecting user privacy.

    These companies demonstrate that ethical marketing is not just a compliance requirement—it is a long-term competitive advantage.

    Strategies for implementing ethical marketing

    Aligning marketing efforts with brand values

    Consistency between values and actions is essential for ethical marketing. This alignment starts with a clear understanding of what your organisation truly stands for—not just aspirational statements, but genuine commitments that inform daily decisions.

    Implementing this alignment requires cross-functional collaboration. Marketing teams need to work closely with product development, customer service, and leadership to ensure consistency across all touchpoints. When different departments send contradictory messages about company values, trust erodes quickly.

    Clear guidelines help marketing teams apply values in practical decisions, from campaign concepts to media placements. Regular ethical reviews of marketing plans can identify potential issues before campaigns launch, avoiding reactive corrections that damage credibility.

    Privacy-first data strategies

    Developing robust approaches to customer data is fundamental to ethical marketing. This starts with prioritising first-party data (collected directly from your own channels) and zero-party data (actively shared by customers through preference centres, surveys, and similar mechanisms).

    Measuring success doesn’t have to come at the expense of privacy. Ethical analytics provide accurate insights while protecting user data, ensuring compliance, and enhancing customer trust.

    Ethical personalisation approaches focus on using aggregated or anonymised data rather than individual tracking. This allows for relevant experiences without the invasive feeling that erodes trust when consumers feel watched across the internet.

    Most importantly, ethical data strategies create transparent value exchanges where users clearly understand what benefits they receive in return for sharing information. This reciprocity transforms data collection from exploitation to fair exchange.

    Measuring success ethically

    Traditional marketing measurement often relies on individual-level tracking across sites and platforms. Ethical approaches require adapting these frameworks to respect privacy while still demonstrating impact.

    Focusing on aggregate patterns rather than individual behaviour provides valuable insights without privacy invasions. For example, understanding that 30% of visitors to a specific page subsequently make purchases is actionable intelligence that doesn’t require tracking specific people.

    Incrementality testing measures campaign impact by comparing outcomes between exposed and control groups at an aggregate level. This provides more accurate attribution than traditional last-click models while respecting privacy boundaries.

    Server-side conversion tracking offers another ethical measurement approach, collecting necessary data on your servers rather than through client-side scripts vulnerable to blocking. This improves data accuracy while reducing reliance on cookies and browser storage.

    Implementing ethical marketing strategies : A practical framework

    1. Align marketing with brand values – Ensure campaigns reflect transparency and trust

    2. Leverage first-party data – Collect insights directly from consumers with clear consent

    3. Respect privacy and consent – Give users control over their data and clearly communicate its use

    4. Create value-driven content – Offer educational and relevant resources instead of relying solely on advertising

    5. Use privacy-compliant analytics – Switch to ethical platforms such as Matomo for responsible performance measurement

    For a step-by-step guide to implementing ethical marketing strategies, download the full report here.

    five step ethical marketing framework diagram

    The future of ethical marketing

    With the decline of third-party cookies and the rise of privacy regulations, ethical marketing is no longer optional. Brands that adopt privacy-first practices now will gain a sustainable competitive edge in the long term. The future of marketing belongs to brands that earn consumer trust, not those that exploit it.

    Key trends shaping the future of marketing include :

    • Privacy-first analytics to replace invasive tracking
    • First-party and zero-party data strategies for direct consumer engagement
    • Consent-driven personalisation to balance relevance and privacy
    • Greater emphasis on corporate social responsibility in marketing initiatives

    Companies that proactively address these changes will build stronger customer relationships, enhance brand reputation, and ensure long-term success.

    Take the next step

    Ready to transform your marketing approach for 2025 and beyond ?

    Download Matomo’s comprehensive “2025 Ethical Marketing Field Guide” to get practical frameworks, implementation strategies, and real-world case studies that will help you build trust while driving growth.

    With detailed guidance on first-party data activation, consent-based personalisation techniques, and privacy-preserving analytics methods, this guide provides everything you need to future-proof your marketing strategy in a privacy-first world.

    ethical marketing guide ad

    Download the ethical marketing guide now to start building stronger, more trusted relationships with your customers through ethical marketing practices.