Alternatives to Lucky Orange logo

Alternatives to Lucky Orange

Hotjar, Google Analytics, Crazy Egg, Google Tag Manager, and Mixpanel are the most popular alternatives and competitors to Lucky Orange.
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What is Lucky Orange and what are its top alternatives?

Lucky Orange will help you answer the question of why 99% of visitors that visit your site never turn into customers. It's one of those tools that will have you wondering how you ever lived without it.
Lucky Orange is a tool in the Heatmap Analytics category of a tech stack.
Lucky Orange is an open source tool with GitHub stars and GitHub forks. Here’s a link to Lucky Orange's open source repository on GitHub

Top Alternatives to Lucky Orange

  • Hotjar
    Hotjar

    See how visitors are really using your website, collect user feedback and turn more visitors into customers. ...

  • Google Analytics
    Google Analytics

    Google Analytics lets you measure your advertising ROI as well as track your Flash, video, and social networking sites and applications. ...

  • Crazy Egg
    Crazy Egg

    Crazy Egg gives you the competitive advantage to improve your website in a heartbeat without the high costs. ...

  • Google Tag Manager
    Google Tag Manager

    Tag Manager gives you the ability to add and update your own tags for conversion tracking, site analytics, remarketing, and more. There are nearly endless ways to track user behavior across your sites and apps, and the intuitive design lets you change tags whenever you want. ...

  • Mixpanel
    Mixpanel

    Mixpanel helps companies build better products through data. With our powerful, self-serve product analytics solution, teams can easily analyze how and why people engage, convert, and retain to improve their user experience. ...

  • Mixpanel
    Mixpanel

    Mixpanel helps companies build better products through data. With our powerful, self-serve product analytics solution, teams can easily analyze how and why people engage, convert, and retain to improve their user experience. ...

  • Optimizely
    Optimizely

    Optimizely is the market leader in digital experience optimization, helping digital leaders and Fortune 100 companies alike optimize their digital products, commerce, and campaigns with a fully featured experimentation platform. ...

  • Segment
    Segment

    Segment is a single hub for customer data. Collect your data in one place, then send it to more than 100 third-party tools, internal systems, or Amazon Redshift with the flip of a switch. ...

Lucky Orange alternatives & related posts

Hotjar logo

Hotjar

1.5K
0
See how visitors are really using your website, collect user feedback and turn more visitors into customers.
1.5K
0
PROS OF HOTJAR
    Be the first to leave a pro
    CONS OF HOTJAR
    • 4
      Doesn't work with iframe

    related Hotjar posts

    Jason Barry
    Cofounder at FeaturePeek · | 7 upvotes · 168.5K views

    Segment has made it a no-brainer to integrate with third-party scripts and services, and has saved us from doing pointless redeploys just to change the It gives you the granularity to toggle services on different environments without having to make any code changes.

    It's also a great platform for discovering SaaS products that you could add to your own – just by browsing their catalog, I've discovered tools we now currently use to augment our main product. Here are a few:

    • Heap: We use Heap for our product analytics. Heap's philosophy is to gather events from multiple sources, and then organize and graph segments to form your own business insights. They have a few starter graphs like DAU and retention to help you get started.
    • Hotjar: If a picture's worth a thousand words, than a video is worth 1000 * 30fps = 30k words per second. Hotjar gives us videos of user sessions so we can pinpoint problems that aren't necessarily JS exceptions – say, logical errors in a UX flow – that we'd otherwise miss.
    • Bugsnag: Bugsnag has been a big help in catching run-time errors that our users encounter. Their Slack integration pings us when something goes wrong (which we can control if we want to notified on all bugs or just new bugs), and their source map uploader means that we don't have to debug minified code.
    See more
    Google Analytics logo

    Google Analytics

    127.3K
    5.1K
    Enterprise-class web analytics.
    127.3K
    5.1K
    PROS OF GOOGLE ANALYTICS
    • 1.5K
      Free
    • 927
      Easy setup
    • 891
      Data visualization
    • 698
      Real-time stats
    • 406
      Comprehensive feature set
    • 182
      Goals tracking
    • 155
      Powerful funnel conversion reporting
    • 139
      Customizable reports
    • 83
      Custom events try
    • 53
      Elastic api
    • 15
      Updated regulary
    • 8
      Interactive Documentation
    • 4
      Google play
    • 3
      Walkman music video playlist
    • 3
      Industry Standard
    • 3
      Advanced ecommerce
    • 2
      Irina
    • 2
      Easy to integrate
    • 2
      Financial Management Challenges -2015h
    • 2
      Medium / Channel data split
    • 2
      Lifesaver
    CONS OF GOOGLE ANALYTICS
    • 11
      Confusing UX/UI
    • 8
      Super complex
    • 6
      Very hard to build out funnels
    • 4
      Poor web performance metrics
    • 3
      Very easy to confuse the user of the analytics
    • 2
      Time spent on page isn't accurate out of the box

    related Google Analytics posts

    Tassanai Singprom

    This is my stack in Application & Data

    JavaScript PHP HTML5 jQuery Redis Amazon EC2 Ubuntu Sass Vue.js Firebase Laravel Lumen Amazon RDS GraphQL MariaDB

    My Utilities Tools

    Google Analytics Postman Elasticsearch

    My Devops Tools

    Git GitHub GitLab npm Visual Studio Code Kibana Sentry BrowserStack

    My Business Tools

    Slack

    See more
    Max Musing
    Founder & CEO at BaseDash · | 8 upvotes · 368.7K views

    Functionally, Amplitude and Mixpanel are incredibly similar. They both offer almost all the same functionality around tracking and visualizing user actions for analytics. You can track A/B test results in both. We ended up going with Amplitude at BaseDash because it has a more generous free tier for our uses (10 million actions per month, versus Mixpanel's 1000 monthly tracked users).

    Segment isn't meant to compete with these tools, but instead acts as an API to send actions to them, and other analytics tools. If you're just sending event data to one of these tools, you probably don't need Segment. If you're using other analytics tools like Google Analytics and FullStory, Segment makes it easy to send events to all your tools at once.

    See more
    Crazy Egg logo

    Crazy Egg

    2.5K
    23
    Visualize where your visitors click
    2.5K
    23
    PROS OF CRAZY EGG
    • 12
      Very easy to use
    • 9
      Great insight information
    • 2
      Neat visualizations
    CONS OF CRAZY EGG
      Be the first to leave a con

      related Crazy Egg posts

      Google Tag Manager logo

      Google Tag Manager

      63.6K
      0
      Quickly and easily update tags and code snippets on your website or mobile app
      63.6K
      0
      PROS OF GOOGLE TAG MANAGER
        Be the first to leave a pro
        CONS OF GOOGLE TAG MANAGER
          Be the first to leave a con

          related Google Tag Manager posts

          Iva Obrovac
          Product Marketing Manager at Martian & Machine · | 8 upvotes · 86.1K views

          Hi,

          This is a question for best practice regarding Segment and Google Tag Manager. I would love to use Segment and GTM together when we need to implement a lot of additional tools, such as Amplitude, Appsfyler, or any other engagement tool since we can send event data without additional SDK implementation, etc.

          So, my question is, if you use Segment and Google Tag Manager, how did you define what you will push through Segment and what will you push through Google Tag Manager? For example, when implementing a Facebook Pixel or any other 3rd party marketing tag?

          From my point of view, implementing marketing pixels should stay in GTM because of the tag/trigger control.

          If you are using Segment and GTM together, I would love to learn more about your best practice.

          Thanks!

          See more
          Mixpanel logo

          Mixpanel

          7.1K
          438
          Powerful, self-serve product analytics to help you convert, engage, and retain more users
          7.1K
          438
          PROS OF MIXPANEL
          • 144
            Great visualization ui
          • 108
            Easy integration
          • 78
            Great funnel funcionality
          • 58
            Free
          • 22
            A wide range of tools
          • 15
            Powerful Graph Search
          • 11
            Responsive Customer Support
          • 2
            Nice reporting
          CONS OF MIXPANEL
          • 2
            Messaging (notification, email) features are weak
          • 2
            Paid plans can get expensive
          • 1
            Limited dashboard capabilities

          related Mixpanel posts

          Max Musing
          Founder & CEO at BaseDash · | 8 upvotes · 368.7K views

          Functionally, Amplitude and Mixpanel are incredibly similar. They both offer almost all the same functionality around tracking and visualizing user actions for analytics. You can track A/B test results in both. We ended up going with Amplitude at BaseDash because it has a more generous free tier for our uses (10 million actions per month, versus Mixpanel's 1000 monthly tracked users).

          Segment isn't meant to compete with these tools, but instead acts as an API to send actions to them, and other analytics tools. If you're just sending event data to one of these tools, you probably don't need Segment. If you're using other analytics tools like Google Analytics and FullStory, Segment makes it easy to send events to all your tools at once.

          See more
          Yasmine de Aranda
          Chief Growth Officer at Huddol · | 7 upvotes · 386.3K views

          Hi there, we are a seed-stage startup in the personal development space. I am looking at building the marketing stack tool to have an accurate view of the user experience from acquisition through to adoption and retention for our upcoming React Native Mobile app. We qualify for the startup program of Segment and Mixpanel, which seems like a good option to get rolling and scale for free to learn how our current 60K free members will interact in the new subscription-based platform. I was considering AppsFlyer for attribution, and I am now looking at an affordable yet scalable Mobile Marketing tool vs. building in-house. Braze looks great, so does Leanplum, but the price points are 30K to start, which we can't do. I looked at OneSignal, but it doesn't have user flow visualization. I am now looking into Urban Airship and Iterable. Any advice would be much appreciated!

          See more
          Mixpanel logo

          Mixpanel

          7.1K
          438
          Powerful, self-serve product analytics to help you convert, engage, and retain more users
          7.1K
          438
          PROS OF MIXPANEL
          • 144
            Great visualization ui
          • 108
            Easy integration
          • 78
            Great funnel funcionality
          • 58
            Free
          • 22
            A wide range of tools
          • 15
            Powerful Graph Search
          • 11
            Responsive Customer Support
          • 2
            Nice reporting
          CONS OF MIXPANEL
          • 2
            Messaging (notification, email) features are weak
          • 2
            Paid plans can get expensive
          • 1
            Limited dashboard capabilities

          related Mixpanel posts

          Max Musing
          Founder & CEO at BaseDash · | 8 upvotes · 368.7K views

          Functionally, Amplitude and Mixpanel are incredibly similar. They both offer almost all the same functionality around tracking and visualizing user actions for analytics. You can track A/B test results in both. We ended up going with Amplitude at BaseDash because it has a more generous free tier for our uses (10 million actions per month, versus Mixpanel's 1000 monthly tracked users).

          Segment isn't meant to compete with these tools, but instead acts as an API to send actions to them, and other analytics tools. If you're just sending event data to one of these tools, you probably don't need Segment. If you're using other analytics tools like Google Analytics and FullStory, Segment makes it easy to send events to all your tools at once.

          See more
          Yasmine de Aranda
          Chief Growth Officer at Huddol · | 7 upvotes · 386.3K views

          Hi there, we are a seed-stage startup in the personal development space. I am looking at building the marketing stack tool to have an accurate view of the user experience from acquisition through to adoption and retention for our upcoming React Native Mobile app. We qualify for the startup program of Segment and Mixpanel, which seems like a good option to get rolling and scale for free to learn how our current 60K free members will interact in the new subscription-based platform. I was considering AppsFlyer for attribution, and I am now looking at an affordable yet scalable Mobile Marketing tool vs. building in-house. Braze looks great, so does Leanplum, but the price points are 30K to start, which we can't do. I looked at OneSignal, but it doesn't have user flow visualization. I am now looking into Urban Airship and Iterable. Any advice would be much appreciated!

          See more
          Optimizely logo

          Optimizely

          4K
          100
          Experimentation platform for marketing, product, and engineering teams, with feature flags and personalization
          4K
          100
          PROS OF OPTIMIZELY
          • 50
            Easy to setup, edit variants, & see results
          • 20
            Light weight
          • 16
            Best a/b testing solution
          • 14
            Integration with google analytics
          CONS OF OPTIMIZELY
            Be the first to leave a con

            related Optimizely posts

            Shared insights
            on
            SegmentSegmentOptimizelyOptimizely

            Hey all, I'm managing the implementation of a customer data platform and headless CMS for a digital consumer content publisher. We're weighing up the pros and cons of implementing an OTB activation platform like Optimizely Recommendations or Dynamic Yield vs developing a bespoke solution for personalising content recommendations. Use Case is CDP will house customers and personas, and headless CMS will contain the individual content assets. The intermediary solution will activate data between the two for personalisation of news content feeds. I saw GCP has some potentially applicable personalisation solutions such as recommendations AI, which seem to be targeted at retail, but would probably be relevant to this use case for all intents and purposes. The CDP is Segment and the CMS is Contentstack. Has anyone implemented an activation platform or personalisation solution under similar circumstances? Any advice or direction would be appreciated! Thank you

            See more
            Segment logo

            Segment

            3.1K
            275
            A single hub to collect, translate and send your data with the flip of a switch.
            3.1K
            275
            PROS OF SEGMENT
            • 86
              Easy to scale and maintain 3rd party services
            • 49
              One API
            • 39
              Simple
            • 25
              Multiple integrations
            • 19
              Cleanest API
            • 10
              Easy
            • 9
              Free
            • 8
              Mixpanel Integration
            • 7
              Segment SQL
            • 6
              Flexible
            • 4
              Google Analytics Integration
            • 2
              Salesforce Integration
            • 2
              SQL Access
            • 2
              Clean Integration with Application
            • 1
              Own all your tracking data
            • 1
              Quick setup
            • 1
              Clearbit integration
            • 1
              Beautiful UI
            • 1
              Integrates with Apptimize
            • 1
              Escort
            • 1
              Woopra Integration
            CONS OF SEGMENT
            • 2
              Not clear which events/options are integration-specific
            • 1
              Limitations with integration-specific configurations
            • 1
              Client-side events are separated from server-side

            related Segment posts

            Julien DeFrance
            Principal Software Engineer at Tophatter · | 16 upvotes · 3.2M views

            Back in 2014, I was given an opportunity to re-architect SmartZip Analytics platform, and flagship product: SmartTargeting. This is a SaaS software helping real estate professionals keeping up with their prospects and leads in a given neighborhood/territory, finding out (thanks to predictive analytics) who's the most likely to list/sell their home, and running cross-channel marketing automation against them: direct mail, online ads, email... The company also does provide Data APIs to Enterprise customers.

            I had inherited years and years of technical debt and I knew things had to change radically. The first enabler to this was to make use of the cloud and go with AWS, so we would stop re-inventing the wheel, and build around managed/scalable services.

            For the SaaS product, we kept on working with Rails as this was what my team had the most knowledge in. We've however broken up the monolith and decoupled the front-end application from the backend thanks to the use of Rails API so we'd get independently scalable micro-services from now on.

            Our various applications could now be deployed using AWS Elastic Beanstalk so we wouldn't waste any more efforts writing time-consuming Capistrano deployment scripts for instance. Combined with Docker so our application would run within its own container, independently from the underlying host configuration.

            Storage-wise, we went with Amazon S3 and ditched any pre-existing local or network storage people used to deal with in our legacy systems. On the database side: Amazon RDS / MySQL initially. Ultimately migrated to Amazon RDS for Aurora / MySQL when it got released. Once again, here you need a managed service your cloud provider handles for you.

            Future improvements / technology decisions included:

            Caching: Amazon ElastiCache / Memcached CDN: Amazon CloudFront Systems Integration: Segment / Zapier Data-warehousing: Amazon Redshift BI: Amazon Quicksight / Superset Search: Elasticsearch / Amazon Elasticsearch Service / Algolia Monitoring: New Relic

            As our usage grows, patterns changed, and/or our business needs evolved, my role as Engineering Manager then Director of Engineering was also to ensure my team kept on learning and innovating, while delivering on business value.

            One of these innovations was to get ourselves into Serverless : Adopting AWS Lambda was a big step forward. At the time, only available for Node.js (Not Ruby ) but a great way to handle cost efficiency, unpredictable traffic, sudden bursts of traffic... Ultimately you want the whole chain of services involved in a call to be serverless, and that's when we've started leveraging Amazon DynamoDB on these projects so they'd be fully scalable.

            See more
            Robert Zuber

            Our primary source of monitoring and alerting is Datadog. We’ve got prebuilt dashboards for every scenario and integration with PagerDuty to manage routing any alerts. We’ve definitely scaled past the point where managing dashboards is easy, but we haven’t had time to invest in using features like Anomaly Detection. We’ve started using Honeycomb for some targeted debugging of complex production issues and we are liking what we’ve seen. We capture any unhandled exceptions with Rollbar and, if we realize one will keep happening, we quickly convert the metrics to point back to Datadog, to keep Rollbar as clean as possible.

            We use Segment to consolidate all of our trackers, the most important of which goes to Amplitude to analyze user patterns. However, if we need a more consolidated view, we push all of our data to our own data warehouse running PostgreSQL; this is available for analytics and dashboard creation through Looker.

            See more