Skip to main content

SugarCRM and sales-i reimagine sales intelligence in a sweet move

The news

Today, May 22 2024, SugarCRM and sales-i announced the acquisition of sales-i by SugarCRM. sales-i is leading provider of a revenue intelligence solution that helps businesses maximize their revenue and profitability. It targets at making sales professionals more efficient and effective by providing actionable insight into every customer, product and sale. 

The acquisition comes nearly a year after Sugar announced a partnership with sales-i to improve business-to-business (B2B) sales performance by delivering AI-powered revenue intelligence that leverages the data of a business's enterprise resource planning (ERP) system and CRM. This combination provides businesses with actionable insights that improve sales, marketing, service and support, resulting in greater revenue and higher levels of retention.

You can read the full announcement here.

The combination of SugarCRM and sales-i combines the detailed transactional data residing in ERP systems with the rich sales data in SugarCRM. According to the release information, his shall create an intelligent data hub enabling customers to successfully execute impactful sales strategies to improv revenue, maximize profitability and increase customer satisfaction.

In this combination, sales-i delivers the revenue intelligence, while SugarCRM delivers the CRM data; both of which are needed for a better sales enablement.

Together, SugarCRM and sales-i intend to deliver the most innovative intelligent account management solution in the marketplace by utilizing leading edge sales enablement technologies provided by both companies and the rich revenue intelligence capabilities provided by sales-i. 

The bigger picture

The market for CRM and CX solutions is crowded while only few vendors enjoy significant mindshare. And what is more, both terms, CRM and CX, get increasingly fuzzy as many vendors use them to endorse their own offerings. This results in oddities like a customer service software vendor claiming to have a “complete CX solution” or the term CRM used synonymously to sales force automation.

The same holds true for the term “platform”. Nearly every vendor claims to be a platform vendor – regardless of the breadth or width of the offering. And every single one of them is saying that the platform makes easier for employees and delivers better results for customers.

In addition, triggered by the enormous success of Open AI, every vendor jumped on the AI bandwagon – with most of them delivering more or less the same feature set.

The consequence is a cacophony. There is nearly too much noise to identify any signal. 

At the same time, customers start to look more into margin and profitability, which requires targeted solutions that are ready to run without a lengthy or complicated implementation program. 

For vendors this means that they need to increasingly concentrate on easy-to-implement business scenarios that deliver a fast return on investment. By nature, these business scenarios must work along and supporting, corporate value chains. Delivering to these business scenarios that show real business value, along with adequate and distinctive messaging, is one important way for vendors to get heard again.

My analysis and point of view

Why am I not surprised about this acquisition?

For one, the partnership has been deep. Second, the combination of SugarCRM and sales-i fulfills exactly the need for easy-to-implement and valuable business solutions that I described above.

Both, SugarCRM and sales-i share a focus on manufacturing industries and have a good standing partnership with a number of common customers. The short-term opportunities for SugarCRM lie in the ability to tap into the mutual other client base to increase its footprint, plus the ability to use sales-i as a door-opener to place SugarCRM in companies that run an ERP but not yet a sales-oriented CRM solution.

Implemented right – of which I do not have any doubts, the incorporation of sales-i into the SugarCRM fold also addresses one of the analytics weaknesses that SugarCRM has. While it is simple to create reports and to display them where it matters also in a graphical representation, the analytics system itself is fairly limited by being ‘in-module’. sales-i should give SugarCRM the capability to deliver more immediately useful, as it is directly actionable, analytics, along with the predictions and recommendations based on it. This complements and enhances what is currently available with Sugar Predict. The combination of Sugar Predict and sales-i does open up some interesting avenues for SugarCRM customers.

The longer-term benefits for both, SugarCRM as well as customers, lie within the data – and AI – realm. The combination of ERP- and CRM data allows for the far more specific and accurate identification of revenue potentials – and the way to realize these potentials. 

Having the ability to combine and use both ERP and CRM data natively is something that not many vendors can offer. Top of mind are actually only suite vendors and not CRM (or ERP) specialists. This ability sets SugarCRM quite apart from the CRM/CX competition, which is something that becomes increasingly important in a CRM/CX world that increasingly lacks differentiators, both functionally and messaging-wise.

Plus, given customers’ consents, there is a treasure-trove of data that can be used for additional services, including the comparison of a company vs. an industry or a sector. This could help businesses adding to existing strengths and mitigating weaknesses.

Lastly, SugarCRM now has now increased its ability to get out of the cacophony of vendors. There are now some ways to communicate and demonstrate actual business value that should help in lifting the “let the platform do the work” message to the next level.

This acquisition opens exciting prospects, not only in the short term. Kudos to both, the SugarCRM and the sales-i teams.


 

Comments

Last Year's Top 5 Popular Posts

You are only as good as your customer remembers

As you know, I am very interested in how organizations are using business applications, which problems they do address, and how they review their success. In a next instance of these customer interviews, I had the opportunity to talk with Melissa Gordon , Executive Vice President, Enterprise Solutions at Tidal Basin about their journey with Zoho. You can watch the full interview on YouTube. Tidal Basin is a government contractor that provides various services throughout the government space, including disaster response, technology and financial services, and contact centers. Tidal Basin started with Zoho CRM and was searching for a project management tool in 2019. This was prompted by mainly two drivers. First, employees were asking for tools to help them running their projects. Second, with a focus on organizational growth and bigger projects that involved more people, Tidal Basin wanted to reduce its risk exposure and increase the efficiency of project delivery. This way, the compa...

Sweet Transformation: Inside SugarCRM’s New Direction

Fresh from the 2025 SugarCRM Analyst Summit, waiting for my plane home, it is time to sort my thoughts. From Monday, 1/27 evening to Wednesday 1/29 in the morning we had some time jam packed with information and good conversations with SugarCRM execs, customers, and in between analysts. The main summit started with a bang, namely the announcement that industry icon Bob Stutz joins the SugarCRM board of directors , which is something that few of us, if any, had foreseen. This is exciting news.  With David Roberts , who succeeded Craig Charlton in September 2024, SugarCRM itself has a new CEO with a long time CRM pedigree.  As with every leadership change, this promises some change. Every new CEO evaluates what they see vs. where they want their company to go and then, together with the team, establishes and executes a plan to get there. Usually, this involves some change in the structure of the executive leadership team, too.  This is what happened and happens with SugarCR...

Data Wars: SAP Vs. Salesforce In The AI-Driven Enterprise Future

The past weeks certainly brought a lot of news, with SAP Sapphire and Salesforce's surely strategically timed announcement of acquiring Informatica , ranging at the top. I have covered both in recent articles. The enterprise software landscape is crackling with energy, and Artificial Intelligence (AI) is certainly the star of the show. It isn't anymore about AI as a mere feature; it's about AI as the strategic core of enterprise software. Two recent announcements underscored this shift: SAP's ambitious AI-centric vision that was unveiled at its Sapphire 2025 conference, and, arriving hot on its heels, Salesforce's agreement to acquire data management titan Informatica for $8 billion. Both signal an intensified battle for AI supremacy, where trusted, enterprise-wide data is the undisputed new monarch. Of course, SAP and Salesforce are not the only ones duking this one out. SAP's Sapphire Vision: An AI-Powered, Integrated Enterprise At its Sapphire 2025 event in ...

The CDP is dead – long live the CDP!

In the past few years, I have written about CDPs, what they are and what their value is – or rather can be. My definition of a CDP that I laid out in one of my column articles on CustomerThink is:  A Customer Data Platform is a software that creates persistent, unified customer records that enable business processes that have the customers’ interests and objectives in mind. It is a good thing that CDPs evolved from its origins of being a packaged software owned by marketers, serving marketers. Having looked at CDP’s as a band aid that fixes the proliferation of data silos that emerged for a number of reasons, I have ultimately come to the conclusion and am here to say that the customer data platform as an entity is increasingly becoming irrelevant – or in the typical marketing hyperbole – dead.  Why is that? There are mainly four reasons for it.  For one, many an application has its own CDP variant already embedded as part of enabling its core functionality. Any engageme...

CPQ, Meet Price Optimization: Your Revenue Lifecycle Just Got Serious

The news On October 1, 2025, Conga announced its intent to acquire the B2B business of PROS , following PRO’s acquisition by Thomas Bravo . At the same time, ThomaBravo and PROS announced that PRO’s travel business segment will be run as a standalone business . The bigger picture Revenue operations, revenue management and revenue lifecycle management have become a thing in the past years, as evidenced by the number of specialized companies that solve parts of the overall problem of optimizing revenue. It also got abused to some extent (e.g., surge pricing models) when the users of the corresponding capabilities consider optimizing being the same as maximizing. Reality check: It is not. While optimizing involves a bit of identifying how much a customer is willing to pay, it also involves the thought of repeat business, or in other words customer loyalty, even without a formal loyalty program. And that involves the customer experience, part of which the speed of creating a quote with mat...