Update: Google offers its Web analytics service for free
One customer who has used the software called the move 'incredible'
November 14, 2005 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
Google Inc. will provide for free its hosted Web analytics service, which businesses can use to track the effectiveness of online marketing campaigns, the company announced today.
The service, called Google Analytics, is free and has a page view limit of 5 million per month, a cap that is removed if the user is a Google AdWords advertiser, said Paul Muret, a Google engineering director.
Formerly known as Urchin on Demand, the service used to cost $199 per month, with a 100,000 monthly limit on page views, he said.
AdWords advertisers also get some additional analytics features, said Muret, who founded Urchin Software Corp., the Web site analytics system developer that Google bought earlier this year.
However, Google Analytics isn't meant to be exclusively an AdWords analysis tool. It is designed to be a complete analytics package that can monitor various types of online marketing campaigns from multiple ad sellers, Muret said.
By making Google Analytics free, Google will shine a bright light on the Web analytics market, which should benefit that market in general by drawing in many new customers, but it will also put significant pricing pressure on vendors, said Eric Peterson, a Jupiter Research analyst.
The move by Mountain View, Calif.-based Google will hurt Web analytics vendors that don't have strong professional services and consulting to complement their packaged or hosted software offerings, Peterson said. "Free is always compelling, but free from Google has historically been the most compelling offer," Peterson said.
However, vendors that have built strong professional services and consulting units, such as WebSideStory Inc., CoreMetrics Inc. and Omniture Inc., will be able to compete better, he said. This is because Google, at least so far, doesn't have a particularly large professional services and consulting staff for Google Analytics, Peterson said.
Although Google could quickly build a large professional services and consulting team if it wanted to, right now Google Analytics is more in line with the needs of small-to-medium-size businesses, and of large businesses that don't need or want that type of support, Peterson said.
Google Analytics monitors the performance of banner ads, referral links, e-mail newsletters and organic and paid search, so companies can track how visitors were referred to their Web sites and what they do once there, Muret said.
The statistics Google Analytics gathers, and the reports and graphs it generates, can be used by Web site owners to determine, for example, how effective their different ad campaigns are and how they should adapt their Web sites to improve sales conversions.
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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