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Posts Tagged ‘Analytics Tools’

The plummeting price of information

Tuesday, September 16th, 2008

.net issue 180

Has the price of insight just got cheaper?When Google Analytics was launched in November 2005, a world of opportunity was opened up to owners of websites of all sizes, that’s because Google made it free. Microsoft followed suit in 2007 with Gatineau and now Yahoo! has bought IndexTools and announced that it too will be available for free.

Both Google Analytics and Microsoft Gatineau are good products and in the right hands they can yield considerable dividends but IndexTools is in another league.

Google’s early experience showed that a free tool whilst immensely popular can, at times, be hard to manage from the supplier perspective due to high demand. Google do not offer full support, and queries can only be submitted online.

Both Google and Microsoft offer free products as added value to their respective Adwords and AdCentre suites however, whilst the Google and MS products offer some differentiation between one another both broadly compete at the same level.

By Yahoo! making it available for free, IndexTools arguably becomes the best free web analytics product available and any site owner or manager looking to improve the level of insight from web analytics should consider this option. Additionally, now such a high quality product has become available for nothing the 20/80 rule in web analytics (spend 20% of your budget on the analytics tool and 80% on the talent) may shift further still towards the talent.

However, anybody wishing to sign up for an IndexTools account must go through a partner reseller and in doing so there will be certain restrictions; to begin with it looks like there will (sensibly) be a limit on the availability of new accounts, additionally there is a monthly cap on the volume of page views per account. It also seems logical that the resellers could take the load in offering support and this would be good as long as the support is of a higher comparable standard to Google’s and matches the quality of the IndexTools product. Of course there may also be a fee attached to this; certainly there is an opportunity to collect a consultancy fee.

As a free product with a more advanced feature set IndexTools’ Enterprise level package will appeal to mid-sized organisations looking to take a step up and larger organisations looking to save money, something that may resonate in the current economic climate. However, the extent of the restrictions and the current limitations on accounts mean that there may still be a bit of a wait before we see an enterprise level tool having an impact on the cost of web analytics at the top end of the market.