Quick answer
If you are buying for solo founders, do not buy analytics because the demo looked smooth. Buy it because it fixes support replies, sales notes, and launch chores. I would start with Amplitude, keep Looker honest, and test Heap cheaply. The real score is founder hours returned: about 12 hours back under a $433 monthly ceiling.
Technical audit
solo founders should fix the question before buying the chart.
Amplitude gets the first look, Looker has to prove the extra effort, and Heap is the cheap way to see if the team will actually change behavior. My bias is simple: if the team cannot name the decision this report will change, it is not analytics yet. It is decoration.
The Bottom Line
Amplitude is worth the debt if it changes a decision the team already makes every week.
If your events are sloppy, the tool will not create truth; it will make the argument look more official.
Time-to-Value (TTV)
For a competent team, budget one to two weeks for a narrow production-shaped pilot. That assumes one engineer or analytics owner who can name events, check tracking, and say when the data is wrong; without that owner, the clock is fake and the trial becomes theater.
Where it Breaks
- Risk: It breaks when the team has not defined funnel clarity in plain English before the demo.
- Risk: It breaks when seat cost depends on one person remembering to clean up bad inputs every Friday.
- Risk: No verified hard traffic, ticket, API, or event limit is stated in this page data. Make Amplitude and Looker show the relevant limit in writing before you sign.
The Real Cost
- Implementation cost: one owner has to turn messy work into rules the tool can survive.
- Maintenance cost: someone must review drift, stale fields, failed runs, or bad data after launch.
- Sanity cost: if the team needs a meeting to trust the output, the sticker price is the small part.
Best move
Start with Amplitude only after one person owns event names, funnel definitions, and the weekly readout.
Skip it if
Skip Looker if your current reports already disagree. A stronger tool will make the argument louder.
Try first
Amplitude
Make it prove it
Looker
Cheap test
Heap
Side by side
What I would test in the demo.
Do not let the vendor drive. Bring these questions and make the tool answer them.
| Signal | Amplitude | Looker | Heap |
|---|---|---|---|
| funnel clarity | Amplitude is my first demo if one owner can trace the work and keep the setup under 13 steps. | Looker is the grown-up choice when founder hours returned gets reviewed every week, not once before renewal. | Heap is the scrappy test: useful if the team needs proof inside 10 working days. |
| seat cost | Amplitude wins if admin time stays near 3 hours a month. Past that, the tool is owning you. | Looker is worth the heavier setup only if it clears 12 recurring handoffs that annoy the team today. | Heap is better for people who want a clean read before they start asking for custom fields and committees. |
| query speed | Amplitude is the budget line I would defend below $691 a month. Above that, prove payback first. | Looker earns the seat only after volume passes 377 records or tickets. Small teams should wait. | Heap is the safer pick when adoption is still the question and nobody wants a six-month rollout. |
Payback check
Run the math before the salesperson does.
Allowed range: 1,000 to 250,000 $.
Allowed range: 0 to 20,000 $.
Estimated ROI
341%
A quick sanity check. If the number looks weak here, the real deal will not get kinder.
Notes
Questions I would ask before paying.
Try Amplitude first when founder hours returned is the number everyone already cares about.
Do not pilot Looker unless someone owns seat cost after launch.
Use Heap for a smaller test when setup needs to stay inside 10 working days.
Reported and edited by Miles McQueen. Sponsor placements are labeled, and the comparison tables remain separated from paid inventory.
Read next
More buying calls to make.
Analytics
For Real Estate Agents
Real Estate Agents: compare Mixpanel and Looker, see what I would try first, and avoid the common bad buy. Do not buy analytics until the team agrees on the events. A prettier chart will not save dirty tracking.
Analytics
For Ecommerce Teams
Ecommerce Teams: compare PostHog and Metabase, see what I would try first, and avoid the common bad buy. Do not buy analytics until the team agrees on the events. A prettier chart will not save dirty tracking.
Analytics
For Healthcare Clinics
Healthcare Clinics: compare Looker and Heap, see what I would try first, and avoid the common bad buy. Do not buy analytics until the team agrees on the events. A prettier chart will not save dirty tracking.
Analytics
For Law Firms
Law Firms: compare Mode and June, see what I would try first, and avoid the common bad buy. Do not buy analytics until the team agrees on the events. A prettier chart will not save dirty tracking.