Gumloop vs Optimove
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Gumloop Brain grounds agents in company knowledge as the platform races toward agent ops
Gumloop is a fast-shipping agent-automation platform, and its changelog is a steady stream of MCP connector growth, new model support, and agent-governance controls: credit thresholds, chat evaluations, per-agent analytics, and access requests. The standout in this window is Gumloop Brain, a permission-scoped company knowledge base that lets agents answer from real content across Drive, Notion, Slack, and Confluence with citations. Around it sit incremental wins: 160-plus new connectors, usage-based workflow billing, agent-owned credentials, and DocuSign and ClickUp connectors going GA.
The arc points squarely at enterprise-grade agent operations: grounding agents in company data, metering spend by token usage, adding per-agent analytics and credit governance, and widening the connector surface. Gumloop is positioning itself as the control plane for company agents rather than a workflow builder, with reliability and admin controls maturing release over release.
Expect Gumloop Brain to deepen with more sources and retrieval controls, and the usage-based billing shift to bring further spend-management and enterprise-tier features. The connector-and-model cadence will continue as table stakes.
Optimove is quietly building a loyalty-and-gamification platform out through its developer API.
Optimove's changelog is dominated by developer-facing API work, with a clear center of gravity: the Loyalty System API launched in May and has since gained level-claiming, calculated-reward missions, and a documented events schema. Around it sits routine maintenance — an SMS Unsubscribes V2, documentation corrections, and newly documented query parameters.
The loyalty and gamification surface is where Optimove is investing. In under two months the API went from a 20-endpoint v1 to supporting player-claimed rewards and dynamic, event-calculated missions — a move from static loyalty tiers toward programmable, real-time engagement mechanics. The rest of the API is in steady upkeep.
Expect the Loyalty System API to keep expanding — more event types, richer mission logic, and tooling to let customers build custom loyalty frontends on top of it.
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