HubSpot

  • Salesloft

    Salesloft is a sales engagement platform acquired by Vista Equity Partners in 2024 for approximately $2.3 billion, following several years of consolidation pressure in a category increasingly commoditized by lower-cost alternatives. Originally a pioneering tool in the sales engagement space alongside Outreach, Salesloft built its reputation on cadence management, call recording, and deal intelligence for enterprise and mid-market sales teams. Post-acquisition, Vista has repositioned Salesloft as an AI-first revenue platform under the “Rhythm” product branding — an AI-driven workflow engine that surfaces next-best-action recommendations for sellers based on deal signals, conversation intelligence, and engagement history. The repositioning is directionally correct for the category but has created execution risk: Salesloft is simultaneously managing a significant product re-architecture, a cultural transition to PE ownership, and competitive pressure from both above (enterprise CRMs adding native engagement features) and below (Smartlead and Instantly capturing mid-market cold email at a fraction of Salesloft’s price point). As of May 2026, Salesloft is bleeding mid-market accounts to Smartlead for cold email infrastructure while attempting to move upmarket toward the AI revenue intelligence positioning where Gong remains the incumbent leader. The strategy is coherent but not yet conclusively executed.

  • Expandi

    Expandi is a LinkedIn automation tool founded in 2018 that was an early leader in cloud-based LinkedIn outreach, allowing users to run connection campaigns, message sequences, and InMail outreach from a persistent cloud session rather than a browser extension. Bootstrapped throughout its history, Expandi was the go-to LinkedIn automation tool for agencies and consultants through roughly 2022-2023, but has ceded significant market share to HeyReach and Lemlist’s LinkedIn layer since 2024. The platform targets individual operators and small agencies who need basic LinkedIn automation without the multi-account management complexity of HeyReach. Pricing is a flat $99 per month per account — a simple, predictable structure that works for solo practitioners but scales poorly for agencies managing multiple client LinkedIn identities, where HeyReach’s model becomes materially cheaper per seat. As of May 2026, Expandi remains a functional tool with a loyal existing user base, but its product roadmap has not kept pace with the agency-first features that define the current competitive standard. The core use case — automating LinkedIn connection requests and message sequences from a single account — is well-executed, but the market has moved toward multi-account management and deep sequencing tool integrations that Expandi has been slow to match.

  • 11x

    11x builds AI sales development representatives — Alice (outbound email and LinkedIn) and Mike (inbound call handling) — designed to operate as autonomous agents rather than workflow automation. The company raised a $20M Series A from Benchmark in mid-2024 at a reported $50M valuation, generating significant press. That press cycle was followed by a difficult 2025 in which multiple customers and former employees publicly alleged inflated ARR figures, rapid churn, and gap between demo performance and production reliability. As of April 2026, 11x is a company with a compelling product vision and serious execution credibility questions.

  • Gong

    Gong is the conversation intelligence and revenue intelligence platform that defined its category, having reached a peak valuation of approximately $7.25 billion in its 2021 Series E raise backed by Franklin Templeton, Coatue, and Sequoia. The platform records, transcribes, and analyzes sales calls and emails, surfacing deal risk signals, coaching opportunities, and competitive intelligence across the revenue organization. Backed by SoftBank and Sequoia among others, Gong became the default enterprise answer to the question of what actually happens in sales conversations and how to replicate top-performer behaviors at scale. Since the 2021 peak, Gong’s valuation has been flat against a broader SaaS multiple compression — the company has not achieved a public listing despite long-rumored IPO intentions, and secondary market trades suggest current valuation is materially below the $7.25B peak. As of May 2026, Gong remains the category standard for conversation intelligence at enterprise scale, with no direct competitor having displaced it in the upmarket segment despite Chorus’s ZoomInfo integration, Clari’s expansion into the space, and multiple AI-native entrants targeting the mid-market. The platform’s data moat — years of sales conversation data training its AI models — is the structural differentiation that keeps Gong ahead of competitors who are building features but not catching up on model quality.

  • Outreach

    Outreach is the sales engagement incumbent — the platform that effectively invented the modern SDR sequencing category and held the top position through the enterprise adoption wave of 2016–2021. The company raised approximately $489M in total funding, peaked at a $4.4B valuation in 2021, and has since navigated a painful recalibration as the market it created got disrupted by cheaper, faster, AI-native competitors. Outreach acquired Sameplan (deal execution software) in 2024 and launched Kaia, its AI sales assistant, as the centerpiece of an AI-first repositioning. As of April 2026, Outreach is a platform with genuine enterprise depth fighting a two-front war: defending against Salesloft from above and Smartlead and Instantly from below.

  • ZoomInfo

    ZoomInfo is the data incumbent that built the enterprise B2B contact and company database category, went public on Nasdaq in 2020 (ticker: GTM), and has spent the years since defending its position from Apollo’s aggressive PLG expansion and Clay’s waterfall enrichment architecture. The company acquired Chorus.ai in 2021 for $575M to add conversation intelligence, and has continued building toward a full go-to-market platform. As of April 2026, ZoomInfo has the deepest enterprise data asset in the category — particularly for direct dials and intent signals at the Fortune-5000 level — but its price-to-value ratio versus Apollo has never been harder to justify for companies under $100M in revenue.