Senja vs Pardot
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Testimonial platform consolidates its surface and extends it to AI agents via MCP.
Senja is a small (3-person) testimonial collection and presentation tool serving 3,000+ paying customers. Recent work moves across two themes: stitching the product surface into a single coherent flow — Forms 2.0 unification, native Slack notifications replacing Zapier — and exposing the entire testimonial database to AI agents via a first-party MCP server.
The big bet is becoming part of the AI-native marketing stack — letting Claude and any MCP client search, filter, and create testimonials and grab embed codes for any Senja asset. Alongside, the team is consolidating accumulated dual-track product surfaces and pulling third-party glue into native integrations. Both moves point at scale: one unlocks new distribution, the other reduces support load before growth.
Expect deeper MCP capabilities — generating sizzle reels or case studies from a Claude prompt — and continued migration of features that previously lived in Zapier or Make into native integrations. The hiring of a Customer Success Lead suggests a near-term push from 3K to 10K paying customers, so feature work will likely tilt toward retention and team-collaboration polish.
Pardot's Summer '26 release shows the bridge to Marketing Cloud Next is being built feature by feature.
The substantive signal in this window is the Salesforce Summer '26 release for Marketing Cloud Account Engagement (the artist formerly known as Pardot): consent data now syncs between Account Engagement and Marketing Cloud Next via static public list mapping, plus expanded email capabilities (CC recipients, archiving) inside Marketing Cloud Next. The rest of the captured feed is broken scrapes of Salesforce help pages - mostly CSS errors and JavaScript exceptions.
Salesforce is gradually wiring Pardot into Marketing Cloud Next rather than sunsetting it abruptly - consent sync and shared email primitives are the kind of integrations that smooth a long-running migration. Expect each seasonal release to add another shared object (subscriptions, audiences, journeys, attribution) until the practical difference between the two products narrows. The ingestion problem on the source side is severe; most product-relevant context is buried under broken page captures.
Next likely beats: shared audience and segmentation primitives between Account Engagement and Marketing Cloud Next, plus journey-stitching across both. On data quality, the Salesforce help center scraping needs a different ingestion approach - likely the official release-notes RSS or PDF rather than the JS-rendered help portal.
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