EmailAnalytics vs Mailtrack
Someone comparing EmailAnalytics and Mailtrack is usually evaluating both because of similar-sounding names but very different scope.
EmailAnalytics is a manager-reporting tool that aggregates email behaviour at the rep and team level. Mailtrack is an AE-side per-send tracker. Despite category overlap, these tools rarely compete directly.
If you want team-level behaviour reporting, EmailAnalytics. If you want per-send open tracking, Mailtrack.
Where EmailAnalytics and Mailtrack differ
Both touch the email-engagement space. Both have free trials. The intent is so different that direct comparison only makes sense if buying one or the other.
Verdict by buyer profile
EmailAnalytics is purpose-built for this.
Mailtrack at $4.99.
Both covered at Teams Pro tier.
Outsolvi covers AE per-send tracking with confidence-scored opens, and Teams Pro at $20/user/mo covers manager-level engagement reporting. Many teams running on Outsolvi don't need EmailAnalytics separately.
Frequently asked questions
Are these tools competitors?+
Not really. The scope is so different that most teams either buy one or buy neither.
Can I use both?+
Yes; EmailAnalytics for manager reporting, Mailtrack for per-send tracking. Some teams do this.
Want the third-option breakdown?
Outsolvi covers Outlook + Gmail natively, exposes Tier 1 to 5 confidence scoring on opens, and includes AI reply sentiment at the $7/user/mo yearly base tier. 14-day free trial, no credit card.
Start 14-Day Free TrialDeeper resources for each tool
Compare each tool against Outsolvi directly, see ranked alternatives, or read the migration guide.
Related comparisons and research
Other head-to-heads, comparison pages, glossary entries, and ranked lists on the same tools and topics.
Nate built Outsolvi after watching every email-tracking tool he had ever used lie to him about opens. Outsolvi runs Tier 1 to 5 confidence scoring on every open, native in Outlook and Gmail, so the number on the dashboard is one a rep can actually act on.
We update these pages when the underlying mechanics change. new mailbox-provider rules, new tracker behavior, new measurement gaps. The dates above are real revisions, not auto-touches.