The End of an Era for Urchin Software

Friday, January 20, 2012 | 1:30 PM

When I started Urchin Software with a few colleagues back in 1998, it was hard to imagine the scale and impact that Urchin and Google Analytics would eventually have. And yet, I remember rolling out the first version of Urchin to our customers and being blown away by the response. It was clear that Urchin was filling a fundamental need to understand customer engagement in a new medium. Suddenly, it made the intangible packets of traffic flying invisibly all over the world very tangible.

Within a few short years, we built a successful business based on Urchin and “Urchin on Demand”, an online version of the product. In early 2005, we were acquired by Google because it saw the potential of data to create a better web. By liberating this tool we could empower companies of all sizes to become smarter and more effective online. We assigned considerable resources to our online solution and released it to the public for free. Google Analytics has since grown beyond anything that we could have expected.

The success of Google Analytics has been incredibly rewarding and humbling, and we are very thankful for the support of our early Urchin customers and investors. The Urchin Software product has now been completely overshadowed by its tremendously popular offspring. And so, it is time that we now complete the cycle by officially retiring the Urchin Software product and focus exclusively on online analytics. On behalf of the original Urchin crew and Google, we thank you and hope that we can continue to serve you with amazing products.

Urchin has only been available during the past several years through Certified Urchin Resellers, and new sales will officially discontinue at the end of March 2012. We are encouraging Urchin users to migrate to Google Analytics, although expect that current installations of the software will continue to work fine on most systems for years to come. You can learn more about the retirement of this product on the Urchin Website.

Posted by Paul Muret, Director of Engineering, Google Analytics

24 comments:

Allaedin Ezzedin said...

Thank you Paul Muret, Scott Crosby, Jack Ancone, and Brett Crosb for such an amazing product. Urchin will be remembered for ever!

Brad Fry said...

If only Google Analytics allowed for the collection of Personally Identifiable Information (PII) and enabled companies to own their data.

Will GA Premium give us back these capabilities?

dan said...

Long live UTM!

nit said...

thanks all for the effort and the basis for a great product!

na said...

Sad to see it go, is there any chance of open-sourcing or releasing a version without license checks?

Happy Horn said...

And this is the proof: Google DOES evil!

webalytics said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

webalytics said...

Google Analytics is – for many known reasons – is not really an alternative to Urchin. This cannot be argued away with nice and new reports in GA and a Service Level Agreement for Google Analytics Premium which is not yet valid in Europe not yet available at all in Germany.

Many of our Urchin customers know about the “drawbacks” of Urchin compared to Google Analytics and they prefer and love the benefits that come along with Urchin for various reasons.

This leads to the question: Why is it so important to make Urchin disappear completely? I believe the answer for that is: Google Analytics Premium. It seems that sales for Google Analytics Premium shall be forced down customers throats. It’s easier (and cheaper for Google) to “kill” a product and a channel for Google Analytics Premium’s sake no matter what problems the customers and channel partners are going to face. Yes, the lamb is ready for slaughter!

Tu quoque, Brute, fili mi...

vb2cville said...

Google Analytics is not an acceptable replacement for Urchin. Primary amongst its many drawbacks, GA does not have the ability to accurately quantify web traffic. Urchin’s data collection strategy – leveraging both browser-side javascript and web logs – plugs the blindspots of GA, and has proven conclusively (we run Urchin and GA simultaneously for dozens of websites) that at a minimum, GA misses between 15% and 25% of all web traffic. GA also prohibits the collection of personally identifiable information (IP addresses, our clients' user IDs, etc.), negating Urchin’s ability to tie web statistics to our clients’ specific end users.

Why is Google doing this? Because they are evil. Their strategy is to own as much of the world’s most important data as possible. GA allows them to possess the detailed knowledge of the world’s web traffic. Urchin enables owners of web sites to maintain their own data privately on servers outside the grasp of Google. Google will now try to force-feed GA Premium down the throats of customers worldwide, regardless of the needs of their customers who paid them $10,000 for Urchin (in our case, 7 months ago).

The final statement from Google on this topic:

"What product should I use if I want to (or need to) host my own web analytics solution?"

"You may want to research other self-hosted web analytics solution providers on the market who focus on delivering those products."

Allow me to paraphrase: Give us your data or go away.

dalshe.com said...

good bye urchin

Unknown said...

This is very uncool. For those of us that want to track traffic and want our traffic to remain private; Urchin was a great (although getting more and more buggy since 5) alternative. I will now either have to find another product (sawmill?), or go through the legal mumbojumbo about sending information into the US where the Patriot Act makes it much less private.

Russellc said...

This is a total nightmare and seems more reminiscent of a move that Microsoft would have done in the past than Google. You still need to analyze your logs. What about robots, clients that don't allow tracking urls or javascript.

What about service providers with hundreds of URLs?

Needless to say, Sysadmins everyone will be very sad to see Urchin go.

Garp said...

This is sad to see. The UTM is a far from accurate data source for analytics. We pick up a lot through web log analysis in Urchin that the UTM never catches. A significant amount, in fact. Log analysis in urchin also allows us to monitor and analyse unwanted traffic and its impact on our sites. Web scraping tools never bother to execute UTM javascript.

It's going to be a real pain to find a suitable replacement. Sadly GA Premium isn't it.

Santosh kumar sonu said...

ohhhhhhhhhhh no!

its too sad

Travel Packages said...

This comment has been removed by the author.

Jonathan Kingston said...

Please open source this as other commenters have said here it is useful to ascertain non JavaScript users.

It is also more useful to have ips and other information. I wouldn't mind this functionality merging into analytics as standard but at the moment it doesn't does it. There is also no real ability to write plugins for the interface for analytics too.

Betrayed Customer said...

You've just burned the 10 grands that I've spent in December 2011. Thank you so much!

Hey what's next? Are you going to charge me for using google.com?

Hopefully someday someone kicks your butt!

S. B. Crosby said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

Albania Properties said...

Thanks for starting the routes of a very successful and very valuable service. How on earth we could improve services without analysing.

Integrati Marketing said...

Bugger!

But thank you for selling a license to us Q4 2011!

NO warning.

kevin said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

Actual Metrics said...

We are sad to hear the news, but Urchin had a great run - haters step aside.

Now that Urchin has exited the building, we're working on a standalone software product called Angelfish Stats, which will provide a migration path from Urchin.

Rahul Deshmukh said...

My thoughts on Urchin and alternatives : http://tinyurl.com/6sjgjo4

Nelson said...

It seems like Piwik will be a good alternative to Urchin: open source (GPL license) and many features, active community! See their blog post about Log files import and using Piwik from Urchin: http://piwik.org/blog/2012/01/piwik-best-alternative-to-urchin-web-analytics-via-log-files-import/