The best Ethnio alternative for most teams is Great Question. Here's how it compares to eight others across recruitment, study execution, incentives, and a research repository.

The best Ethnio alternative is Great Question. It does everything Ethnio does, plus the parts Ethnio doesn't: panel management from your own CRM, study execution across every research method, global incentive payouts, and an AI-powered research repository. All in one platform, with proven results at ServiceNow (118 → 6 days recruitment) and Intuit ($580K saved, 10K → 100K interviews per year).
Eight other platforms are listed below. Most are point tools that cover one slice of the research workflow. Read on if you want the comparison logic before you shortlist.
If you're scanning, here's the short version.
Pick Great Question. It's the only platform on this list that replaces Ethnio and the four tools most teams use around it. Recruit from your CRM, run any study type, pay incentives in 80+ countries, store findings in an AI repository, and run research directly from Claude Code, Cursor, ChatGPT and more with our MCP. One contract, one login.
Pick something else only if you have a narrow, single-method use case
If "only" doesn't describe your team, Great Question is the consolidation play.
Ethnio still owns one job. Intercepts catch users in context, and nothing on the market does that better. The problem is everything else that surrounds a modern research workflow.
Ethnio's own math: roughly 10 participants per 50,000 page views. Great at Netflix scale. For a B2B SaaS with 12,000 monthly sessions, you'll fill three panels a quarter and run out.
A modern research team pulls from a CRM, a panel of past participants, a vendor pool, and sometimes an outside agency. Ethnio handles intercepts cleanly. The other sources need extra tools.
Most Ethnio shops also run a separate scheduling tool, a separate incentive vendor, a separate repository, and a separate unmoderated testing platform. Four contracts. Four logins. Four places where the participant record looks slightly different.
G2 reviews are consistent: the panel features bigger teams want are gated behind the higher plans, and the lower plans don't have what research ops actually needs. Inflexible packaging is the single most common complaint.
The pitch: One platform for the entire research workflow.
What it does: Recruit from your own CRM, your GQ panel, or external vendors using the same screener, scheduling, and incentive flow. Run moderated interviews, unmoderated studies, surveys, prototype tests, card sorts, and tree tests in one place. Pay participants in 80+ countries through the Tremendous integration. Store transcripts, clips, and insights in a repository the whole company can search with AI.
Proof:
Where it's not the right fit: Single researcher running occasional intercepts on a high-traffic consumer site.
Best for: Research, product, and design teams running regular research who want to consolidate participant recruitment, study execution, incentives, and a repository into one platform. Strong fit for teams that need to recruit from their own customer base, and who want to infuse AI with research.
How Great Question compares to Ethnio side by side
The pitch: A recruitment marketplace with 1.5M+ public panel participants.
What it does well: The panel is the product. Need early childhood educators in Texas? They have them and they respond. Solid screener builder, responsive support, plans that flex well for smaller teams.
Where it falls short:
Best for: Teams that mostly need a paid panel and already have execution and analysis covered elsewhere.
The pitch: Participant CRM and panel management for in-house research teams.
What it does well: Ethnio's panel features without the rest of Ethnio. Custom roles, team workspaces, Salesforce and Snowflake integrations, governance controls that hold up when seven different PMs are touching the same panel.
Where it falls short: Won't run your studies. You'll still need separate tools for unmoderated testing, surveys, and a repository. Net tool count: same or worse.
Best for: Mature research ops teams that want best-of-breed infrastructure and already have execution and analysis tools they're not willing to replace.
The pitch: Original unmoderated testing platform plus a large contributor panel.
What it does well: Mobile testers and consumer demographics. Need 30 verified iPhone users in 72 hours? Fastest path. Mature video-first analysis.
Where it falls short: Recruiting from your own users is awkward. Packaging skews to enterprise commitments. The platform pushes you toward their panel, which is good if you want it and a problem if you don't.
Best for: Consumer-facing teams whose primary method is unmoderated mobile usability testing on a paid panel.
The pitch: A recruiting marketplace for B2B professionals and hard-to-reach audiences.
What it does well: Panel skews professional. Strong reach into CTOs, CFOs, healthcare workers, IT decision-makers. Vetting is solid, no-show rates reasonable, screener tools good enough.
Where it falls short: It's a marketplace, not a platform. Doesn't own the rest of your stack. Incentives for senior B2B titles need to be sized accordingly.
Best for: Teams that need to interview specific B2B professionals or specialized roles you can't get from your own customer base.
The pitch: A research ops platform with recruitment, study execution, and analysis bundled.
What it does well: Covers more of the workflow than the marketplace-only tools. Drag-and-drop study builder approachable for non-researcher PMs. Strong presence in Australia, UK, and parts of Asia.
Where it falls short: Smaller North American panel than User Interviews. AI-powered analysis is less mature than what Great Question and a few others ship.
Best for: Mid-market teams running international research that want bundled recruitment and execution without a full repository.
The pitch: Diary study and mobile ethnography on a recruited panel.
What it does well: Watching how people use something across a week, not a single 30-minute session. The mobile app makes diary studies, in-the-moment captures, and longitudinal research feel native.
Where it falls short: Method-specific. If 80% of your work is moderated interviews and unmoderated tasks, you're over-investing in a method you barely use. Recruitment is panel-based.
Best for: Teams running diary studies, longitudinal research, or in-the-moment mobile capture as a core method.
The pitch: Unmoderated testing and surveys focused on rapid validation.
What it does well: Speed. Build a prototype test, ship it, see results in hours. The unmoderated UX is one of the most approachable on the market. Heatmaps, time-on-task, and conversion funnels baked in.
Where it falls short: Limited moderated interview workflows. Basic repository. Panel option exists but most teams bring their own audience.
Best for: Teams validating design decisions quickly with unmoderated tests on prototypes (Figma, Adobe XD, live URLs).
The pitch: Lightweight unmoderated testing for quick design feedback.
What it does well: Five-second tests, preference tests, card sorts, short surveys. Fast to set up. Panel access for fresh eyes on a design.
Where it falls short: Deliberately narrow. Doesn't manage participant CRMs, run moderated interviews, or store transcripts. End-to-end research teams outgrow it fast.
Best for: Design teams running lightweight unmoderated tests on their own, often alongside heavier platforms.
Four questions, in order. Answer them and the shortlist shrinks fast.
If "where do we store findings" is currently Google Drive, Notion, or Dovetail and the answer feels broken, the repository question matters a lot. Great Question bundles one natively. Most alternatives don't. Adding it later is expensive and the participant-to-finding handoff breaks first.
Add up what you'd actually need: recruitment, screening, scheduling, incentives, the testing platform, the repository, the analysis layer. If the count is more than two after you buy the new tool, you haven't solved consolidation. You've renamed it.
Teams that switch successfully pick the option that gets them to one or two tools. ServiceNow went from 15 tools to 7 by moving to Great Question. Run the math before you sign.
Great Question is the best Ethnio alternative for most teams. It covers the full research workflow (recruitment, study execution, incentives, repository) in one platform, where Ethnio is focused on intercept recruiting. Teams that switch typically consolidate 4-6 separate tools into Great Question.
Yes, for live website intercepts when you have the traffic volume to make them productive. Ethnio is still the best dedicated intercept tool. It's a weaker fit if you need a participant CRM, study execution, or a research repository, which are the gaps most switching teams cite.
For intercepts alone, nothing matches Ethnio one-for-one. For the broader job of participant recruitment and panel management, Great Question is the closest substitute that also covers study execution and incentive payouts. Rally is the closest substitute if you only want the CRM and panel piece.
An intercept tool like Ethnio captures users on your site or app and routes them into a screener and scheduling flow. A research platform handles the full workflow: recruiting from any source, running any study type, paying incentives, and storing findings. Intercepts are one input into a research platform, not a substitute for one.
Yes. Great Question includes a native research repository with AI-powered search across transcripts, clips, surveys, and notes. Most other Ethnio alternatives don't include one, so teams that need a repository end up adding Dovetail or a similar tool.
Most platforms support participant import via CSV, and several offer assisted migration for teams moving from Ethnio. Great Question's onboarding team handles migrations directly. Always confirm what gets imported (basic contact info vs. full screener history and incentive records) before signing, because the difference matters.
Look at User Interviews (panel-led) or Rally (CRM and panel management for in-house recruiting). Both are deliberately narrow and do that job well. The trade-off: you'll still need other tools for study execution, incentives, and storage.
The "best Ethnio alternative" depends on what specific job Ethnio is doing for you, and what jobs it isn't doing that you wish it was.
Using Ethnio as a single-purpose intercept tool and it's working? Don't move.
Using Ethnio plus four other tools to cover the parts it doesn't? That's the moment a platform starts to pay back.
Teams that move off Ethnio usually do it because the research operation got bigger and a single-purpose tool stopped being the right shape. Ethnio didn't get worse. The job around it got harder.
Want to see what a consolidated stack looks like? Recruitment from your own customers, every research method in one place, incentives in 80+ countries, AI repository included. Book a Great Question demo and we'll walk through what your team's setup would look like.