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Home > Commentary > Trends Archive > Web 2.0 Changes Web Analytics Pricing Models

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The Web Analytics Report 2008 looks at... Access controls in WebTrends

"WebTrends can become a bit problematic in super-distributed environments, however, because it lacks the ability to control permissions down to the report level. Currently, you can only control permissions down to report set. This creates a scenario where users in different business groups could alter reports that impact each other."

(p. 256)

More about The Web Analytics Report 2008

 

TrendWatch Blog

Web 2.0 Changes Web Analytics Pricing Models

06-Jun-2007

Most hosted Web Analytics vendors charge you according to page views -- not unreasonable since each view is a call to their server and a new record in their database. But what happens when Ajax and other rich applications eliminate the notion of a "page"? Well, vendors are now talking about pricing in terms of "events" or "server calls," rather than page views. Expect to be asked about the number of Flash and Ajax based applications you're running. And, if you add applications over the course of a SaaS contract, expect a scheduled audit to count these, assuming they have been tagged.

As one vendor explained at a recent event, "If I want to track any new events, whether new page updates, Video Play Activation and whatever else -- they all insert a new row in my database." Look for vendor marketing literature and contracts to start replacing "page views" with "events." But then again, that's what you should be tracking too, and as Web Analytics Report readers know, vendors differ in the way they handle (or want you to handle) intra-page activity tracking.

- Submitted by: Phil Kemelor, Contributing Analyst

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