Countly is a product analytics solution and innovation enabler that helps teams track product performance and customer journey and behavior across mobile, web, and desktop applications. Ensuring privacy by design, Countly helps the user to innovate and enhance products to provide personalized and customized customer experiences, and meet key business and revenue goals. Countly empowers companies of any size or location to grow their business by helping them securely process billions of…
N/A
Woopra
Score 3.0 out of 10
Enterprise companies (1,001+ employees)
Woopra provides real-time customer analytics. It begins by tracking users across digital touch points (website, mobile app, help desk, marketing automation, etc.) and building a comprehensive behavioral profile for each user. These Customer Profiles are Woopra's building blocks, which are used to generate custom analytics reports, funnel analytics, retention analytics, and more.
$999
per month
Pricing
Countly
Woopra
Editions & Modules
Countly Enterprise Edition
Personalized Plans
per month per data point
Countly Community Edition
Free Forever
Pro
$999.00
per month
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Countly
Woopra
Free Trial
Yes
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
Optional
Additional Details
Customizable, with free Community Edition (free forever) and free Enterprise Edition trial (free for 1 Month).
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Countly
Woopra
Considered Both Products
Countly
Verified User
Anonymous
Chose Countly
Google Analytics is a big giant and Countly has impressed me with its features. I say well done.
Countly have two main elements that make it the better option. First is open sourced so you can edit with code new options and new events, also you can use a variety of plugins depending of the necessities of the users and the objectives of every analysis. The second …
Well, Countly is open-source. It got a very helpful community in its back that will surely help you on your projects. Countly is known for its mobile analytics and marketing platform for businesses. It excels at mobile data analysis and working directly with customers to boost …
Matomo has poor integrations and SDK support compared to Countly. It is also significantly harder to set up compared to Countly. There have also been complaints about Matomo having security flaws. Additionally, Matomo seemed to lack common analytics platform features, like …
Mixpanel looks too mobile oriented. Very limited in some scenarios. Google analytics seems too B2C products oriented. More on aggregated data, retention, funnel and conversion. Woopra allows a better follow of particular users when needed.
Easier to use. Loved the tracking functionality allowing to see individual user paths and 'labels' attached to a customer. you can assign customers to a specific bucket, which you can't do in GA.
Woopra is much easier to setup and use than Google Analytics. I've spent hours trying to create custom reports in Google analytics. Woopra does not take this much time to get solid reporting for our site. If you need something that tracks marketing efforts then Google …
In our infancy, we purchased Intercom, and have never gotten rid of it. Every time it comes up, we find a reason to hold on. Currently that reason is that support uses it for live chat. Their support is great, and I want to say that they are cheaper (don't quote me on that). If …
I do not know how to compare these to other such tools, as I only use analytics tools that do not collect PII for security purposes. I would not call this an analytics tool though, but rather a product quality measurement tool—it allows you to easily see high level data and …
Woopra's user interface is far superior than any of the competition. I found other analytics software to be clunky and hard to use. With Woopra, I always know exactly where to go in the app to get the results I'm looking for. This saves me valuable time; in the end time is …
Google Analytics is another product we use, but we've found their product pretty hard to use and follow. Woopra is the product that solves this problem and makes analytics easy to understand.
Woopra has more flexible ways to visualize the data. Also found Woopra to be more reliable than the other analytic packages that we have used in the past. Quick turnaround when we do see a bug.
Google Analytics, Mixpanel. Woopra blows both of these out the water, the UI and level of easy segmentation is a big factor in this but also they have some nice real time features that these other tools simply do not have that add a lot of value.
We looked a number of similar products, and while we liked the others, they did different things to Woopra. Woopra was much better at not just showing us high level analytics, but being able to query them, and drill down all the way to a specific user's behaviour in a much more …
Countly is wonderful. It mhas affordable options for startups that are experimenting with event and market-tracking services that can't afford more expensive services but do have the cloud credits to operate Countly. For later-stage companies that have the money, but not the time to set up a service like this, a service like Amplitude, Segment, or Mixpanel may be a better alternative.
We have only used it on web applications so I would recommend it in that case. Deploy has been pretty straightforward. Usage is very intuitive so if you are looking for an analytics product to implement fast and easy (for example for a startup or when starting a project) it is also a good scenario to recommend Woopra. The free tier has been pretty useful to us.
Bad UI - The UI is quite outdated and poorly designed, which was one of the principal reasons for us moving away from Countly.
Some poor documentation - 3rd-party documentation and tutorials for some of their mobile SDKs are better than Countly's own documentation.
Server requirements can be a bit high - For startups with trial credits on cloud computing services, this may not be a problem. Otherwise, Countly can get as expensive as hosted services like Segment and Mixpanel.
We just really like the tool. There are lots of us using it internally... from Product, to marketing, to customer service, to optimization team, to traffic acquisition, to Executives. Really helps us answer questions about how well things are going, and what is not going well.
The UI and reports are great overall. Creating reports just requires a few too many screens and clicks. Also dashboard tiles can't be resized. Both of these are easy items that are being addressed
Compared to other products, the support was a small effort. We only had part time contributions from a product management intern and front end developer.
Well, Countly is open-source. It got a very helpful community in its back that will surely help you on your projects. Countly is known for its mobile analytics and marketing platform for businesses. It excels at mobile data analysis and working directly with customers to boost engagement. Its main job in "user retention" is to assist you to comprehend custom activity in any component of your app and communicating that data to the server. Its user-friendly and well-designed app features improve consumer happiness. Unique features like in-app activity tracking and analysis can increase in-app usability and user experience, resulting in higher retention and income.
Woopra's user interface is far superior than any of the competition. I found other analytics software to be clunky and hard to use. With Woopra, I always know exactly where to go in the app to get the results I'm looking for. This saves me valuable time; in the end time is money
Really helped us begin to segment our users based on their engagement and retention.
Helped increase retention by about 1.5% after about 5 months of implementation (don't shoot the messenger if your team can't implement that quickly).
I felt like it had great potential to create a pipeline between sales and the CSM, but I had trouble getting the sales team to implement it properly as they had their noses deep in calls and emails (they struggle entering notes in SalesForces as well, so it's more a company specific problem).