EmbedMyReviews vs Miget
Side-by-side comparison to help you choose the right product.
EmbedMyReviews
White-label reputation management software for agencies. Flat $99/mo, unlimited clients, local SEO, AI tools, and full branding control.
Miget
Deploy unlimited apps, databases, and workers on one fixed compute plan. No per-service billing—just pick your resources and build.
Visual Comparison
EmbedMyReviews

Miget

Overview
About EmbedMyReviews
EmbedMyReviews is white-label reputation management software built for agencies, consultants, and operators already serving local businesses. The platform gives agencies full branding control over review generation, AI-powered review responses, local SEO rank tracking, client reporting, and subscription billing under their own domain and brand. Unlike per-location platforms that penalise growth, EmbedMyReviews charges a flat $99/month for unlimited clients and unlimited locations. Agencies keep their margins clean whether they manage ten locations or two hundred. The platform includes Sales Intelligence for AI-powered prospect reports, a Local Search Grid for visual Google Maps rank tracking, AI Insights for review sentiment analysis, Search AI for monitoring visibility across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity, and 67+ review source integrations worldwide. Agencies in over 40 countries use EmbedMyReviews to deliver reputation management services under their own name.
About Miget
Miget – Stop paying per app. Start paying per compute.
Traditional PaaS platforms charge you for every app, database, and worker separately. Miget flips that model: pick a fixed compute plan, then deploy as many services as you want inside it.
- Unlimited apps, databases, and background workers per plan
- No per-service billing surprises
- Built on Kubernetes with full isolation between tenants
- Deploy from Git, GitHub, Registry with zero-config builds
- Managed PostgreSQL, Redis, and more
- Custom domains with automatic TLS
Whether you're running a single side project or a full production stack, you only pay for the compute you reserve—not the number of things you run on it.