Product analytics is not marketing analytics. Product managers need metrics that show how features are adopted and how users behave — not just how many converted.
Product analytics is the foundation for understanding whether your product is delivering value. If you cannot measure how users engage with your features, you cannot improve them. The trap is confusing product analytics with marketing analytics — the two overlap, but the questions you ask and the tools you use must be tailored to your role as a product manager.
Your actual job is to track how features are adopted, how users move through your product, and what behaviors drive retention and growth. WebEngage, Amplitude, and Google Analytics are among the key tools in your toolkit — but each serves a distinct purpose.
Product analytics is a different discipline than marketing analytics
Marketing analytics focuses on acquisition, conversion, and revenue metrics. Marketers want to know how many users clicked an ad, signed up, or bought a product.
Product analytics goes deeper into user behavior inside the product:
- How often is a new feature used?
- How long does it take a new user to reach the first "aha" moment?
- What user journeys lead to retention or churn?
- Which cohorts respond best to a feature?
Google Analytics is king for marketers, but it was not built for product managers. PMs have had to "torture it to work" for their needs.
Amplitude was designed specifically for product managers. Its metrics and reports are tailored to answer product questions, making it easier to track feature adoption, funnels, and retention.
Engagement tools like WebEngage focus on user retention and interaction
WebEngage started as a simple survey tool but quickly evolved into a full-stack engagement platform. It helps product teams understand what happens after users land on your website or app:
- Which pop-ups or surveys increase user interaction?
- What messaging nudges drive retention or conversion?
- How do different segments respond to personalized campaigns?
WebEngage uses data science and predictive analytics to suggest which engagement tactics will work best.
While WebEngage is not primarily a product analytics tool, it complements product analytics by focusing on engagement and retention — key parts of the user journey that PMs must influence.
Understanding funnels: measuring user behavior through event tracking
A fundamental concept in product analytics is the user funnel — the sequence of steps users take to complete a goal, like signing up, activating, or purchasing.
Example:
- Step 1: User signs up
- Step 2: User watches an intro video
- Step 3: User completes onboarding
- Step 4: User performs first key action
You want to know:
- How many users drop off at each step?
- How long does it take to move from one step to the next?
- Does a new feature reduce drop-off or speed up progression?
Tools like Mixpanel, Segment, and Intercom capture event data to build these funnels. Amplitude excels at visualizing funnels with cohort analysis and retention curves.
Hypothesis testing for product changes
When you introduce a change, like an intro video for new users, you need to test whether it actually improves user behavior.
The process:
- Make an observation: New users take a long time to start using the product.
- Form a hypothesis: An intro video will reduce that time.
- Implement the change: Add the intro video on first login.
- Measure impact: Compare funnels before and after the change.
This is a practical application of hypothesis testing — a statistical method to determine whether the observed effect is real or due to chance.
The null hypothesis is that the video has no effect on user behavior. The alternative hypothesis is that it reduces the time to first action.
If the difference is statistically significant (low p-value), you can be confident the video helped.
Google Analytics: a versatile but marketer-focused tool
Google Analytics (GA) is the most widely used web analytics tool. It tracks website traffic, user sessions, referral sources, and conversions.
PMs use GA for:
- Setting up funnels to track user journeys
- Analyzing traffic sources and user demographics
- Measuring bounce rates and session duration
However, GA's strengths lie in marketing and SEO analytics rather than detailed product usage. Its event tracking can be customized, but it requires effort and is less intuitive than dedicated product analytics tools.
Demo: Setting up a funnel in Google Analytics
In a live demo, you would:
- Define the funnel steps (e.g., landing page → signup → onboarding)
- Set conversion goals for each step
- Analyze drop-offs and conversion rates
- Segment users by source, device, or geography
This helps identify where users get stuck or leave, guiding product improvements.
Amplitude: product analytics designed for PMs
Amplitude was built with product managers in mind. It offers:
- Easy event tracking and funnel creation
- Cohort analysis to compare user segments
- Retention reports to measure stickiness
- Behavioral analytics to understand feature adoption
Unlike GA, Amplitude focuses on what users do inside your product rather than just how they arrive.
An Indian ed-tech startup used Amplitude to identify which content formats kept students engaged longer. This insight allowed them to prioritize video lectures over text, improving retention significantly.
Localytics and other mobile engagement tools
Localytics specializes in mobile app analytics and engagement. It tracks app usage, session frequency, and retention, and supports targeted in-app messaging.
Indian mobile startups have used Localytics to segment users by behavior and run personalized campaigns, boosting retention and monetization.
Best practices for product analytics and engagement
- Segment your users: Different cohorts behave differently. Analyze by geography, device, acquisition channel, and user persona.
- Continuously monitor: Set up dashboards and alerts to catch drops in engagement early.
- Act on feedback: Use analytics insights to prioritize features, fix UX issues, and run experiments.
- Combine tools: Use Amplitude for product analytics, WebEngage for engagement campaigns, and GA for website traffic.
The evolving analytics landscape
The analytics space is crowded and evolving. Early suites were "Swiss Army knives" trying to do everything. Now, specialized tools excel in narrow domains.
Your job as a PM is to choose the right tool for your question and integrate them effectively.
Test yourself: The analytics tool choice
You are the PM at a Series A Indian fintech startup. Your team wants to improve onboarding completion rates. The marketing team is focused on Google Analytics data showing traffic and signups. Your engineering lead suggests using Amplitude to track in-product feature usage. The growth lead wants to run personalized pop-ups with WebEngage.
The call: Which tool(s) do you prioritize to improve onboarding, and how do you coordinate across teams?
Your reasoning:
Where to go next
- If you want to master user research to complement analytics: User Research Methods
- If you want to learn how to run A/B tests and experiments: A/B Testing and Experimentation
- If you want to define and track metrics effectively: Metrics and KPIs
- If you want to understand customer data platforms: Customer Data Platforms
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