Salesmate vs KIMISUITE
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Salesmate ships at a slow drumbeat with Sandy AI as its most directional move.
Salesmate's release cadence is sparse — roughly one update every couple of months — and most entries are small UX or workflow tweaks rather than platform changes. The most directionally significant move in the last year was Sandy AI, which folded an assistant for scheduling and summarization into the CRM. Recent work has tightened the existing surface: knowledge base consolidation, surveys, mobile navigation, name-field customization.
Salesmate is positioning as a quietly maturing all-in-one CRM rather than chasing a dominant trend. AI is being added narrowly (scheduling, summarization) rather than as a full agentic layer. Mobile and data-quality work suggest the priority is making the current product stickier for existing teams, not breaking into new categories.
Expect Sandy AI to expand further into deal-stage automation or pipeline summaries within the next two quarters, since that is the obvious next step from chat/email summarization. The slow cadence likely continues unless competitive pressure forces a step change.
Small all-in-one suite leaning on content marketing more than product news.
KIMISUITE is a small all-in-one business platform split across hospitality (Booking Hub) and CRM (Business Hub) with a connected App Store. The feed is overwhelmingly content marketing — hotel metrics primers, e-invoicing explainers, OTA-dependency posts — with a single substantive monthly product update covering new applications, guest communication features in Booking Hub, AI-powered support in the CRM, and App Store changes.
The platform is expanding modularly (Booking Hub, CRM Business Hub, App Store) while positioning itself as a transparent-pricing alternative to vendors who gate features behind module add-ons. AI appears as a CRM support helper rather than a headline bet. The hotel-software wedge — "become independent from Booking.com" — reads as the sharpest GTM angle but is still mostly aspirational copy.
Expect more vertical-specific content (hospitality, then likely restaurants or small retail) and incremental App Store applications, rather than directional product change.
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