Realtime website performance tests generated from real user experience on a website. Request Metrics gathers performance data from actual users, rather than a synthetic tests. Request Metrics is website performance monitoring, simplified for small high performance teams. There is no complicated query languages to learn or theoretical metrics to understand. The service provides reports that help keep a website running fast, and customers…
$37
per month
RUMvision
Score 0.0 out of 10
N/A
Non-delayed UX data of visitors. Agencies and merchants are using Real User Monitoring (RUM) to know pagespeed gains from deploys, spot issues, and improve their website or shop's SEO, bounce and revenue. Extra metrics and dimensions based on Core Web Vitals (https://www.rumvision.com/sitespeed-user-experience/_ How does device capability…
$95
Monthly or annual (10% off) Based on number of domains
Pricing
Request Metrics
RUMvision
Editions & Modules
Essentials
$37
per month
Professional
$96
per month
Custom
Custom Pricing
Starter
$95
Monthly or annual (10% off) Based on number of domains
International
$175
Monthly or annual (10% off) Based on number of domains
Global
$225
Monthly or annual (10% off) Based on number of domains
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Request Metrics
RUMvision
Free Trial
No
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
Optional
No setup fee
Additional Details
—
Free onboarding, unlimited users, Cloudflare CDN and user location tracking included, SUX goals by gamification, Track 3 CWV and 7 extra metrics, 300.000 monthly sessions per domain.
We also consider Speedcurve and Calibre for monitoring. Speedcurve was really nice, but the reports were slow. We had to wait a lot to get information. It was also out of our budget and would require extra justification to use it.
Request Metrics is great for small web development teams that want to make fast web applications. It was quick for us to get started and we could use the reports right away without having to read through documentation. If you just need to get some performance metrics, Request Metrics is perfect. It would not be so good for a larger team or a complex backend application as it is pretty limited in what it can measure.
We also consider Speedcurve and Calibre for monitoring. Speedcurve was really nice, but the reports were slow. We had to wait a lot to get information. It was also out of our budget and would require extra justification to use it. Calibre was also nice, but the numbers were based on synthetic rather than real user performance. We felt that this wasn't as helpful for us.