Functionality | 5 <p>Sprig is another excellent user behaviour analytics tool, providing deep insight across heatmaps, session replays, surveys, feedback mechanisms, and more.</p><p>This is much more focused and narrow than a full-suite analytics tool, lacking more event-driven analytics capabilities. Sprig, similar to Hotjar which is best-in-class for user behaviour analytics, works best in tandem with a more quantitative and event focused analytics suite.</p><p>Features focus more on understanding user behaviour across your product like click maps, pain points, and replays, and less on analysing large datasets of aggregated data across pages.</p> | 4 <p>Google Analytics excels at website visitor tracking but struggles with product analytics. It offers solid traffic analysis and acquisition data but falls short on user behavior insights. Its real power comes from Google Ads integrations and benchmarking functionality.</p> |
Ease of Use | 8 <p>A very well designed site, with an equally intuitive process. This is especially helped by the AI features which allows you to use everyday language to prompt powerful analyses workflows.</p> | 3 <p>GA4 is surprisingly difficult to use despite its popularity. Finding basic metrics often requires hunting through multiple screens. The learning curve is steep, and the recent redesign has only made things worse by disrupting established workflows.</p> |
Look and feel | 7 <p>This is a very well designed site, with a great feel and intuitive interface that encourages use. Clear menus help navigation, with a very usable lefthand panel menu serving as the navigation point across features.</p><p>Filters on each feature view help with sifting through data, and we've found their AI assisted analysis to be particularly well integrated into their site by offering a visible and consistent presence without overpowering the user journey.</p> | 2 <p>GA4's interface is cluttered and confusing. Navigation is a labyrinth of menus and submenus that hide basic information. Reports load quickly but finding the right one is a chore. The design prioritizes Google's needs over users', making common tasks unnecessarily difficult.</p> |
Customisability | 7 <p>Sprig offers customisation to a degree, however true granular control is something it trades off against a more intuitive and immediately effective platform that caters to more users. Dashboards and tools have certain levels of customisability, but there is no true drag and drop or custom dash type functionality within the program.</p> | 6 <p>Google Analytics offers decent customization through custom dimensions and metrics, but implementing these requires technical knowledge. Custom reports are possible but clunky to configure.</p> |
Ease of Setup | 8 <p>Onboarding was a quick process, allowing for very quick access to the software with enough working knowledge to get started immediately. The average employee should be able to get up and running with some analytics within their first hour of use.</p> | 7 <p>Drop in a tracking code and you're done. Setting up Google Analytics takes minutes, making it very simple to start with like most web analytics products. However, to make full use of the product there is a fair amount of customization that you can action after initial installation.</p> |
Customer Support | 4 <p>Access to customer support can be difficult, as we've found in our testing at least that support both by chat bubble and by menu only indicated that support is offline and will be back soon. No further information or alternative resources were presented. A separate web search had to be made to learn the support hours of Monday - Friday 8 AM - 5 PM Pacific Standard Time (UTC-8).</p><p>Whilst Sprig manages to stay in line with other products in the category with its help and resources button in clear view on the lefthand menu pane, most resources are just a text link to external pages- making a slightly less informative process than the best we've seen from platforms like Userpilot and their in-window support.</p> | 3 <p>Support is practically non-existent for free users. Google offers documentation but it's often outdated or unclear. Users mostly rely on community forums for help, creating a significant gap compared to privacy-focused alternatives that provide stronger documentation.</p> |
Integratability | 6 <p>Sprig's ability to integrate is fairly average, connecting with your typical data sources, connecting to other software that would complement and extend integrations like PostHog and Zapier respectively.</p> | 8 <p>Google Analytics integrates seamlessly with Google's ecosystem (especially Google Ads) and offers connections to major marketing platforms. Its status as the industry standard means most tools support it, though privacy-focused competitors are quickly catching up.</p> |
Ease of Migration | 5 <p>Typical export functions such as webhooks, CSV, and more are available.</p> | 5 <p>Data export options are adequate but outdated. Reports can be exported to spreadsheets or accessed via API, but the process feels clunky compared to modern alternatives.</p> |