Revenue enablement is entering one of the most consequential transformation periods we’ve seen since the function emerged. In our newly published Revenue Enablement Platform Landscape, Q1 2026, we examined 18 vendors and uncovered a market undergoing rapid maturity, consolidation, and reinvention. These changes are all fueled by the rise of agentic AI and the growing pressure on B2B organizations to orchestrate consistent, high‑quality buyer engagement at scale.
But beneath the buzz, one truth stands out: technology is racing ahead faster than most enablement teams can keep up.
Below, I share a few of the biggest takeaways from the research and what they mean for marketing, sales, and enablement leaders navigating an increasingly complex ecosystem.
AI Is Becoming Truly Agentic
The most significant market shift is the acceleration toward agentic AI, where platforms don’t just recommend actions but take them. Instead of telling a seller what content to share, the platform drafts the email, assembles contextual content, or surfaces deal‑specific insights based on signals from across the tech stack.
This evolution marks a fundamental shift in how sellers, and increasingly managers and enablers, engage with technology. Revenue Enablement Platforms (REPs) now:
Curate personalized buyer‑aligned content automatically
Provide adaptive learning, coaching, and role‑play simulations
Perform routine administrative tasks that have historically drained seller productivity
Emerging AI‑native players are accelerating this trend even faster, proving that you no longer need to be a legacy category leader to deliver sophisticated solutions.
The Real Challenge Is Organizational Readiness
Despite rapid capability advancement, the top barrier holding organizations back is not functionality. It’s readiness.
Enablement teams, which are historically under-resourced, now find themselves responsible for:
Managing data hygiene
Orchestrating AI agents
Coordinating content, training, and performance insights across functions
The promise of AI‑driven enablement is real, but only if organizations invest in the people and processes required to operationalize it. Teams lacking strategic alignment or a strong operational foundation risk falling into the “shiny platform trap,” switching vendors in search of a silver bullet that doesn’t exist.
The next generation of enablement leaders must bring:
Command of buyer‑ and seller‑centric insights
High “AIQ,” or the ability to understand and apply AI intelligently
Organizational influence to drive change beyond the sales function
Consolidation Is Rising, And So Are Disruptors
The market has rapidly consolidated through mergers and acquisitions as vendors race to build end‑to‑end platforms. Meanwhile, a parallel trend is unfolding: the emergence of nimble AI‑native challengers.
This dual‑track evolution creates a split market dynamic:
On one side:Large, full‑stack platforms are competing to become the unifying sales productivity hub, integrating content, learning, analytics, and buyer engagement into a seamless experience.
On the other side:Lightweight point solutions are winning frustrated customers by offering simplicity, speed, and targeted value without the overhead of complex, enterprise‑scale deployments.
What Leaders Should Do Next
2026 isn’t the year to buy more tools. It’s the year to make smarter, more strategic decisions about the ones you already have or plan to adopt. Based on the research, leaders should:
Anchor your evaluation in use cases – Start with the problems you need to solve: readiness gaps, content complexity, manager empowerment, contextual guidance, or buyer‑network engagement.
Assess your operational maturity honestly – The best platform will fail without data governance, cross‑functional alignment, and clear enablement ownership.
Look beyond the sales persona – Enablement value compounds when applied across customer‑facing and customer‑influencing roles.
Prepare your teams for AI orchestration – AI isn’t reducing enablement’s workload, but it is offering new capabilities and possibilities.
The Bottom Line
Revenue Enablement Platforms have matured into a strategic, AI‑driven operating layer that influences every buyer interaction and every seller capability. But technology alone won’t elevate enablement into the strategic discipline it’s poised to become.
Success now requires readiness, clarity of purpose, and the courage to rethink how your organization equips people to engage buyers on their terms.


















