CRM at $50-$150 per seat
Pipeline, accounts, opportunities, contact management. Often the largest line item per user.
Stack pattern
If you're paying per seat for CRM, per seat for marketing automation, per seat for sales engagement, and per seat for AI insights on top of all of it, you're paying for the integration drag as much as the software. This is the consolidation pattern.
What this stack usually looks like
Operators rarely set out to build this stack. It accretes one purchase at a time, each justified at the time, until the integration drag is the dominant cost.
Pipeline, accounts, opportunities, contact management. Often the largest line item per user.
Lead capture, nurture sequences, attribution. Frequently a separate tool with its own integration project.
Outreach sequencing, conversation tracking, dialer overlays. Yet another login.
Dashboards, forecasting, AI insights. Increasingly bundled as a premium upcharge on the underlying CRM.
What consolidation changes
Consolidating this stack is not just a cost question. It changes how revenue operations actually work day to day, because the seams between tools were where most of the operational drag lived.
User, role, and audit are the same across pipeline, marketing, engagement, and analytics. SSO is structural, not a feature.
A lead becomes an opportunity becomes a forecast becomes a dashboard without four integration partners managing the seams.
Lead scoring, drafting, summarization, and forecasting are part of the platform. No per-seat AI surcharge.
Get a compatibility check
A free written assessment of what would replace what, what migration looks like, and what the math actually changes. Two business days for the response.