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Comparison · Analytics

Kameleoon vs Hex

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

K
Kameleoon
ANALYTICS
1.3

Kameleoon refines its prompt-driven personalization editor with widget, targeting, and PBX upgrades.

◆ Current state

Kameleoon is iterating on the new Personalization editor and the prompt-based workflow that sits inside it. Recent changes: a simpler two-step widget event creation flow that ties directly to Kameleoon goals, the ability to reorder personalization targeting rules from the new editor, and PBX prompt-area improvements (resizable prompt area, image paste as input). Survey widgets get a configurable response-recording trigger.

◆ Where it's heading

The product is settling into the new editor as the default surface and accumulating the small ergonomics wins teams expect from a mature personalization tool — fewer clicks, fewer manual IDs, more control over evaluation order. The PBX prompt updates suggest AI-assisted variant creation is becoming a more prominent workflow, with multimodal input now supported.

◆ Prediction

Expect the editor's PBX surface to keep gaining capability — likely brand-context awareness, reusable prompts, and broader image-driven generation. Targeting and goal flows will continue to consolidate so users don't need to reach for IDs or admin pages.

H
Hex
ANALYTICS
6.3

Hex bets the product on prompt-as-authoring: data apps are now one sentence away.

◆ Current state

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.

◆ Where it's heading

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.

◆ Prediction

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.

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