Geckoboard vs Hex
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Geckoboard polishes chart visualizations and deepens support-ops integrations in steady cadence
Geckoboard is in a polish-and-deepen cycle. Chart visualizations are being refreshed one type at a time — column, bar, and now stacked columns, framed by the team as the first new visualization in several years. Integrations get richer filtering (HubSpot cross-object) and faster live data (Zendesk webhook-based status), and Custom Dashboard Templates targets large organizations that have been rebuilding the same dashboard for dozens of teams.
The product is leaning further into the operational-dashboard use case, especially in support (Zendesk, HubSpot, Aircall). Investments split between scaling administration (templates) and surface polish (chart visualizations). Nothing in the recent stream suggests a category move or platform shift; the shape is of a mature SaaS optimizing for retention and per-account expansion.
Expect the next few releases to continue the chart polish sweep — line charts and pie/donut variants are the obvious unfinished sets — and to roll Custom Dashboard Templates out beyond the initial Zendesk/Aircall/HubSpot trio. A second cross-object filter against Salesforce or another CRM is a plausible follow-up.
Hex bets the product on prompt-as-authoring: data apps are now one sentence away.
Hex is in the most aggressive AI-agent build-out of any analytics tool we track. The last month has stacked: repo connections as agent context, Generative Data Apps, prompt-to-dashboard, context suggestions, user memory, projects-as-context, and a CLI for programmatic context control. Around it, the surface has been extended with Hex-in-Claude, Hex-in-Cursor, a ClickHouse partnership, and Google Sheets export.
Hex is reorganizing itself around an agent that the user steers with prompts and grounds with context. Each release adds either more context channels (repos, projects, semantic models, memory, guides) or more places the agent can act (apps, dashboards, third-party clients). The product surface is being recast: notebooks remain, but the primary entry point is becoming the prompt. Expect Hex to keep stacking context sources and to start moving from authoring assist into autonomous, scheduled, agent-driven workflows.
Next plausible moves: agent-authored scheduled jobs or alerts, deeper integrations with semantic layer tools (dbt-style metric stores) as context sources, and more co-pilot embeddings in third-party editors. A pricing tier tied to agent usage is increasingly hard to delay.
See more alternatives to Geckoboard →
See more alternatives to Hex →