Whatagraph vs Elasticsearch
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Whatagraph is quietly building a data layer beneath its agency reporting tool.
Whatagraph remains an agency-focused marketing reporting platform, but recent releases push two fronts at once: deeper data infrastructure and broader visualization. The Data Storage destination and Snowflake source let it ingest and retain data rather than just pull live API calls each render, while a steady stream of widgets (GeoMap, Gauge, Heatmap) and table controls sharpen the reporting surface clients see. Integration breadth keeps widening with WhatConverts, Shopify collaborator access, and a rebuilt CallTrackingMetrics.
The center of gravity is shifting from a connector that visualizes marketing channels toward a data layer that stores and blends first-party and warehouse data. Storage, 24-month backfill, and Snowflake ingestion all reduce dependence on live API calls and position Whatagraph to own more of the pipeline. Visualization work continues in parallel but increasingly reads as table-stakes polish next to the infrastructure bets.
Expect the storage and warehouse thread to deepen, with more destinations, longer retention, and richer blended-attribution tooling on the Max plan. AI-assisted report creation (Create with IQ) is the likely next surface to expand.
Elastic 9.4 pushes into observability metrics and AI orchestration on a single release.
Elastic Stack is shipping on four maintenance lines (8.19, 9.2, 9.3, 9.4) with the 9.4 minor as the active feature train. The 9.4 release lands native Prometheus and PromQL support, promotes Workflows to GA, and expands the Agent Builder. The 8.19 and 9.2/9.3 lines are receiving routine backport bugfix releases in parallel.
Two narratives run simultaneously: observability expansion via first-class Prometheus compatibility and TSDB work, and AI-platform expansion via Workflows GA and Agent Builder. Both push Elastic past 'search engine' framing — observability into Grafana/Mimir/Datadog territory, AI into the retrieval-and-orchestration layer for agentic systems.
Expect 9.5 to deepen Workflows orchestration primitives and broaden PromQL semantic coverage, with backport churn on 8.19 continuing as the long-tail LTS. Agent Builder will likely pick up evaluation and observability features to compete more directly with LangChain/LangGraph-style tooling.
See more alternatives to Whatagraph →
See more alternatives to Elasticsearch →