Piwik PRO vs Whatagraph
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Piwik PRO ships steady fortnightly fix releases with quiet integration improvements.
Recent releases (18.59 through 18.66) follow a tight bi-weekly cadence dominated by analytics bug fixes — chart tooltips, scheduled-report PDF rendering, sorting and pagination edge cases — interleaved with smaller integration improvements: Google Ads account-switching, expanded AI-referral domain detection, sequential-audience sort and filter, in-app contact form. No directional moves in this window.
The product is in maintenance-and-polish mode, focused on the edges where reports, exports, and integrations break. The most signal-bearing recent change is broader Google Ads account management plus more domains classified as AI-driven traffic — small hints at where buyers are asking for sharper analytics.
Expect Piwik PRO to keep shipping defect-density patches at this cadence, with what feature growth there is concentrated in AI-traffic attribution and Google Ads tooling rather than core analytics primitives.
Whatagraph adds Data Storage and a Snowflake source — agency reports stop waiting on live API calls.
Whatagraph is moving from 'report builder over live API connections' to 'managed data layer plus report builder.' Two recent releases anchor the shift: Data Storage lets Whatagraph store customer data on its own infrastructure with a 24-month default backfill, and Snowflake has been added as a first-party data source so warehouse tables can sit alongside paid media and web analytics in the same report. Around that, the company is filling in standard reporting depth — GeoMap widget, conditional formatting, Gauge and Heatmap widget types — plus broader integration coverage like bol. Retailer and Advertising for Benelux retail media and a rebuilt event-level CallTrackingMetrics.
The product is pushing toward becoming an agency-grade marketing reporting platform that also owns the data plumbing. Historically agencies had to choose between Whatagraph-style report builders (fast but live-API constrained) and BigQuery-based stacks (flexible but heavyweight). Whatagraph's managed Storage destination collapses that choice, and the Snowflake source pulls customer-warehouse data directly into the reporting surface — both moves widen the addressable customer set into mid-market and larger agencies.
Expect the next quarter to deepen the data layer: a SQL-style transformation interface on stored data, more warehouse sources (likely Databricks or Redshift), and a billing change that splits the storage layer from the report-builder seat licenses. The GeoMap widget will exit beta with continent-grouped drill-downs.
See more alternatives to Piwik PRO →
See more alternatives to Whatagraph →