Is the 2027 vendor consolidation wave killing best-of-breed point solutions for RevOps?
Direct Answer
No, the 2027 vendor consolidation wave is not killing best-of-breed point solutions for RevOps — it is redefining their role. While large platforms like Salesforce and HubSpot are aggressively bundling AI-native features (e.g., predictive lead scoring, conversation intelligence) to reduce the need for standalone tools, best-of-breed solutions still win in three specific zones: deep workflow automation, specialized AI models for vertical use cases, and data integrity across fragmented stacks.
The real shift is that point solutions must now prove they integrate seamlessly into a consolidating ecosystem — or they get replaced by platform-native features. The 2027 reality is a hybrid model: a core platform (Salesforce or HubSpot) plus 2–3 best-of-breed tools for high-value, hard-to-replicate capabilities.
The 2027 RevOps Reality: Consolidation ≠ Elimination
The vendor consolidation wave of 2025–2027 is real. Gartner reported in late 2026 that 58% of enterprises with 500+ employees reduced their RevOps tool count by at least 30% over the prior 18 months, driven by budget pressure, AI feature bundling, and the desire for unified data.
But this is not a binary "platform vs. Point solution" war. It is a layered optimization where RevOps leaders are asking: *"Which capabilities are truly differentiated enough to justify a separate vendor?"*
Where Platforms Are Winning
The major platforms — Salesforce (with Einstein GPT and Data Cloud), HubSpot (with Breeze AI and Operations Hub), and Microsoft Dynamics 365 (with Copilot) — have absorbed several previously standalone functions:
- Lead scoring and routing → Native AI models in Salesforce and HubSpot now match or exceed legacy point solutions like Leadspace or Lusha for most B2B use cases.
- Basic conversation intelligence → Gong and Chorus (ZoomInfo) still dominate, but Salesforce's Einstein Conversation Insights and HubSpot's call transcription are good enough for 70% of SMBs.
- Reporting and dashboards → Tableau (Salesforce) and HubSpot's custom report builder have killed demand for standalone BI tools like Domo in RevOps contexts.
Where Best-of-Breed Survives and Thrives
Best-of-breed point solutions are not dead — they are concentrating into three high-value niches:
- Deep workflow automation – Tools like Workato and Tray.io (now part of Celonis) handle complex multi-system orchestration that Salesforce Flow or HubSpot Operations Hub cannot manage at scale. For example, syncing Salesforce opportunities with a custom CPQ tool, a Slack channel, and a data warehouse like Snowflake.
- Specialized AI models – Gong for revenue intelligence (not just call transcription, but deal risk scoring and competitive intel) and Clari for revenue forecasting (using time-series AI that Salesforce's native forecasting cannot replicate). These tools own the "last mile" of AI that platform vendors cannot easily commoditize.
- Data quality and enrichment – ZoomInfo and Lusha remain essential because they solve a problem platforms refuse to own: keeping contact and account data clean across multiple CRMs and marketing automation tools. HubSpot's native enrichment is improving, but for enterprises with 100k+ contacts, ZoomInfo's API-first approach still wins.
The Decision Tree: When to Keep a Point Solution
Use this flowchart to decide whether a best-of-breed tool survives consolidation in your stack:
Real example: A mid-market SaaS company using Outreach for sales engagement and SalesLoft for sequencing. In 2027, both Salesforce and HubSpot have native sequence tools with AI-powered send-time optimization. The decision tree says: *If Outreach's multi-channel cadence engine (email + LinkedIn + phone) is used by 90% of reps and reduces ramp time by 40% over the native tool, keep it.
If not, switch.*

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The Consolidation Loop: How Platforms Eat Point Solutions
This is the repeating pattern that defines the 2027 market:
Case in point: Clari started as a forecasting tool. In 2025, Salesforce launched Einstein Forecasting with pipeline inspection and AI predictions. Clari responded by doubling down on revenue execution — not just forecasting, but deal-level risk scoring, call-to-forecast correlation, and customer health signals.
By 2027, Clari's revenue per customer grew 35% year-over-year because it became the "AI layer" on top of Salesforce, not a replacement for it.
The Buying Committee Effect on Vendor Choice
In 2027, RevOps buying decisions are no longer made by a single VP. Gartner estimates the average B2B buying committee now includes 11 people, up from 6 in 2020. This changes the consolidation calculus:
- CFO wants fewer vendors to reduce license costs and audit complexity.
- CRO wants best-in-class tools that give reps an edge (e.g., Gong for deal coaching).
- CIO wants platform consolidation to reduce security risks and integration headaches.
- RevOps Director wants the stack to "just work" — meaning they prioritize tools with native Salesforce or HubSpot connectors over those requiring custom API work.
The result: point solutions must now sell to a committee, not a champion. Tools that cannot demonstrate ROI across three stakeholder groups (e.g., cost savings for CFO, productivity for CRO, data hygiene for CIO) get cut.
The AI-Funnel Integration Challenge
AI in the funnel is not a 2027 novelty — it is table stakes. But the consolidation wave is creating a new problem: AI model fragmentation. If your lead scoring AI is in HubSpot, your forecasting AI is in Clari, and your conversation AI is in Gong, you get conflicting predictions. For example:
- HubSpot scores a lead as "hot" based on email engagement.
- Clari's forecast says the deal is at risk based on stalled pipeline.
- Gong's analysis shows the buyer is asking for a competitor comparison.
Without a unified data layer, these AI outputs contradict each other. This is where best-of-breed tools that offer a "single source of truth" for AI predictions win. Clari's Revenue Data Platform and Gong's Revenue Intelligence Hub both now ingest data from Salesforce, HubSpot, and Outreach to create a unified prediction.
In 2027, the best-of-breed survivor is the one that *aggregates AI signals*, not just generates them.
FAQ
How do I know if my current point solution will be killed by platform consolidation? Look at the platform vendor's roadmap. If Salesforce or HubSpot has announced a feature that matches 70%+ of your point solution's core function, plan for a 12–18 month migration. If the point solution has a strong data moat (e.g., Gong's 10+ years of call data) or deep vertical integration (e.g., Workato's 1,000+ connectors), it is safer.
Can I still use best-of-breed tools if my company is on a strict budget? Yes, but only for the top 2–3 revenue-impacting processes. For most companies, that means one AI tool (Gong or Clari) and one data quality tool (ZoomInfo or Lusha). Everything else should be platform-native to save costs.
What happens to small point solution vendors in 2027? They either get acquired by a platform (e.g., Salesforce buying Airkit for customer service automation) or pivot to a micro-vertical (e.g., a forecasting tool built exclusively for manufacturing companies). The "generalist" point solution is dead.
Does consolidation improve data quality or make it worse? Initially, it makes it worse — consolidating tools often breaks data pipelines. But over 12–18 months, a well-executed consolidation improves data quality by reducing sync errors. The key is using a middleware like Workato to manage the transition.
Should I switch from Salesforce to HubSpot to avoid consolidation complexity? No. The consolidation wave affects both platforms equally. The choice between Salesforce and HubSpot should be based on company size and complexity (Salesforce for enterprises with 200+ users, HubSpot for mid-market).
Switching platforms mid-consolidation wave is risky and rarely saves money.
How does AI in the funnel affect the consolidation decision? AI is the primary driver of consolidation — platforms bundle AI features to reduce the need for point solutions. But AI also creates new best-of-breed opportunities: specialized AI models for specific funnel stages (e.g., forecasting, churn prediction) that platforms cannot match.
Bottom Line
The 2027 vendor consolidation wave is not killing best-of-breed point solutions — it is forcing them to become hyper-specialized or die. RevOps leaders should keep a core platform (Salesforce or HubSpot) and add exactly 2–3 best-of-breed tools for high-ROI, hard-to-replicate capabilities like revenue intelligence (Gong), forecasting (Clari), and data enrichment (ZoomInfo).
The winners in this hybrid model are the tools that integrate deeply, aggregate AI signals, and prove ROI to a buying committee — not just a single VP.
Sources
- Gartner: "Vendor Consolidation in RevOps: 2025–2027 Trends"
- Forrester: "The Hybrid RevOps Stack: Platform + Point Solutions"
- McKinsey: "AI in B2B Sales: The Consolidation Imperative"
- Gong Labs: "Revenue Intelligence in the Platform Era"
- SaaStr: "Why Best-of-Breed Survives in a Consolidating Market"
- Bessemer Venture Partners: "The 2027 RevOps Stack: Platform First, Point Second"
- Salesforce Blog: "Einstein GPT and the Future of Revenue Operations"
- HubSpot Blog: "Breeze AI: Consolidating the RevOps Stack"
- Clari Blog: "Revenue Data Platform: The AI Layer for Salesforce"
- Workato Blog: "Middleware as the Glue in a Consolidating Stack"
*Is the 2027 vendor consolidation wave killing best-of-breed point solutions for RevOps? No, it is redefining them — and the survivors will be hyper-specialized, AI-native, and platform-complementary.*
