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Conversational Shopping Trends

Conversations Are Becoming a Revenue Channel: The Data Proves It

Brands using AI-driven conversational commerce are seeing measurable gains in purchase rates, retention, and AOV. The data from 16,000+ ecommerce brands shows why conversation has become the new path to checkout.
By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • Customer journeys are collapsing to a single conversation. The traditional browse-and-buy journey is giving way to AI-guided shopping that moves from discovery to purchase in a single exchange.
  • 79% of brands say AI-driven conversational commerce has increased their sales and purchase rates.
  • AI-only influenced orders grew 63% in a single year, from 2.7 million in Q1 to 4.4 million in Q4.
  • Brands treating conversation as a revenue channel. They’re not just a support function, generating higher AOV, shorter buying cycles, and stronger retention.

The page-based shopping experience dominated for decades. Customers would search, browse, compare, abandon, get retargeted, return, and eventually buy (sometimes). 

That journey is no longer the only option.

Shoppers are turning to chat, messaging, and AI-powered tools to find what they need. Instead of clicking through product pages or reading static FAQs, they ask questions, have back-and-forth conversations, and get answers that move them closer to a purchase in real time. The path to checkout has changed, and the brands that recognize this are pulling ahead.

Read our 2026 State of Conversational Commerce Report to learn more about conversation commerce trends from 400 ecommerce decision-makers and 16,000+ ecommerce brands using Gorgias. 

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The shopping journey has collapsed into a single thread

The traditional shopping journey was a solo experience. A shopper had a need, searched for options, browsed across sessions, and eventually made a decision — often days later, after being retargeted multiple times. Support only entered the picture after the purchase.

Side-by-side comparison showing traditional page-based shopping with multiple steps and drop-offs versus a streamlined conversation-led journey with AI guidance and fewer friction points.

The conversation-led journey collapses that timeline:

  1. A shopper recognizes a need and starts a conversation via chat, messaging, or a search-triggered prompt
  2. An AI agent asks clarifying questions about preferences, budget, and constraints
  3. The AI provides personalized product recommendations in real time
  4. The shopper validates concerns about fit, compatibility, delivery, and returns, all inside the conversation
  5. The shopper completes the purchase directly within or immediately after that exchange
  6. The AI picks up the conversation post-purchase for order tracking and proactive support
  7. A human agent steps in only when the situation calls for it

What used to take days now takes minutes. Discovery, evaluation, and purchase happen in a single thread.

Conversation is a revenue strategy, not a support upgrade

79% of brands agree that AI-driven conversational commerce has increased sales and purchase rates in their business. When brands were asked to rank the highest-return areas:

  • 38% cited improved customer support efficiency
  • 23% pointed to higher customer retention and loyalty
  • 20% saw improved purchase rates

Those numbers reflect something important: the value of conversation compounds. Faster support reduces friction. Better retention raises lifetime value. More confident shoppers buy more often and spend more per order.

The brands seeing the biggest returns aren't just using AI to deflect tickets. They're using it to create one-to-one shopping experiences at scale.

What the data shows about AI-influenced orders

Looking at AI-only influenced orders across key verticals like Apparel and Accessories, Food and Beverages, Health and Beauty, Home and Garden, and Sporting Goods, the growth across a single year was significant. 

Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders increasing from about 2.7M in Q1 to 4.4M in Q4, with a small share influenced by AI.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders growing from about 753K in Q1 to just over 1M in Q4, with a small AI-driven portion.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders growing from about 2.05M in Q1 to 2.82M in Q4, with a small portion influenced by AI.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders increasing from about 651K in Q1 to 978K in Q4, with a minor AI contribution.
Quarterly bar chart showing conversations linked to orders rising from about 322K in Q1 to 509K in Q4, with minimal AI influence.

Across industries, ecommerce brands saw AI step into conversations, reduce shopper hesitation, and drive higher QoQ conversion rates. 

Learn more about AI-powered revenue generation in the full 2026 Conversational Commerce Report.

Why brands are making this a strategic priority

84% of brands say the strategic importance of conversational commerce is higher than it was a year ago. 82% agree it will be mainstream in their sector within two years.

Statistics showing 84% of brands increased the strategic importance of conversational commerce and 82% expect AI-driven conversational commerce to become mainstream within two years.

That shift is registering at the leadership level because of what conversational commerce does to the buying experience. Creating one-to-one touchpoints earlier in the journey drives higher AOV, shorter buying cycles, and stronger purchase rates. Shoppers who get real-time answers to their questions are more confident.

What this looks like in practice: TUSHY

TUSHY, known for eco-friendly bidets and bathroom essentials, is a useful example of what happens when you take conversational commerce seriously.

Bidets aren't an impulse purchase. Shoppers have real questions about fit, compatibility, and installation. Those questions used to go unanswered until the CX team could respond, often after the customer had abandoned the cart.

TUSHY used Gorgias's AI Agent and shopping assistant capabilities to automate pre-sales support. AI Agent engaged shoppers in real-time conversations, addressed their concerns directly, and built confidence at the moment of highest intent.

This resulted in a 190% increase in chat-based purchases, a 13x return on investment, and twice the purchase rate of human agents.

How to apply this to your strategy

You don't need to overhaul your entire operation to start seeing results. The most effective approach is to start where the impact is clearest and expand from there.

A few places to begin:

  • Pre-sales chat. Identify your most common pre-purchase questions (sizing, compatibility, shipping timelines) and ensure your AI can answer them confidently and promptly.
  • Product page engagement. Use proactive chat prompts triggered by page behavior to start conversations before shoppers leave.
  • Post-purchase follow-up. Let AI pick up the conversation after checkout with order updates and proactive support, reducing inbound volume and building trust.
  • Human escalation. Define clearly which situations require a human agent – complex issues, emotional exchanges, high-stakes decisions. 

Want to see the full picture of where conversational commerce is headed in 2026? Read the full report to explore the data, trends, and strategies shaping the next era of ecommerce.

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min read.
ai adoption trends

AI Is Table Stakes for Ecommerce: What the Data Tells Us About 2026

AI adoption in ecommerce has reached 96% in 2026, with use cases spanning support automation, personalization at scale, product discovery, and end-to-end operations.
By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • AI adoption is rapidly accelerating. 96% of ecommerce professionals now use AI in their roles, up from 69% in 2024.
  • AI has moved beyond support automation. Use cases have evolved into revenue generation, personalization, and logistics.
  • Brands are tying AI success to profit-and-loss outcomes. 60% of brands consider AOV a top indicator of AI effectiveness.  

A year ago, ecommerce brands were still debating whether AI was worth the investment. That debate is over. Today, nearly every ecommerce professional uses AI to do their job.

The shift isn't just about adoption. It's about what AI is used for and how brands measure its impact. Support automation was the entry point. Now, AI is embedded across the full operation, from product recommendations to inventory control to real-time shopping conversations.

In our 2026 State of Conversational Commerce Report, we break down trends on AI usage among 400 ecommerce decision-makers and 16,000+ ecommerce brands using Gorgias. 

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AI adoption has reached a tipping point

If we rewind 12 months ago, the industry was still split on AI. Some ecommerce professionals were excited, but most were still hesitant. In 2024, 69% of ecommerce professionals used AI in their roles. By 2025, that number reached 77%. In 2026, it hit 96%.

Ecommerce professionals using AI: 69.2% in 2024, 77.2% in 2025, and 96% in 2026.

The confidence numbers back it up. 71% of brands say they are confident using AI for ecommerce, and 73% are satisfied with its business impact. 

In early 2025, only 30% of ecommerce professionals rated their excitement for AI at 10/10. Today, zero percent of respondents describe themselves as hesitant about AI. 

Views on AI among ecommerce professionals: 33% say it’s transforming their business, 50% see steady improvements, 18% say it hasn’t delivered, and 0% remain hesitant.

AI use cases now span the full ecommerce stack

Using AI in ecommerce is not new. In fact, it dates back to the 1980s with the invention of algorithms and expert systems. And if you’ve ever leveraged similar product recommendations or chatbots, you’ve already integrated AI into your ecommerce stack. 

Modern AI is far more sophisticated. 

With the rise of agentic commerce and conversational AI, brands began leveraging AI agents to automate the processing of repetitive support tickets. That’s still happening today, but the scope has expanded beyond the support queue. 

AI use cases in ecommerce include customer support automation (96%), product recommendations (88%), tracking updates (69%), personalization (64%), inventory control (51%), dynamic pricing (36%), and order fulfillment (18%).

Ecommerce brands are deploying AI across every layer of their operation:

  • Customer support automation: 96%
  • Product recommendations: 88%
  • Automated tracking and status updates: 69%
  • Personalization: 64%
  • Inventory control: 51%
  • Dynamic pricing and discounting: 36%
  • Order fulfillment: 18%

When brands were asked which channels contribute most to their AI success, conversational channels dominated. Social media messaging led at 78%, followed by SMS at 70%, and website live chat at 51%. Shoppers want fast, personal conversations, and AI is the best way to deliver that at scale.

Learn more about AI adoption, perception, and use case trends in the full 2026 Conversational Commerce Report.

How AI is changing CX success metrics

For decades, customer support success meant fast response times and high satisfaction scores. Those are still important indicators of success, but leading brands are adding revenue-focused metrics to their dashboards.   

91% of brands still track CSAT as a measure of AI's impact. But 60% now include AOV as a top indicator, and higher-revenue brands earning $20M+ are focusing on metrics like total operating expenses, cost per resolution, incremental revenue, and one-touch ticket rate.

AI impact measured by 91% customer satisfaction, 60% average order value, and 43% resolution time.

AI can now start a conversation, ease customer doubts, sell, upsell, and recover abandoned carts in a single conversation. When you’re only measuring CSAT, you’re ignoring the real ROI of conversational AI investment. 

AI makes every conversational channel a storefront

Virtual shopping assistants now proactively engage shoppers, adapt to their needs in real time, and offer contextual product recommendations and upsells. When the moment calls for it, they can close the deal with a targeted discount. 

Gorgias brands using AI Agent's shopping assistant capabilities nearly doubled their purchase rates and converted 20–50% better than those using AI Agent for support only.

Orthofeet, the largest provider of orthopedic footwear in the US, is a concrete example of this in practice. Using Gorgias, they achieved:

  • 56% of support tickets automated in 2 months
  • Email response times down from 24 hours to 35 seconds
  • Double-digit revenue growth without adding headcount. 

What this means for your AI strategy

The data tells a clear story: AI has evolved beyond a tool for handling tier 1 support tickets. It’s a core part of your revenue generation strategy. 

57% of brands are already using AI for 26–50% of all customer interactions, and 37% expect that share to rise to 51–75% within the next two years. The brands building toward that range now are the ones who will have the operational advantage when it matters most.

The practical question isn't whether to invest in AI. It's where to focus first. Based on where brands are seeing the most impact, three priorities stand out:

  • Start with high-volume, low-complexity tickets. WISMO (where is my order) inquiries, return policy questions, and order status updates are where AI delivers the fastest return. Automate these first.
  • Expand into conversational channels. Social messaging and SMS are where AI is driving the most success right now.
  • Connect AI performance to revenue metrics. If you're only measuring CSAT and response time, you're missing half the story. Add AOV, conversion rate, and incremental revenue to your reporting.

Want to go deeper on the full 2026 conversational commerce trends? Read the complete report for data across every major AI use case in ecommerce.

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min read.
Conversational Commerce Trends

The State of Conversational Commerce: 5 Trends Reshaping Ecommerce in 2026

Explore 5 key trends from The State of Conversational Commerce Trends Report in 2026.
By Gabrielle Policella
0 min read . By Gabrielle Policella

TL;DR:

  • AI is resolving tickets, not just replying. AI now handles 31% of customer interactions for ecommerce brands, and that number is expected to nearly double within two years.
  • Every channel is becoming a storefront. Conversations are replacing the traditional browse-and-buy journey, with 79% of brands reporting sales from AI-driven interactions. 
  • AI is shortening the buying cycle. 93% of AI-influenced purchases happen within the first 48 hours of the conversation. 
  • CX teams are changing, not shrinking. Ecommerce brands are actively hiring for more technical roles to implement, coach, and maintain AI. 
  • The winning model is hybrid. AI handles volume and speed, while humans handle complexity and judgment. 

The way shoppers buy online has shifted and customers are at the center. 

They no longer want to scroll through product pages, dig through FAQs, or wait 24 hours for an email reply. They open a conversation, ask a specific question, and expect a useful answer in seconds. Brands that can’t deliver these experiences at scale are seeing customer hesitation turn into abandoned carts and lost revenue. 

This shift has a name: conversational commerce. It's the practice of using real-time, two-way conversations as your primary sales channel, through chat, AI agents, messaging apps, and voice. 

What started as an experiment for early adopters has become a key growth lever, with 84% of ecommerce brands treating conversational commerce as a strategic pillar this year vs. last year. 

Bar chart showing percentage of customer interactions handled by AI: 31% in 2025 and 47% within the next two years.

We surveyed 400 ecommerce decision-makers across North America, the U.K., and Europe to understand how conversational commerce and AI are reshaping the ecommerce landscape. These findings are complemented by aggregated and anonymized internal Gorgias platform data from 16,000+ ecommerce brands.

The State of Conversational Commerce in 2026 trends report breaks down all of the findings, including five key trends shaping the ecommerce landscape. 

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Trend 1: AI is table stakes for ecommerce and it’s no longer just about efficiency

A few years ago, adding an AI chatbot to your site that could provide tracking links and Help Center article recommendations was a differentiator. Today, it's table stakes. McKinsey found that 71% of shoppers expect personalized experiences, and 76% get frustrated when they don't get them. 

Right now, most ecommerce professionals use AI, with 93% having used it for at least 1 year. Enthusiasm is accelerating quickly, with only 30% of ecommerce professionals rating their excitement for AI at 10/10 in April 2025. Similarly, while AI adoption rose steadily year over year, it reached a clear peak in 2026.

Bar chart showing ecommerce professionals using AI: 69.2% in 2024, 77.2% in 2025, and 96% in 2026.

The use cases driving this adoption are practical and high-volume:

  • Order tracking and status updates
  • Returns, exchanges, and refund requests
  • Shipping FAQs and delivery estimates
Bar chart showing AI use cases across ecommerce: customer support automation (96%), AI product recommendations (88%), automated tracking updates (69%), AI personalization (64%), inventory control (51%), dynamic pricing (36%), and order fulfillment (18%).

These are the tickets that flood brands’ inboxes every day. AI agents resolve them instantly, without pulling teams away from conversations that actually require human judgment.

Explore AI adoption and use case data in more depth in the full report. 

Trend 2: Conversations are the new path to checkout

The traditional ecommerce funnel, visit site, browse products, add to cart, check out, is losing ground. Shoppers now discover products on Instagram, ask questions via direct message, and complete purchases without ever visiting a website.

Side-by-side comparison of page-based and conversation-led customer journeys, highlighting AI-driven real-time recommendations, proactive information, and post-purchase support within a single conversation.

Conversational AI is actively increasing revenue, with 79% of brands reporting that AI-driven interactions have increased sales and conversion in their business.

Bar chart showing percentage of customer interactions handled by AI: 31% in 2025 and 47% within the next two years.

The practical implication is that every channel is becoming a storefront. Creating personalized touchpoints with customers earlier in the journey, through proactive engagement, is impacting the bottom line. 

Read the full report to explore how AI conversions have increased QoQ by industry.  

Trend 3: AI is accelerating the purchase cycle

Pre-purchase hesitation is one of the biggest conversion killers in ecommerce. A shopper lands on your product page, has a question about sizing or compatibility, can't find the answer quickly, and leaves. That's a lost sale that had nothing to do with your product.

Conversational AI changes that dynamic. When a shopper can ask a question and get an accurate, personalized answer in real time, the friction disappears. 

Brands using Gorgias saw this play out at scale in 2025. When AI Agent recommended a product, 80% of the resulting purchases happened the same day, and 13% happened the next day. 

AI chat interface recommending apparel items based on cart contents, alongside statistic stating 93% of purchases occur within 48 hours of an AI agent’s recommendation.

Brands are further accelerating the buying cycle through proactive engagement. On-site features such as suggested product questions, recommendations triggered by search results, and “Ask Anything” input bars drove 50% of conversation-driven purchases during BFCM 2025. 

Explore how AI is collapsing the purchase cycle in Trend 3 of the report.

Trend 4: AI is making CX teams more technical 

There's a persistent narrative that AI is making CX teams redundant. The data tells a different story. 62% of ecommerce brands are planning to grow their teams, not cut them. But the scope of those teams is changing.

Bar chart of expected headcount changes over 12 months: 21% increase significantly, 41% increase somewhat, 28% stay the same, 9% decrease somewhat, and 1% decrease significantly.

New roles are emerging around AI configuration and quality assurance. Teams are investing in technical members to write AI Guidance instructions, develop tone-of-voice instructions, and continuously QA results. 

CX teams are also bridging the gap between support goals and revenue goals, as the two functions increasingly overlap.

Donut chart indicating 77% of companies report at least some convergence between support and sales functions due to AI.

The result is CX teams that are more technical than they were before. Agents who once spent their days answering repetitive tickets are now spending that time on higher-value work: complex escalations, VIP customer relationships, and improving the AI systems and knowledge bases that handle the volume.

Learn more about the evolution of CX roles in Trend #4. 

Trend 5: The future is hybrid: AI-first, humans when it counts

Despite increasing AI adoption, data shows that ecommerce brands shouldn’t strive for 100% automation. Winning brands are building systems in which AI handles repetitive tier-1 tickets, and humans handle complex, sensitive cases. 

Chart showing which inquiries are handled by AI vs. humans.

AI handles speed and scale. It resolves order-tracking requests at 2 a.m., processes return-eligibility checks in seconds, and answers the same shipping question for the thousandth time without compromising quality. 

Human agents handle conversations that require context, empathy, or decisions that fall outside the standard playbook. There are several topics where shoppers still prefer human support.

Bar chart showing customers prefer human support for order issues (54%), product advice (35%), and returns or refunds (24%).

Successful hybrid systems require continuous iteration, meaning reviewing handover topics, Guidance, and reviewing AI tickets on a weekly basis. 

Discover how leading brands are balancing human and AI systems in Trend #5. 

Where conversational commerce is heading by 2030

The 2026 trends are about expansion and standardization. The 2030 predictions are about what comes next.

Bar chart showing brand expectations by 2030: 89% expect AI voice purchasing, 29% expect AI multilingual support, and 19% expect proactive AI upsells and cross-sells.

Voice-based purchasing is the biggest bet on the horizon. Only 7% of brands currently use voice assistants for commerce, but 89% expect it to be standard by 2030. The vision is a customer who can reorder a product, check their subscription status, or manage a return entirely over the phone.

Proactive AI is the other major shift. Rather than waiting for a customer to reach out, AI will anticipate needs based on browsing behavior, purchase history, and where someone is in their relationship with your brand. Think of it as the digital equivalent of a sales associate who remembers what you bought last time and knows what you're likely to need next.

Explore where ecommerce brands are allocating their AI budgets in the full report. 

Start building your conversational commerce strategy today

The brands winning in 2026 are creating smart, scalable systems where AIhandles volume and humans handle nuance. They’re treating every conversational channel as an opportunity to serve and sell.

The data is clear: AI adoption is accelerating, customer expectations are rising, and the revenue impact of getting this right is measurable.

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min read.
Create powerful self-service resources
Capture support-generated revenue
Automate repetitive tasks

Further reading

Outlook Support New Editor

Outlook support & New editor

By
1 min read.
0 min read . By

We've been busy, but not deaf!

Last few months we got lots of feedback about our extension and found to our delight that most people are satisfied, but still a few recurrent issues came up:

  • The HTML/WYSIWYG editor sucks.
  • No support for Outlook.com.

We listened and now we're presenting:

  • A brand new editor
  • Support for outlook.com
  • More on the Rich-Text editor

WYSIWYG editors for the web are notoriously buggy and are just difficult to develop.

I have yet to see one that is bug free. There are few venerable editors that do a good job like TinyMCE, FKEditor or CKEditor.. but they are big and all have edge cases that break the intended formatting and add a lot of garbage html.

There are newer good quality editors in town such as Redactor. The one that got my attention and finally landed in Gorgias is this wonderful editor called which is super lightweight, uses modern content-editable (no i-frames) and 'just works' most of the time. That's not to say it's perfect, but it's good enough and I'm satisfied with it's direction in terms of development.

Enjoy it and as always send us bug-reports or feedback on: support@gorgias.com

No items found.

8 Best Yuma AI Alternatives for Ecommerce Brands

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Yuma AI charges per resolution, which gets expensive fast for high-volume stores
  • Most alternatives offer predictable monthly pricing and deeper Shopify integrations
  • Gorgias leads with native ecommerce AI that handles support and drives sales
  • Consider your order volume, channels, and tech stack when choosing
  • Setup time ranges from hours (Gorgias) to months (enterprise tools)

Yuma AI works well for basic ticket deflection, but many ecommerce brands outgrow its limitations quickly. The per-resolution pricing becomes unpredictable as you scale, and the focus on simple deflection misses opportunities to drive revenue through conversations.

The best alternatives offer subscription pricing, deeper ecommerce integrations, and AI that can both resolve tickets and increase sales. We've tested the top options to help you find the tool for your brand's needs.

What is Yuma AI for ecommerce support?

Yuma AI is an artificial intelligence tool that automatically responds to customer service emails for ecommerce brands. This means it reads incoming support tickets and tries to answer them without human help. The platform charges you each time it successfully resolves a customer inquiry, which they call per-resolution pricing.

The tool focuses on deflection rate, or the percentage of tickets handled entirely by AI. Yuma learns from your past customer conversations and help center articles to generate responses. When it can't handle a ticket, it passes the conversation to your human agents.

Why ecommerce brands look for Yuma AI alternatives

Brands start searching for alternatives when Yuma's limitations become clear. The biggest issues emerge as your business grows and your support needs become more complex.

Cost unpredictability: Per-resolution pricing sounds appealing until your ticket volume spikes. During Black Friday Cyber Monday or after a viral social media post, your support costs can double or triple overnight. You lose control over your monthly expenses.

Limited ecommerce actions: Yuma can answer basic questions but can't perform the actions your customers actually need. It can't cancel orders, process returns, or update shipping addresses. Your team still handles all the real work.

Channel gaps: Most customer conversations happen outside email. If your shoppers message you on Instagram, text you questions, or use live chat, Yuma can't help. You need separate solutions for each channel.

Setup complexity: Getting Yuma to understand your brand voice and policies takes weeks of training. You're paying for resolutions while the AI learns, often giving incorrect answers during the learning period.

8 Yuma AI alternatives, compared

Here's how the top alternatives compare to each other in terms of user, pricing, setup time, and Shopify compatibility.

Platform

Best for

Pricing model

Setup time

Shopify integration

Gorgias

Shopify brands wanting revenue + support

Subscription

Hours

Native

Zendesk AI

Large enterprises with complex needs

Per-agent + add-ons

Weeks

App-based

Intercom Fin AI

Proactive chat engagement

Per-agent + usage

Weeks

App-based

Ringly.io

Email automation focus

Per-resolution/subscription

Days

API

Freshdesk

Small businesses needing basics

Per-agent + tiers

Weeks

App-based

DigitalGenius

Enterprise custom workflows

Custom pricing

Months

API

Alhena AI

Simple ticket deflection

Per-resolution

Days

API

My AskAI

Basic chatbot needs

Subscription

Hours

Widget

The best Yuma AI alternatives for ecommerce brands

Each platform takes a different approach to AI customer service. Some focus purely on cost reduction, while others help you grow revenue through better conversations.

1. Gorgias

Gorgias is a customer service platform built specifically for ecommerce brands that sell on Shopify. This means every feature connects directly to your store data, orders, and customer information. The AI Agent doesn't just answer questions — it can take actions like processing returns, updating orders, and recommending products.

The platform treats customer service as a revenue driver, not just a cost center. Your AI can upsell customers, recover abandoned carts, and turn support conversations into sales opportunities. Everything happens in one unified inbox across email, chat, SMS, social media, and phone.

Gorgias integrates natively with Shopify, which means no complex API setup or data syncing issues. Your team can see order history, customer details, and take actions without switching between tools. The AI learns your brand voice quickly and starts resolving tickets within hours of setup.

Main features:

  • AI Agent that resolves tickets and drives sales
  • Native Shopify integration with real-time order data
  • Unified inbox for all customer channels
  • Revenue-focused automation and upselling tools
  • Self-service order tracking and returns

Ideal for:

  • Shopify brands processing high order volumes
  • Teams managing both support and sales conversations
  • Brands wanting fast implementation and quick results
  • Companies seeking predictable monthly costs

Pricing:

  • Subscription-based helpdesk with transparent tiers
  • AI Agent available as a flat monthly add-on
  • No surprise charges based on ticket volume

2. Zendesk AI

Zendesk serves companies across all industries, from airlines to banks to ecommerce. The AI features are add-ons to their core helpdesk platform. Zendesk AI can suggest responses to agents, categorize tickets automatically, and power basic chatbots.

The platform works well for large enterprises with dedicated IT teams and complex support workflows. However, the ecommerce-specific features require custom development or third-party apps. You'll need separate tools to handle order management, returns processing, and product recommendations.

Pricing:

  • Per-agent monthly subscription starting at $25 USD
  • AI features cost extra on top of base plans
  • Enterprise features require higher-tier plans

3. Intercom Fin AI

Intercom focuses on proactive customer engagement through live chat and messaging. Fin AI powers their chatbot, which can answer questions from your help center and knowledge base. The tool excels at starting conversations and qualifying leads before they reach your sales team.

Fin works well for pre-purchase questions and basic support, but lacks deep ecommerce functionality. You can't process orders, handle returns, or access detailed customer purchase history within the platform. Complex post-purchase issues require switching to other tools.

Pricing:

  • Seat-based subscription plus usage fees for AI resolutions
  • Costs increase with chat volume and AI usage
  • Multiple pricing tiers based on features needed

4. Ringly.io

Ringly.io focuses specifically on automating email support for ecommerce brands. The AI learns from your historical tickets to automatically respond to common questions. It positions itself as a direct alternative to Yuma with similar per-resolution pricing options.

Since Ringly only handles email, you'll need other solutions for chat, social media, and phone support. The tool also lacks the order management capabilities that modern ecommerce brands need. Your team still manually processes returns, cancellations, and order updates.

Pricing:

  • Per-resolution pricing similar to Yuma
  • Subscription options available for predictable costs
  • Pricing scales with ticket volume

5. Freshdesk (Freddy AI)

Freshdesk targets small and medium businesses across industries. Freddy AI can automate ticket routing, suggest responses to agents, and power basic chatbots. The platform offers good value for teams just starting with AI automation.

Like other general-purpose helpdesks, Freshdesk requires additional setup for ecommerce-specific workflows. The Shopify integration exists but doesn't provide the deep, native functionality that specialized platforms offer. You'll spend more time configuring and maintaining integrations.

Pricing:

  • Per-agent subscription with different AI features by tier
  • Entry-level plans include basic automation
  • Advanced AI requires higher-tier subscriptions

6. DigitalGenius

DigitalGenius targets large enterprises with highly complex support workflows. The platform integrates with existing CRM and helpdesk systems like Salesforce and Zendesk. It offers extensive customization options and can handle industry-specific requirements.

The complexity that makes DigitalGenius powerful also makes it overkill for most ecommerce brands. Implementation takes months and requires significant technical resources. The platform works better for companies with dedicated IT teams than for agile online stores.

Pricing:

  • Custom enterprise pricing based on requirements
  • Typically combines subscription and usage-based fees
  • Implementation and consulting costs are additional

7. Alhena AI

Alhena AI offers ticket deflection similar to Yuma, focusing on reducing the number of inquiries that reach your human agents. The tool sits on top of your existing helpdesk to intercept and answer common questions automatically.

Alhena shares Yuma's limitations around ecommerce functionality and per-resolution pricing unpredictability. It can answer basic questions but can't take the actions customers need, like processing returns or updating orders. You're still paying for each resolution while handling the complex work manually.

Pricing:

  • Per-resolution pricing model
  • Costs vary based on ticket volume
  • No subscription alternatives offered

8. My AskAI

My AskAI lets you create a simple chatbot based on your website content and help center articles. You can embed the widget on your site to answer basic questions automatically. The tool focuses on self-service rather than full support automation.

This works well for answering simple questions but can't handle complex ecommerce tasks. The chatbot can't access order data, process returns, or take any actions beyond providing information. It's a starting point for self-service, not a complete support solution.

Pricing:

  • Subscription-based with tiers by usage
  • Pricing based on number of questions and content sources
  • No per-resolution fees

How we evaluated Yuma AI alternatives for ecommerce

We tested each platform from the perspective of a growing ecommerce brand. Our evaluation focused on practical impact rather than feature lists. We looked at how quickly you can get value, how well the tools integrate with your existing stack, and what the true costs look like at scale.

Key evaluation criteria:

  • Ecommerce integration depth: Can the AI access order data and take actions, or just read information
  • Implementation speed: How quickly can you start seeing results without extensive setup
  • Pricing predictability: Whether costs remain stable as your business grows
  • Channel coverage: How many customer touchpoints the platform can handle natively
  • Action capabilities: Whether the AI can resolve issues completely or just provide information

What to expect when switching from Yuma AI

It's easy for teams to underestimate what happens when migrating from one tool to another. The transition period can impact response quality, workflows, and even customer satisfaction if not planned carefully.

AI retraining time

Tools like Yuma rely heavily on past conversations. When you switch, not all of that training carries over. Some platforms can start resolving tickets within hours, while others take weeks to reach acceptable accuracy.

Temporary performance dips

It’s common to see a short-term drop in automation rate or response quality during the first few days. Teams that phase rollout — keeping humans in the loop while AI ramps — avoid most of this risk.

Data and workflow migration

Macros, help center content, and policies don’t always transfer cleanly. Expect to rebuild or refine parts of your setup, especially if your workflows are complex.

Channel consolidation

If you’re moving from an email-only tool to a multi-channel platform, this is often the biggest unlock. It also requires rethinking how your team manages conversations across chat, social, and SMS.

The fastest transitions happen when the platform already understands ecommerce data like orders, returns, and customer history, not just conversation logs.

Related: When should you migrate helpdesks? 5 signs to watch out for

How to choose the right Yuma AI alternative for your tech stack

The right Yuma alternative depends on what your team needs and what kind of support experience you want to build. You don't have to compare every feature at once, just start with these four steps:

1. Decide what you need AI to do

Some tools are built to answer simple questions. Others can fully resolve support requests or even help drive sales.

If your main goal is to reduce ticket volume, a basic automation tool may be enough. If you need AI to handle actions like returns, order updates, or product recommendations, look for a platform with deeper ecommerce functionality.

2. Look at where your customers contact you

If most of your conversations happen over email, a narrower tool may work. But if your team also manages live chat, social media, and SMS, you’ll need a platform that supports those channels together.

The more your customer conversations are spread across channels, the more important it is to keep everything in one place.

3. Consider how well the platform fits your tech stack

Some tools require custom integrations and ongoing technical support. Others are easier to launch because they connect directly to platforms like Shopify.

If your team is lean, a tool with native ecommerce integrations will usually get you live faster and reduce maintenance over time.

4. Choose a pricing model that matches your growth

Per-resolution pricing can work at lower volumes, but it becomes harder to predict as your ticket count grows.

If your support volume changes often during launches, promotions, or peak season, a subscription model usually gives you more control over costs.

The best choice is the one that fits your current operations without limiting what your team can do next.

Pick an AI platform that scales with you

If you’re moving away from Yuma, decide first whether you need a standalone AI tool or a full helpdesk with built-in AI. Most growing ecommerce brands benefit from a unified platform that can both automate and take action across channels.

Gorgias combines automation with revenue-driving features, built specifically for ecommerce brands.

Still comparing options? See how the best AI helpdesk tools stack up.

Want to test it yourself? Start a free trial.

Prefer a walkthrough? Book a demo.

AI in Customer Service

AI in Customer Service: What Actually Works

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • AI in customer service uses chatbots, machine learning, and natural language processing to provide instant support and automate repetitive tasks
  • Key benefits include reduced response times, lower support costs, and improved customer satisfaction through 24/7 availability
  • Common use cases range from order tracking automation to intelligent routing and agent assistance tools
  • Implementation requires clear goals, data integration, and human oversight to maintain quality
  • The future points toward more autonomous agents and proactive support capabilities

Most ecommerce support teams hit the same ceiling: ticket volume grows faster than the team can scale.

AI in customer service changes that equation. It automates repetitive requests, reduces response times, and turns support into a channel that can influence revenue, not just cost.

In this guide, we’ll walk through what AI actually does in customer service, the use cases that drive results, and how to implement it step by step.

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What is AI in customer service?

AI in customer service is technology that automates and enhances support operations using machine learning and natural language processing. This means your support team can provide instant, accurate answers to common questions and intelligently route complex issues without manual effort.

Natural language processing (NLP) is the technology that helps computers understand human language. This allows conversational AI to understand what your customers mean, even when they don't use specific keywords.

The core components work together to create a seamless experience:

  • Intent detection: AI identifies what customers need from their messages
  • Automated responses: The system provides instant answers to common questions
  • Smart routing: Complex issues get sent to the right human agent
  • Cross-channel support: AI works across email, chat, SMS, and social media

Machine learning is what makes AI smarter over time. This means the system learns from every interaction and gets better at understanding your customers and resolving their issues.

Benefits of AI in customer service for ecommerce brands

For ecommerce brands, AI delivers measurable outcomes that directly impact your bottom line. You're not just adding technology — you're solving real business problems.

Instant response times mean your customers get answers immediately, even at 2 a.m. or during Black Friday rushes. No more waiting for your team to come online or catch up on tickets.

Cost reduction happens because AI handles repetitive inquiries automatically. You can scale support without scaling headcount, which means lower cost per contact and better margins.

Improved scalability lets you handle massive spikes in ticket volume during peak seasons. Your team stays focused on complex issues while AI manages the routine stuff.

Customer satisfaction improves when people get fast, consistent answers. AI doesn't have bad days or forget your return policy — it delivers the same quality response every time.

Your agents become more productive when they're not stuck answering "Where's my order?" for the hundredth time. They can focus on building relationships and solving complex problems that actually require human judgment.

Revenue generation happens when AI can recommend products, assist with checkout, and recover abandoned carts. Your support interactions become sales opportunities.

Explore real AI uses cases for ecommerce → 10 must-know AI Agent use cases for instant resolutions

AI in customer service examples and use cases

The real value of AI shows up in specific, practical applications. For ecommerce, this means automating the high-volume tasks that consume the most time and have the biggest impact on customer experience.

Order tracking automation for instant WISMO answers

"Where is my order?" (WISMO) is the most common question in ecommerce. AI connects directly to your shipping and order management systems to provide real-time tracking updates automatically.

The system can handle delivery exceptions and proactively notify customers of delays. This turns a potential negative experience into a positive one by keeping customers informed.

Returns and exchanges workflows for zero-touch resolution

AI manages the entire returns process without agent intervention. It checks if an order is eligible for a return based on your policy, generates a return label, and provides instructions to the customer through automated actions.

When integrated with returns platforms, AI offers complete resolution without any human handoff. Your customers get what they need, and your team saves time.

Intelligent routing and prioritization for faster responses

Not all tickets are created equal. AI categorizes incoming tickets by intent, sentiment, and urgency, then automatically routes them to the right agent or team.

High-priority issues get handled first, and specialized teams get the tickets they're best equipped to resolve. This means faster resolution times and better customer experiences.

Agent copilot and summarization for higher productivity

AI acts as a copilot for your human agents by providing real-time response suggestions and pulling relevant articles from your knowledge base. It also automatically summarizes long conversations.

This helps agents resolve issues faster and with greater accuracy. They spend less time searching for information and more time helping customers.

Sentiment and intent detection for better triage

Understanding a customer's emotional state is critical for good service. AI analyzes the language and tone of messages to detect sentiment like frustration or anger.

The system automatically escalates sensitive conversations to senior agents or managers for immediate attention. This prevents small issues from becoming big problems.

Voice and IVR enhancements for low-friction calls

AI powers interactive voice response (IVR) systems that intelligently route calls and provide answers to common questions. It can offer self-service options like sending a call to SMS.

Real-time call transcription and summaries help with quality assurance and training. Your team gets better insights into customer needs and agent performance.

Help center optimization and article suggestions for accurate self-service

AI powers your Help Center search and dynamically recommends relevant articles to customers in chat. It analyzes support conversations to identify gaps in your knowledge base.

This means customers find answers faster, and you know exactly what content to create next. Your self-service experience gets better over time.

Discounts and revenue assist for higher conversion

AI can offer personalized discount codes to high-intent shoppers and re-engage customers who have abandoned their carts. It provides tailored product recommendations based on conversation context and browsing history.

Your support interactions become sales opportunities that drive revenue while solving customer problems.

Related: How to automate your WISMO tickets

How do you implement AI in customer service

A successful AI implementation is strategic, not just technical. You need a phased approach focused on clear goals and measurable results.

Step 1: Define goals and CX constraints

Start by identifying what you want to achieve. Are you trying to reduce first response time, lower cost per ticket, or increase your automation rate?

Set specific, measurable goals that align with your business objectives. At the same time, establish clear guardrails for what AI should and should not handle.

Sensitive or complex issues should always escalate to a human. This protects your brand and ensures customers get appropriate care when they need it most.

Step 2: Prioritize high-volume intents and channels

You don't need to automate everything at once. Analyze your support ticket data to identify the most common, repetitive inquiries.

For most ecommerce brands, this includes:

  • Order status and tracking questions
  • Return and exchange requests
  • Basic product information
  • Shipping and delivery inquiries
  • Account and subscription management

Start by automating these intents on channels where customers expect fast, simple answers, like live chat and SMS.

Step 3: Integrate data sources and guardrails

AI needs context to be effective. Connect it to your core ecommerce systems, including your order management system, inventory platform, and customer data platform.

This allows AI to perform real actions, like checking an order status or processing a return. Set up clear escalation rules and fallback options for when AI cannot resolve an issue.

Data integration is what makes AI powerful — without it, you're just running a fancy chatbot that can't actually help customers.

Step 4: Pilot, measure, and scale with human oversight

Launch your AI with a limited scope, such as handling one specific question type on a single channel. Closely monitor its performance using metrics like resolution rate and customer satisfaction.

Use this data to refine AI behavior, then gradually expand its responsibilities as you gain confidence in its performance. Always maintain a human-in-the-loop process for quality review.

Scaling too fast without proper oversight can damage customer relationships. Take your time and get it right.

Learn more: How to build an AI-driven support strategy

AI customer service best practices and guardrails

Scaling automation without sacrificing quality requires discipline and clear guidelines. These practices ensure your AI operates safely, accurately, and in line with your brand standards.

Data privacy and security must be your top priority. Ensure your AI platform handles customer data responsibly and complies with all relevant privacy regulations.

Preventing AI hallucinations means limiting your AI to verified information sources, such as your Help Center and integrated apps. This prevents it from providing incorrect or fabricated answers.

Clear escalation protocols ensure complex or sensitive issues get routed to human agents quickly. Design reliable handoff rules that protect your customers and your brand.

Continuous performance monitoring helps you track key metrics like accuracy, resolution rate, and customer satisfaction. You need to understand AI's impact and identify areas for improvement.

Regular optimization treats your AI like a team member that needs ongoing coaching. Use analytics and agent feedback to review and improve its performance regularly.

Transparency with customers builds trust and manages expectations. Be upfront when customers are interacting with AI, and make it easy for them to reach a human when needed.

Read more: Turning AI implementation into team alignment with Rhoback

What is the future of AI in customer service

AI capabilities in customer service are evolving rapidly. While today's tools focus on automating and assisting, the future points toward more autonomous and proactive systems.

Autonomous agents will handle increasingly complex, multi-step tasks from end to end without human intervention. Think complete order modifications, not just status updates.

Multimodal AI will seamlessly understand and respond across different formats, including text, voice, images, and video. Customers can send a photo of a damaged product and get an instant resolution.

Proactive support uses predictive analytics to identify potential customer issues before they happen. AI reaches out with solutions before customers even know there's a problem.

Real-time translation breaks down language barriers, allowing brands to offer high-quality support to a global customer base without hiring multilingual agents.

Deeper personalization leverages a complete view of the customer's history to deliver hyper-personalized support and shopping experiences. Every interaction feels tailored to that specific customer.

These advances will make AI even more valuable for ecommerce brands looking to scale without sacrificing quality.

Get started with AI in customer service for ecommerce

AI in customer service works best when deployed with clear goals and proper guardrails. Start with high-volume, repetitive inquiries where automation delivers immediate value.

Want to try Gorgias for yourself? Start a free trial →

Prefer a walkthrough with an expert? Book a demo →

15 Gladly Alternatives for Ecommerce Brands

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Gladly's unified customer view comes with high costs and limited ecommerce integrations
  • Most brands switch from Gladly due to pricing, automation limitations, or lack of Shopify-specific features
  • Top alternatives include Gorgias (ecommerce-focused), Kustomer (enterprise), and Zendesk (scalable)
  • Compare alternatives based on automation capabilities, pricing model, and ecommerce integrations
  • Migration from Gladly typically takes two to four weeks with proper planning

Gladly pioneered identity-based support, where every customer interaction lives in one conversation thread. But for ecommerce brands, that innovation often comes with trade-offs. High per-agent pricing, limited automation, and weak ecommerce integrations push many brands to explore alternatives.

This guide compares 15 helpdesks that deliver what Gladly promises — unified customer support — while addressing its gaps in automation, pricing flexibility, and ecommerce-specific features. We'll cover the top platforms, key reasons to switch, and how to choose the right tool for your brand.

12 Gladly alternatives compared: pricing, automation, and ecommerce fit

The best Gladly alternative depends on your specific needs, from budget and team size to automation requirements and Shopify integration depth. While Gladly offers a unified customer view, many alternatives provide more robust ecommerce integrations, flexible pricing, and powerful AI capabilities at a lower total cost.

Platform

Starting Price

Best For

Key Strength

Automation Level

Ecommerce Integrations

Gorgias

$10/month

Shopify brands

Revenue generation & automation

AI-powered

100+

Kustomer

$89/agent/month

Enterprise brands

CRM capabilities

Advanced

Limited

Zendesk

$55/agent/month

All-purpose support

Scalability & marketplace

Advanced

Moderate

Intercom

$39/seat/month

Proactive engagement

Conversational marketing

AI-powered

Moderate

Re:amaze

$29/staff/month

Small ecommerce teams

Multichannel support

Basic

Good

Freshdesk

$15/agent/month

Cost-conscious teams

Affordability

Basic

Limited

Front

$19/seat/month

Collaborative teams

Shared inbox

Basic

Limited

Help Scout

$20/user/month

Simplicity-focused teams

Ease of use

Basic

Limited

Zoho Desk

$14/agent/month

Zoho ecosystem users

Affordability

Moderate

Limited

HubSpot Service Hub

$18/month (2 users)

HubSpot CRM users

Marketing alignment

Moderate

Good

Kayako

$15/agent/month

Journey mapping

Customer insights

Basic

Limited

LiveAgent

$9/agent/month

Real-time support

Live chat & voice

Basic

Limited

The best Gladly alternatives for ecommerce brands

Choosing a helpdesk is a long-term commitment. Below is a detailed breakdown of the top Gladly alternatives, focusing on features, pricing, and ideal use cases for growing ecommerce brands.

Gorgias

Gorgias is a conversational commerce platform built specifically for ecommerce brands. It addresses Gladly's core weaknesses for online retailers by combining a powerful helpdesk with deep Shopify integration, revenue-driving tools, and advanced AI automation.

Unlike Gladly's per-agent model, Gorgias uses usage-based pricing that scales with your business, not your headcount. The platform unifies support and sales, allowing teams to manage orders, issue refunds, and recommend products directly within customer conversations.

Its AI Agent can automate up to 60% of common inquiries like "Where is my order?" returns, and product questions. This frees up agents to focus on complex issues and revenue-generating activities.

Main features:

  • Unified inbox across email, chat, SMS, voice, and social
  • Native Shopify integration with order management
  • AI Agent for automated responses
  • Revenue tracking and attribution
  • Self-service flows and Help Center
  • 100+ ecommerce app integrations

Ideal for:

  • Shopify brands doing $1M+ in revenue
  • Teams prioritizing automation and efficiency
  • Brands wanting to track support's revenue impact
  • Companies scaling from two to 50 support agents

Pricing:

  • Starts at $10/month for 50 tickets
  • Usage-based pricing (not per seat)
  • AI Agent add-on available
  • Free seven-day trial

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Kustomer

Kustomer is an enterprise-focused CRM platform that provides a unified timeline view of each customer. It consolidates interactions from various channels into a single, chronological conversation. This makes it a strong choice for large businesses that need a comprehensive, 360-degree view of each customer.

However, its strength in CRM capabilities means less focus on ecommerce-specific workflows. While it integrates with platforms like Shopify, the functionality isn't as deep as purpose-built tools. Kustomer's pricing and minimum seat requirements place it firmly in the enterprise category.

Pricing:

  • Enterprise pricing requires contacting sales
  • Per-agent model starts around $89/agent/month
  • Minimum seat requirements often apply

Zendesk

Zendesk is one of the most well-known names in customer service software. It offers a scalable, all-purpose helpdesk with a vast app marketplace and the ability to support businesses of all sizes.

For ecommerce brands, Zendesk can be a solid choice, but it requires significant configuration and integration work to match the out-of-the-box functionality of an ecommerce-specific platform. Core ecommerce features like order management and revenue tracking often depend on third-party apps.

Pricing:

Intercom

Intercom excels at proactive, conversational engagement. It's best known for its powerful chat widget and automation features designed to engage website visitors, qualify leads, and onboard new users.

While it has strong AI and automation capabilities, its focus is more on marketing and sales engagement than post-purchase ecommerce support. Brands looking for deep order management or returns handling within their helpdesk may find Intercom's ecommerce integrations less comprehensive.

Pricing:

  • Essential starts at $39/seat/month
  • Advanced at $99/seat/month
  • Expert at $139/seat/month

Re:amaze

Re:amaze is a helpdesk and live chat platform designed for small to medium-sized ecommerce businesses. It offers a good balance of multichannel support, including email, chat, social media, and SMS, in a single shared inbox.

Its native integrations with Shopify, BigCommerce, and WooCommerce are a key advantage. Compared to Gladly, Re:amaze is more affordable and more focused on the needs of online stores. However, its automation capabilities are more basic.

Pricing:

Freshdesk

Freshdesk is a popular helpdesk known for its user-friendly interface and affordable pricing, including a free plan for small teams. It offers a comprehensive suite of tools for ticketing, reporting, and automation.

While Freshdesk is a capable general-purpose helpdesk, it lacks the deep ecommerce integrations found in specialized platforms. Ecommerce brands will need to rely on marketplace apps or custom development to bring customer order data into the agent workspace.

Pricing:

Front

Front is a customer communication hub that centers around the shared inbox. It's designed to foster team collaboration by bringing emails, social media, and other channels into a single interface where teams can assign, comment on, and resolve conversations together.

Front is not a traditional helpdesk and lacks many core features ecommerce support teams rely on, such as deep Shopify integration, advanced reporting, and AI-powered automation. It's best for teams that prioritize internal communication over specialized support workflows.

Pricing:

  • Starter at $19/seat/month
  • Growth at $59/seat/month
  • Scale at $99/seat/month

Help Scout

Help Scout is a helpdesk platform that prioritizes simplicity and a human-centric approach to customer service. It offers a clean, uncluttered interface and focuses on features that facilitate personal, helpful conversations.

Like many general-purpose helpdesks, Help Scout's ecommerce capabilities are limited. While it has a Shopify integration, it doesn't allow for actions like editing orders or issuing refunds directly from the helpdesk.

Pricing:

Zoho Desk

Zoho Desk is the customer service module of the broader Zoho suite of business applications. Its biggest advantage is seamless integration with other Zoho products, like Zoho CRM. It's also one of the most affordable and feature-rich helpdesks on the market.

The platform's context-aware AI, Zia, can help agents with suggestions and automate simple tasks. However, its primary focus is serving the wider Zoho ecosystem, and its ecommerce-specific features aren't as developed as platforms built exclusively for online retail.

Pricing:

  • Standard at $14/agent/month
  • Professional at $23/agent/month
  • Enterprise at $35/agent/month

HubSpot Service Hub

HubSpot Service Hub is customer service software that's fully integrated with HubSpot's CRM, Marketing Hub, and Sales Hub. This makes it an excellent choice for businesses already invested in the HubSpot ecosystem.

Service Hub provides a solid set of helpdesk tools, including a shared inbox, knowledge base, and reporting. However, its core strength is its connection to the HubSpot CRM, not its ecommerce-specific functionality.

Pricing:

  • Free tools available
  • Starter at $18/month (includes two users)
  • Professional at $450/month (includes five users)

Kayako

Kayako is a helpdesk platform that focuses on providing a personal and context-rich customer experience. It offers a unified view of the customer journey by mapping out interactions across different channels.

Kayako is a general-purpose tool and lacks the deep integrations with ecommerce platforms that are critical for efficient online retail support. It's a good option for businesses that prioritize understanding the customer journey but don't require extensive ecommerce automation.

Pricing:

  • Inbox at $15/agent/month
  • Growth at $30/agent/month
  • Scale at $60/agent/month

LiveAgent

LiveAgent is a helpdesk solution that excels in real-time support channels like live chat and voice. It offers one of the most comprehensive live chat widgets on the market, along with a built-in call center.

The platform also includes gamification features to motivate support agents. While it provides a wide array of features at an affordable price, its focus is on real-time communication rather than the specific needs and workflows of ecommerce brands.

Pricing:

  • Small at $9/agent/month
  • Medium at $29/agent/month
  • Large at $49/agent/month

What is Gladly?

Gladly is a customer service platform built around identity-based support. Instead of treating each new email or chat as a separate ticket, Gladly consolidates all interactions from a single customer into one continuous conversation thread. This gives agents a complete history of every touchpoint, regardless of the channel.

This approach eliminates the need for ticket numbers and helps agents provide more personal and context-aware support. The platform is designed to be people-centric, not case-centric.

Key Gladly features:

  • Unified customer view: All interactions are organized in a single conversation timeline
  • Omnichannel support: Native support for email, chat, voice, SMS, and social messaging
  • Customer timeline: Complete history of purchases, conversations, and notes without switching tabs
  • Voice integration: Built-in phone support without third-party telephony tools

Gladly pricing:

  • Hero plan starts around $150/agent/month
  • Superhero plan is approximately $180/agent/month
  • Annual contracts and minimum seat requirements are typical

Who needs a Gladly alternative?

While Gladly's people-centric model is innovative, it's not the right fit for every business, especially in ecommerce. Brands often seek alternatives when they face challenges with pricing, automation, or lack of ecommerce-specific functionality.

High-growth ecommerce brands need pricing that scales with order volume, not just agent headcount. They also require deep integrations with platforms like Shopify to manage orders and track support's impact on revenue.

Cost-conscious teams find Gladly's high per-agent cost and annual contracts prohibitive. Teams looking for more flexible, usage-based pricing or lower monthly fees will find better value in alternatives.

Automation-first organizations want to automate a significant percentage of their support volume and need more advanced AI than Gladly offers. They require tools that can fully resolve tickets, not just route them.

Specialized support needs include businesses that rely on specific workflows for returns, subscriptions, or loyalty programs. These brands need a platform with a rich ecosystem of ecommerce integrations that Gladly lacks.

How we selected the best Gladly alternatives

We evaluated dozens of helpdesks based on criteria that matter most to growing ecommerce brands. Our methodology focused on identifying platforms that not only match Gladly's core promise of a unified customer view but also solve its primary shortcomings for online retailers.

Core evaluation criteria:

  • Pricing model: Flexible pricing, including usage-based models aligned with ecommerce seasonality
  • Automation capabilities: Advanced rules engines, AI-powered intent detection, and true self-service options
  • Ecommerce integrations: Deep, native integrations with Shopify, BigCommerce, and key ecommerce apps
  • Implementation speed: Fast time-to-value, allowing teams to get up and running in days, not months
  • Support quality: Level of expertise and responsiveness of the platform's own support team
  • Scalability: Ability to support growth from a small team to a large, multi-department organization

Key features to compare in Gladly alternatives

When evaluating your options, focus on how each platform handles the core jobs of an ecommerce support team. Look beyond marketing claims and dig into specific functionality that will impact your team's daily workflow and your brand's bottom line.

Unified customer view capabilities:

  • Single timeline vs separate tickets: Does the platform offer a continuous conversation or individual cases?
  • Cross-channel threading: How well does it connect conversations across different channels?
  • Data integration depth: How deeply does it integrate customer data from your ecommerce platform?

Automation and AI features:

  • Intent detection: Automatic ticket categorization based on customer requests
  • Smart routing: Assignment based on agent skills, language, or business rules
  • AI responses: Accuracy and customization of AI-generated replies
  • Self-service: Modern Help Center and automated chat flows that resolve issues

Ecommerce-specific functionality:

  • Order management: Can agents view and manage orders directly within the helpdesk?
  • Revenue attribution: Does it track sales generated by the support team?
  • Product tools: Features for recommending products or creating discount codes
  • App integrations: Connections with returns and subscription management apps

Pricing and scalability:

  • Contract requirements: Minimum seat requirements or long-term contracts
  • Pricing model: Agent seats vs ticket volume
  • Cost evolution: How pricing changes as your team and ticket volume grow

What to do next

Start by auditing your current Gladly usage. Export your ticket data to identify common inquiry types and your cost per ticket. This gives you a baseline for evaluating alternatives.

Then, narrow your shortlist to two or three tools and test them using real scenarios. Focus on what impacts your team: automation rate, handle time, and access to order data.

If you're still deciding, these guides can help:

Want to test it with your own data? Start a free trial and see how Gorgias handles real support volume.

Best Enterprise Support Platforms for Ecommerce

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Enterprise support platforms combine AI automation, omnichannel messaging, and ecommerce integrations to handle high-volume customer interactions at scale
  • The best platforms offer deep Shopify integration, AI-powered ticket deflection, and unified customer data across all touchpoints
  • Gorgias leads for ecommerce brands, while Zendesk and Salesforce serve broader enterprise needs
  • Key evaluation criteria include total cost of ownership, implementation timeline, and integration depth with your existing tech stack
  • Enterprise platforms differ from SMB tools in scalability, security requirements, and dedicated support resources

Enterprise support platforms do more than manage tickets. They unify customer conversations across email, chat, social, SMS, and voice into a single workspace. The right platform connects your support data to your ecommerce stack, turning every interaction into an opportunity to resolve issues and drive revenue. This guide compares 12 platforms built for high-volume ecommerce operations.

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Enterprise support platforms compared

An enterprise support platform is a centralized system that manages high volumes of customer interactions across multiple channels. This means you can handle thousands of conversations from email, chat, social media, and phone calls in one place. Unlike basic help desks, these platforms integrate deeply with your business systems and offer advanced automation.

Platform

Starting Price

Key Strengths

Best For

Notable Limitations

Gorgias

$10/month

Ecommerce-native, deep Shopify integration, AI Agent

Shopify Plus brands focused on support-driven revenue

Less suited for non-ecommerce businesses

Zendesk

$55/agent/month

Mature feature set, broad industry use

General enterprise use across industries

Complex and costly to customize for ecommerce

Salesforce

$25/user/month

Deep CRM integration, enterprise ecosystem

Companies already using Salesforce

High total cost, complex implementation

Intercom

$39/seat/month

Strong conversational tools, proactive messaging

SaaS and tech companies

Expensive at scale, less post-purchase focus

Freshdesk

$15/agent/month

Good value, broad feature set

Mid-market all-in-one solution seekers

Less advanced AI and automation

Kustomer

$89/user/month

Customer timeline view, data aggregation

B2C brands needing complete customer history

Higher price, resource-intensive

Front

$59/seat/month

Collaborative inbox, team communication

Teams needing heavy email collaboration

Not a traditional helpdesk, limited automation

Zoho Desk

$14/agent/month

Zoho ecosystem integration, affordable

Businesses using other Zoho products

Dated interface, less retail specialization

Help Scout

$20/user/month

Simplicity, clean UI, human-centric

Small to mid-sized teams prioritizing ease

Lacks advanced enterprise features

Gladly

$150/agent/month

Radically personal, conversation-centric

High-end brands focused on premium service

Very expensive, not built for efficiency

ServiceNow

Custom

Powerful ITSM, extreme scalability

Large enterprises with complex needs

Overkill for most ecommerce, very expensive

Tidio

$29/month

Strong live chat, easy setup

Small businesses focused on chat support

Lacks enterprise omnichannel depth

Best enterprise support platforms for ecommerce

Choosing the right platform depends on your business model, primary sales channels, and growth goals. Here are the top solutions for enterprise ecommerce brands.

Gorgias

Gorgias is a conversational commerce platform built specifically for ecommerce brands. This means it combines customer support with sales capabilities in one system. Its key advantage is deep, native integration with Shopify, allowing your team to manage orders, issue refunds, and apply discounts directly from the helpdesk.

The platform unifies conversations from email, live chat, SMS, voice, and social media into a single view. You get customer data from over 100 ecommerce integrations automatically. The Gorgias AI Agent can automate up to 60% of common inquiries like "Where is my order?" It also acts as a shopping assistant, providing product recommendations and converting shoppers in real time.

Main features:

  • AI Agent for automated resolutions and revenue generation
  • Native Shopify integration with real-time order management
  • Unified inbox for email, chat, SMS, voice, and social channels
  • Revenue tracking and conversion analytics for support interactions
  • Self-service flows and Help Center with AI-powered article suggestions

Ideal for:

  • Shopify Plus brands with high ticket volume
  • Ecommerce teams focused on support-driven revenue
  • Brands seeking fast AI implementation without complex setup

Pricing:

  • Starter plans from $10 USD/month
  • Pro and Advanced tiers with volume-based pricing
  • Custom Enterprise pricing with dedicated support

Zendesk

Zendesk is one of the most established customer service software platforms. It offers comprehensive tools that work across many industries beyond ecommerce. The platform is known for flexibility, an extensive app marketplace, and mature features including ticketing, knowledge base, and robust reporting.

For enterprise teams, Zendesk provides advanced security, compliance, and customization options. However, its generalist approach means achieving deep ecommerce functionality often requires costly third-party apps and complex configuration.

Pricing:

  • Suite Team from $55 USD/agent/month
  • Suite Growth from $89 USD/agent/month
  • Suite Professional from $115 USD/agent/month
  • Enterprise pricing available

Salesforce Service Cloud

Salesforce Service Cloud is powerful for enterprises already using the Salesforce ecosystem. Its greatest strength is seamless integration with Salesforce CRM, providing a complete view of each customer. It offers extensive capabilities for case management, automation, and omnichannel routing at massive scale.

This power comes with significant complexity and cost. Implementation often takes months and requires specialized expertise. For ecommerce brands not already using Salesforce, the platform can be overkill.

Pricing:

  • Essentials from $25 USD/user/month
  • Professional from $75 USD/user/month
  • Enterprise from $150 USD/user/month
  • Unlimited from $300 USD/user/month

Intercom

Intercom pioneered conversational support, focusing on proactive engagement through its messenger. It excels at engaging users on-site and in-app, making it popular with SaaS and technology companies. The platform includes live chat, chatbots, and targeted outbound messaging campaigns.

While Intercom's conversational tools are strong, its focus is more on user acquisition than the full post-purchase ecommerce experience. Managing high volumes of transactional support inquiries can be less efficient compared to platforms with traditional ticketing foundations.

Pricing:

  • Essential from $39 USD/seat/month
  • Advanced from $99 USD/seat/month
  • Expert from $139 USD/seat/month

Freshdesk

Freshdesk offers a user-friendly and affordable helpdesk solution with broad features. It provides omnichannel ticketing, AI-powered automation, and self-service options. The straightforward interface makes it relatively easy for teams to get started.

For enterprise ecommerce, Freshdesk is a solid, cost-effective option. However, its AI and automation capabilities are generally less sophisticated than specialized platforms.

Pricing:

  • Growth from $15 USD/agent/month
  • Pro from $49 USD/agent/month
  • Enterprise from $79 USD/agent/month

Kustomer

Kustomer uses a customer-centric data model, organizing all interactions into a single timeline view rather than separate tickets. This provides agents with rich, chronological context for every customer. The platform is designed for B2C brands and offers strong omnichannel and automation capabilities.

The main trade-off is Kustomer's higher price point and potential complexity of managing its data-heavy environment. It's best suited for brands that prioritize a deep, historical view of each customer over pure ticket-processing speed.

Pricing:

  • Enterprise from $89 USD/user/month
  • Ultimate from $139 USD/user/month
  • Custom pricing for larger deployments

Front

Front is a collaborative customer communication platform centered around a shared inbox. It brings emails, SMS, and social messages into a single space where teams can assign, comment on, and resolve conversations together. Its strength lies in facilitating internal collaboration around external communication.

Front is not a traditional helpdesk. It lacks robust ticketing structure, deep automation, and performance reporting that most enterprise support teams require.

Pricing:

  • Growth from $59 USD/seat/month
  • Scale from $99 USD/seat/month
  • Premier from $229 USD/seat/month

Zoho Desk

Zoho Desk is an affordable helpdesk that's part of the broader Zoho suite of business applications. Its biggest advantage is tight integration with other Zoho products, like Zoho CRM. It offers solid omnichannel support, workflow automation, and AI-powered assistance.

For businesses not already using the Zoho ecosystem, it functions as a capable standalone helpdesk. However, its user interface can feel less modern than competitors.

Pricing:

  • Standard from $14 USD/agent/month
  • Professional from $23 USD/agent/month
  • Enterprise from $40 USD/agent/month

Help Scout

Help Scout is known for simplicity, clean design, and focus on providing a human-centric support experience. It offers a shared inbox, knowledge base, and live chat in a straightforward package that's easy to learn and use.

This focus on simplicity means Help Scout lacks many advanced automation, reporting, and enterprise-grade security features required by large-scale operations.

Pricing:

  • Standard from $20 USD/user/month
  • Plus from $40 USD/user/month
  • Pro from $65 USD/user/month

Gladly

Gladly offers a "radically personal" approach to customer service, eliminating tickets in favor of a lifelong conversation stream with each customer. The platform centers all communication around the individual shopper, regardless of channel.

This premium approach comes at a very high price point. Gladly is designed for luxury and high-end brands where the cost of providing exceptional, high-touch experience is justified.

Pricing:

  • Hero from $150 USD/agent/month
  • Super Hero from $180 USD/agent/month
  • Custom enterprise pricing

ServiceNow

ServiceNow dominates enterprise IT Service Management and extends those capabilities to external customers through its Customer Service Management product. It excels at automating complex, cross-departmental workflows and operates at immense scale.

For most ecommerce brands, ServiceNow is overly complex and expensive. Its foundation is in IT and internal processes, not the fast-paced, revenue-focused world of online retail.

Pricing:

  • Custom enterprise pricing only
  • Typically starts at $100 USD/user/month

Tidio

Tidio started as a live chat and chatbot tool for small businesses and has expanded to serve larger teams. Its strengths are ease of use, strong chat automation capabilities, and affordable entry point.

While effective for chat, Tidio lacks true omnichannel depth and robust backend management features of a full enterprise support platform.

Pricing:

  • Starter from $29 USD/month
  • Growth from $59 USD/month
  • Tidio+ from $749 USD/month

Features that define an enterprise support platform

Enterprise features go beyond basic ticketing to enable scale, security, and strategic value. These capabilities separate a true enterprise platform from a standard help desk.

Omnichannel support

Omnichannel support means managing all customer conversations from a single, unified inbox. This includes email, live chat, social media DMs, SMS, and voice calls. The key is maintaining seamless conversation flow and full customer context as shoppers move between channels.

Your customers don't think in channels — they think in conversations. When someone starts a conversation on Instagram and continues it via email, your team needs to see the full history without switching tools.

AI automation and self-service

At enterprise scale, automation is essential. This includes AI-powered ticket routing, intent detection, and automated responses for common questions. It also extends to customer-facing self-service tools.

Modern AI can handle complex scenarios beyond simple FAQ responses:

  • Order management: Processing returns, exchanges, and cancellations automatically
  • Product recommendations: Suggesting items based on browsing behavior and purchase history
  • Issue resolution: Troubleshooting problems and escalating only when human intervention is needed

Analytics and reporting

Enterprise platforms provide deep, customizable analytics. This goes beyond basic metrics like first response time. You get real-time dashboards, SLA tracking, agent performance scorecards, and custom reports that connect support activity to business outcomes.

The best platforms show you how support conversations drive revenue, not just how quickly you respond to them.

Security and compliance

Large businesses have strict security requirements. Enterprise platforms offer SOC 2 compliance, single sign-on, multi-factor authentication, and role-based access controls to protect customer data. They also provide audit logs and options for data residency to meet global compliance standards.

Security isn't optional at enterprise scale — it's table stakes.

Integrations and data model

An enterprise platform must act as the central hub for customer data. This requires deep, bi-directional integrations with other systems like your ecommerce platform, ERP, and marketing tools. A flexible API and unified customer data model create a single source of truth.

When your support team can see order history, subscription details, and marketing engagement in one view, they can provide better service and drive more revenue.

Ecommerce workflows

For retail brands, the platform must support specific ecommerce workflows. This includes viewing and modifying orders, processing returns and exchanges, managing subscriptions, and tracking revenue generated from support interactions — all directly within the helpdesk interface.

Generic business software forces your team to jump between systems. Ecommerce-native platforms let them work where the conversation happens.

Enterprise support platforms vs SMB help desks

As your business grows, the tools that worked for a small team start to break. The differences between enterprise platforms and small-to-midsize business help desks reflect fundamental differences in scale, complexity, and strategic needs.

Scope and scale differences

SMB help desks handle smaller teams and manageable ticket volumes. Enterprise platforms are engineered for hundreds of thousands of interactions across multiple brands, regions, and languages. They include advanced routing, multi-brand support from a single instance, and robust user permissions to manage large, distributed teams.

When you're processing thousands of tickets daily across multiple time zones, you need different tools than a five-person team handling dozens of emails.

Ecosystem and integration differences

SMB tools offer basic integrations. Enterprise platforms provide deep, two-way data synchronization with core business systems. They have extensive APIs, support custom integrations, and connect to data warehouses for advanced business intelligence.

This creates a unified data ecosystem rather than a collection of disconnected tools.

Support and partnership differences

With SMB tools, support is often limited to email or chat. Enterprise platform vendors act more like strategic partners. They provide dedicated success managers, implementation support, guaranteed uptime SLAs, and ongoing strategic guidance.

You're not just buying software — you're buying a relationship that helps you scale.

How to choose an enterprise support platform for ecommerce

Making the right choice requires clear evaluation of your business needs, technical stack, and long-term goals. Focus on these key areas to find the platform that best fits your operation.

Match customer channels

Start by auditing where your customers actually contact you. Are they on Instagram, SMS, or still primarily using email? Ensure the platform you choose has native, robust support for the channels your customers prefer.

Don't choose based on what you think customers should use — choose based on what they actually use.

Check integration depth with Shopify and your stack

For ecommerce brands, deep integration with your store platform is non-negotiable. Look for bi-directional sync that allows agents to take action directly from the helpdesk. Verify that the platform also connects seamlessly with your other critical tools.

The best integrations feel invisible — your team shouldn't know they're using multiple systems.

Model total cost of ownership and ROI

Look beyond the per-seat license fee. Calculate total cost of ownership, which includes implementation, training, and necessary third-party apps. Measure this against potential return on investment from increased agent efficiency, higher ticket deflection rates, and support-driven revenue.

A more expensive platform that drives revenue can be cheaper than a "budget" option that doesn't.

Validate implementation timeline and admin load

Some platforms take months to implement and require a dedicated administrator. Others can be running in days. Be realistic about your team's resources and choose a platform with an implementation timeline and ongoing maintenance load you can support.

The fastest implementation isn't always the best, but the slowest is rarely worth it.

Confirm security and governance

Work with your IT and legal teams to confirm the platform meets your company's security and compliance standards. This includes data encryption, access controls, and adherence to regulations like GDPR or CCPA.

Don't treat security as an afterthought — it's harder to fix later than to get right from the start.

Start transforming your enterprise support

The right enterprise support platform transforms customer conversations into competitive advantage. Whether you're scaling from SMB tools or evaluating alternatives to your current platform, focus on solutions that match your ecommerce operations and growth trajectory.

Book a demo to see how Gorgias delivers enterprise-grade support built specifically for ecommerce.

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Seat-Based vs. Usage-Based Pricing

Seat-Based vs. Usage-Based Pricing: Which Model Fits Your Ecommerce Support Stack?

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Seat-based pricing charges a fixed fee per agent, regardless of usage. It’s predictable and easy to budget, but you may overpay during slow periods or when agents are underutilized.
  • Usage-based pricing charges based on actual activity like tickets or AI interactions. It scales with demand and can be more efficient, but costs are harder to forecast and can spike.
  • Pricing model matters as much as the price itself. The wrong structure can lead to wasted spend, surprise overages, and ongoing friction with finance.
  • Seasonality and AI usage heavily influence total cost. Volume swings and automation can quickly make one model more cost-effective than another.
  • Hybrid pricing balances predictability and flexibility. A base fee plus usage charges reduces risk, especially when paired with strong billing guardrails.

Picking a support platform is one decision. Figuring out whether you can actually forecast the bill is another. For ecommerce brands, the pricing model — how costs are calculated, what drives them up, and what happens during a volume spike — often creates more friction than the price itself.

This guide breaks down seat-based, usage-based, and hybrid pricing in ecommerce CX to help you answer the questions that matter most: Will this be easy to budget? What happens if usage spikes? Will you overpay during slow seasons? And how does AI complicate the cost?

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Why pricing model matters as much as price

The wrong pricing model creates budget problems, internal friction, and surprise charges even if the platform itself is a strong fit. That's why the structure of how you're billed matters as much as the number on the invoice.

A seat-based model might look affordable until you're paying for 15 agents during a slow January when half the team is idle. A usage-based model might seem efficient until a Black Friday spike generates an overage nobody budgeted for. The model shapes how costs behave across seasons, headcount changes, and AI adoption. The wrong fit creates friction at renewal, during audits, and every time you have to explain a variable invoice to finance.

The real tradeoff isn't just predictability versus flexibility. It's whether your pricing structure matches how your team actually operates, and whether you can explain it clearly enough to get and keep internal buy-in.

What is seat-based pricing vs usage-based pricing?

Category

Seat-Based

Usage-Based

What you pay for

Number of agents

Activity (tickets, AI, etc.)

Cost

Fixed per seat

Varies with usage

Predictability

High

Lower

Flexibility

Low

High

Main risk

Paying for unused seats

Cost spikes with high volume

The core difference is simple: seat-based pricing ties your costs to team size, and usage-based pricing ties your costs to activity. Everything else flows from that distinction.

With seat-based pricing, you pay a flat fee per user regardless of how much your team actually uses the platform. Predictable, easy to budget, but you pay the same whether agents are handling 500 tickets a day or 50.

With usage-based pricing, you're billed for what you actually consume: tickets resolved, conversations handled, AI interactions completed. Costs can scale down during slow periods, but also up when volume spikes.

Most platforms today sit somewhere between the two, with a base fee for core access and usage charges on top for features like AI or automation. Understanding the billing units in play is key to forecasting what you'll actually pay.

Common billing units in CX tools:

  • Seats: fixed fee per agent or user account
  • Tickets or conversations: charges per support interaction handled
  • Automations: fees per workflow or rule triggered
  • AI interactions or resolutions: costs tied to AI-handled or AI-resolved conversations

Five questions to ask before you choose a pricing model

Before evaluating pricing models, it helps to get clear on what you actually need from a billing structure. These are the questions worth answering before you start comparing plans.

  1. Can I forecast this cost 12 months out? If your finance team needs a fixed number for annual planning, that requirement should drive your model decision as much as any feature comparison.
  2. What's the worst-case scenario if usage spikes? Know the ceiling before you sign. Understand exactly what triggers an overage, how much it costs, and whether you can set a hard cap to prevent it.
  3. Where are we most likely to pay for something we don't use? Seat-based models create waste during slow seasons. Prepaid usage volume creates waste if forecasts are off. Identify which risk is more manageable for your team before committing to a structure.
  4. How does AI change our cost exposure? If you're evaluating a platform with AI features, treat AI pricing as a separate evaluation. Understand the billing units, the thresholds, and what happens when AI usage scales up.
  5. Can we explain this bill to finance every month? Variable costs require justification. If your invoice will fluctuate, make sure you have the data and guardrails in place to explain why, and a clear ceiling on how high it can go.

Seat-based pricing: where it works and where it creates friction

Seat-based pricing means the bill is fixed, the math is simple, and finance knows exactly what to expect every month.

It works best for teams with stable headcount and consistent ticket volume year-round. If your support team size doesn't change much and your demand is predictable, seat-based pricing removes a lot of billing complexity without many cons.

The friction shows up when your usage doesn't match your headcount. During slow seasons, you're paying full price for seats that aren't generating much value. When AI starts resolving a large share of your tickets, the per-agent model starts to feel misaligned with where the work is actually happening. And when other teams want occasional platform access, such as marketing pulling customer insights or finance reviewing chargeback data, every additional user has a cost attached.

Seat-based pricing works well when:

  • Your support headcount is stable year-round
  • Ticket volume is consistent and predictable
  • Your finance team requires fixed, forecastable costs

It creates friction when:

  • You're paying for idle seats during off-peak seasons
  • AI or automation is handling a significant share of your ticket volume
  • Cross-team access needs are growing but budget is tight

Usage-based pricing: where it works and where buyers hesitate

Usage-based pricing is the more efficient model on paper. You pay for what you use, costs scale with demand, and you're not carrying unused capacity through slow seasons.

It works best for lean teams, highly automated operations, and brands with significant volume swings between peak and off-season. If AI is resolving the majority of your tickets, usage-based pricing reflects that reality better than paying per human agent.

The hesitation is legitimate, though. Variable billing is harder to forecast, harder to explain to finance, and carries real overage risk if usage spikes faster than expected. There's also a definitional problem: not every platform defines billable units the same way. A "conversation" on one platform may not equal a "conversation" on another, which makes apples-to-apples comparisons difficult.

Usage-based pricing works well when:

  • Your ticket volume varies significantly across the year
  • AI or automation handles a large share of your support volume
  • You want costs to scale down during slow periods, not just up during peaks

It creates friction when:

  • Monthly cost variance makes internal budgeting and approvals difficult
  • Billable unit definitions are unclear or hard to monitor
  • Growth in support volume automatically means a higher bill without a clear ceiling

Why seasonality changes the pricing decision in ecommerce

For seasonal ecommerce brands, the pricing model question is more urgent than it is for most SaaS buyers. A structure that works fine for a stable support team can create serious budget problems when your ticket volume in November is five times what it is in February.

Usage-based pricing looks like the natural fit. Costs go up during peaks and come back down in slow periods. But variable billing during your highest-revenue, highest-stress period of the year carries its own risk. An unexpected overage in November is a harder conversation to have than one in March.

The goal isn't just a model that scales up during peak season. It's one that scales back down reliably afterward, has a clear ceiling on costs, and doesn't lock you into commitments based on peak-period usage for the rest of the year. Before signing anything, make sure you understand exactly how the pricing behaves at both ends of your volume range, not just the high end.

Is a hybrid pricing model the better fit?

Hybrid pricing is the most practical option for most ecommerce teams. It reduces the most common risks on both sides: the waste of paying for unused seats and the unpredictability of a fully variable bill.

A typical hybrid structure includes a base fee for core platform access and usage-based charges on top for features like AI, automation, or high-volume messaging. You get cost certainty for everyday operations and flexibility where your usage is harder to predict.

Common hybrid structures include:

  • Base platform fee + usage: fixed access to core features, variable charges for premium capabilities
  • Seat fee + usage threshold: per-agent pricing up to a usage limit, then per-unit charges above it
  • Bundled usage + overage pricing: a set amount of usage included in the plan, with clear rates for anything above it

The risk is complexity. When you're tracking multiple billing meters at once, forecasting gets harder, auditing gets harder, and explaining the bill to finance gets harder. A hybrid model is only better than a pure usage model if it's transparent enough to actually manage.

Billing guardrails that reduce pricing risk

Regardless of which model you choose, the platforms that handle pricing best give you tools to stay in control of costs.

The most important controls to look for are usage caps that set a hard ceiling on monthly consumption, alert thresholds that notify you before you hit a limit, and transparent overage rules with published rates rather than ambiguous "contact us" language. Beyond those basics, look for clear definitions of what counts as a billable event, flexibility to upgrade or downgrade mid-cycle without penalties, and monthly commitment options that let you test a pricing model before locking into an annual contract.

If a vendor can't clearly answer what triggers a charge, what the ceiling is, and how you'll be notified before you hit it, that's a signal the pricing structure will be harder to manage than it needs to be.

How AI changes pricing for support platforms

AI introduces a second pricing layer that many buyers don't fully account for until after they've signed. Here's how it changes the pricing equation:

  • AI doesn't fit per-seat billing. It works 24/7, handles variable volumes, and its value isn't tied to a single human user
  • Platforms charge for work performed, not access. You pay for conversations handled, tickets resolved, or API calls made
  • Common billing units vary by platform. Per conversation, per resolution, token-based, or tiered by complexity
  • Per-resolution pricing is the most value-aligned. You only pay when the AI successfully closes a ticket without human intervention
  • AI costs are harder to forecast than seat costs. Usage is less predictable than headcount, especially during peak seasons
  • Hard caps and escalation rules are essential. Without them, AI usage can scale faster than your budget allows
  • AI pricing often requires a separate evaluation. Treat it as a second pricing decision, not a footnote to the core platform cost

How to choose the right pricing model for your support stack

No single model works for every ecommerce brand, but most teams fit a recognizable pattern. Work through these steps to identify the right fit.

Step 1: Assess your team and volume stability

If your headcount and ticket volume are consistent year-round, seat-based pricing is likely the simpler, lower-risk choice. If either fluctuates significantly, move to step 2.

Step 2: Map your seasonal exposure

Identify the gap between your peak and off-peak support volume. The wider that gap, the more a fixed seat-based model will cost you in unused capacity during slow periods.

Step 3: Evaluate your automation and AI maturity

If AI or automation is already handling a significant share of your tickets, or you plan to scale it, evaluate AI pricing as a separate layer. A platform that looks affordable on seats may become expensive once AI usage is factored in.

Step 4: Clarify your finance and procurement requirements

Understand what your internal approval process requires. If finance needs a fixed annual number, that constraint should shape your model decision before you start comparing features.

Step 5: Match the model to your profile

  • Stable team, predictable volume: seat-based
  • Seasonal business or variable demand: usage-based
  • Growing team or heavy AI usage: hybrid

Make the pricing model work for your ecommerce support goals

The right pricing model matches how your team actually operates.

As your support volume grows and AI takes on more of the workload, reassess your pricing structure at least once a year. The model that made sense at 10 agents may work against you at 30.

Once you've identified the right model, the next step is finding the right plan.

See how Gorgias pricing is structured and which plan fits your team.

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Siena AI Alternatives

10 Best Siena AI Alternatives for Ecommerce Brands

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Siena AI is an add-on, not a full helpdesk. It automates customer conversations but requires a separate platform for ticketing, workflows, and data management.
  • Brands often outgrow Siena due to operational friction. Issues like routing errors, inconsistent AI responses, and per-message pricing can make scaling costly.
  • Each alternative serves a different use case. Some focus on automation (Ada), others on agent assist (Yuma), or enterprise features (Zendesk), so your choice depends on your needs.
  • Choosing the right tool comes down to your priorities. Factors like integration depth, scalability, deployment speed, and AI control should guide your decision.

Siena AI was built as a standalone AI layer, which means it needs to plug into a separate helpdesk. For ecommerce brands that want one platform handling AI, ticketing, and Shopify data together, that gap starts to show quickly.

This guide looks at the top Siena AI alternatives based on ecommerce functionality, AI capabilities, and scalability, so you can find the platform that fits into your store operations.

What is Siena AI?

Siena AI is an AI customer service agent that sits on top of your existing helpdesk. It uses generative AI to automate customer interactions across email, chat, and social media — reading incoming messages, understanding intent, and responding automatically based on your brand's knowledge and policies.

Because Siena is a standalone AI layer rather than a full helpdesk, it requires integration with a separate support platform to manage tickets, agent workflows, and customer data. It's designed primarily for brands that want to add AI automation to their current support stack without replacing it entirely.

Why do people look for Siena AI alternatives?

Siena AI works well as an AI agent, but ecommerce brands often outgrow it or run into limitations that push them to look elsewhere:

  • It's not a helpdesk. Siena requires a separate support platform to manage tickets and agent workflows, which means more tools, more contracts, and more context-switching for your team.
  • Routing issues. Users report that Siena sometimes continues responding after escalating to a human agent, or closes tickets before a customer's issue is actually resolved.
  • Unpredictable pricing. Siena charges per message sent, not per resolution, meaning multi-reply conversations can drive up costs quickly without guaranteeing an outcome.
  • Inconsistent AI accuracy. Some users note inaccurate or off-brand responses, with limited quality controls to prevent the AI from sending a reply it shouldn't.
  • Shallow ecommerce integrations. Siena's integration score on G2 sits at 7.9, lower than many competitors. This matters for brands that need deep Shopify connectivity to handle orders, returns, and customer data in one place.
  • Limited scalability. As ticket volume grows, managing two separate platforms (Siena and a helpdesk) becomes challenging.

Quick comparison of Siena AI alternatives

Platform

Best For

Starting Price

Key Differentiator

Deployment Time

Gorgias

Shopify brands focused on support and revenue

$10/month

AI that resolves tickets and drives sales

Hours to days

Yuma AI

Teams wanting AI within existing helpdesk

Custom

Response suggestions for human agents

Days

Zendesk

Large enterprises needing feature-rich helpdesk

$55/agent/month

Comprehensive enterprise features

Weeks to months

Fin by Intercom

Businesses focused on proactive chat

$39/seat/month

Proactive engagement and chatbot builders

Weeks

Tidio

Small businesses needing simple live chat

Free plan available

Easy-to-use interface with Lyro AI

Hours

Freshdesk

Mid-market companies wanting business suite

$15/agent/month

Part of broader Freshworks ecosystem

Weeks

Ada

AI-first companies building complex automation

Custom

Powerful no-code platform for custom agents

Months

Richpanel

Brands prioritizing self-service portals

$29/month

Focus on customer account portals

Days to weeks

eDesk

Marketplace sellers on Amazon, eBay, Walmart

$79/month

Deep marketplace integrations

Days

Ringly.io

Companies needing AI voice and chat support

Custom

Voice automation and call center features

Weeks

Best Siena AI alternatives for ecommerce brands

Gorgias

Gorgias is a conversational commerce platform built specifically for ecommerce brands. This means it's designed to handle both customer support and sales conversations in one place.

Gorgias's AI Agent can automate up to 60% of common inquiries while also helping convert browsers into buyers. Unlike generic AI tools, Gorgias integrates directly with Shopify, allowing it to perform real actions like tracking orders, processing returns, and recommending products based on what customers are viewing.

What sets Gorgias apart is its dual focus on support efficiency and revenue generation. The AI doesn't just answer questions — it actively helps increase sales through personalized recommendations and strategic upselling.

Main features:

  • AI Agent that automates support tickets and drives sales
  • Native Shopify integration with real-time order management
  • Unified helpdesk for email, chat, SMS, voice, and social media
  • Shopping Assistant that provides product recommendations
  • Self-service order tracking and returns

Ideal for:

  • Shopify and Shopify Plus brands of all sizes
  • Teams wanting to turn support into a revenue center
  • Brands needing fast AI deployment with minimal setup
  • Companies seeking ecommerce-specific automation

Pricing:

  • Starter plans from $10/month per agent
  • AI Agent available as add-on
  • Custom enterprise pricing available

Read more: What's the difference between Gorgias and Siena?

Yuma AI

Yuma AI works within your existing helpdesk to help human agents respond faster. This means you don't need to replace your current system — Yuma simply makes your team more efficient.

The platform analyzes incoming tickets and suggests draft responses that agents can edit and send. It learns from your past conversations and knowledge base to generate responses that match your brand voice.

While Yuma doesn't offer 24/7 autonomous support like other alternatives, it excels at augmenting human agents. This makes it a good choice for teams that want to improve efficiency without fully automating their support.

Pricing:

  • Custom pricing only
  • Usage-based model

Zendesk

Zendesk is one of the most established names in customer service software. It offers a comprehensive suite of tools for large enterprises that need extensive customization and reporting capabilities.

The platform includes advanced ticketing, omnichannel support, and AI features through its bot and agent-assist tools. However, Zendesk requires significant setup and configuration to work effectively for ecommerce brands.

For ecommerce-specific features, Zendesk often relies on third-party apps from its marketplace. This can make it powerful but complex, requiring technically adept team members to manage the system.

Pricing:

  • Suite Team plans start at $55 per agent per month
  • AI add-ons start at an additional $50 per agent per month

Fin by Intercom

Intercom is a customer communications platform known for proactive chat features and sophisticated chatbot building. Fin is its AI agent that provides instant answers and resolves issues directly in chat widgets.

The platform excels at engaging website visitors, qualifying leads, and booking meetings. While it can handle support inquiries, its core strength lies in pre-sale conversations and marketing interactions rather than post-purchase ecommerce workflows.

Fin can be trained on your knowledge base and external content to deliver conversational support that feels natural and helpful.

Pricing:

  • Essential plans start at $39 per seat per month
  • Fin AI priced based on usage

Tidio

Tidio combines live chat, chatbots, and email marketing in one affordable platform. It's particularly popular with small businesses because of its free plan and user-friendly interface.

The platform's AI chatbot, Lyro, can answer customer questions based on your FAQ content. While easy to set up and use, Tidio lacks the deep ecommerce integrations and advanced automation of more specialized platforms.

Tidio works well as a starting point for brands new to live chat and AI, but may not scale effectively for businesses with high ticket volumes or complex support needs.

Pricing:

  • Free plan available
  • Paid plans start at $29 per month

Freshdesk

Freshdesk is a cloud-based helpdesk that's part of the larger Freshworks suite of business software. It offers robust ticketing, self-service options, and AI features through Freddy AI.

Freddy can help with ticket routing, suggest responses to agents, and power customer-facing chatbots. Like Zendesk, Freshdesk is a general-purpose helpdesk that requires customization for ecommerce workflows.

The platform works well for mid-market companies that may also be interested in other Freshworks products like CRM or IT service management tools.

Pricing:

  • Growth plans start at $15 per agent per month
  • Freddy AI add-on pricing varies

Ada

Ada is an AI-first platform focused entirely on automated customer service. It provides a powerful, no-code builder for creating sophisticated AI agents that handle complex, multi-step conversations.

The platform is designed to resolve the majority of inquiries without human involvement. Because of its AI-first approach, Ada requires significant investment in time and resources to build and maintain the AI agent.

Ada works best for companies committed to an automation-heavy support strategy, but may be overly complex for ecommerce brands needing a solution that works immediately.

Pricing:

  • Custom pricing only
  • Includes platform fee plus usage costs

Richpanel

Richpanel focuses heavily on self-service through customer portals where shoppers can track orders, initiate returns, manage subscriptions, and find answers without contacting support.

The platform includes a helpdesk and AI features to automate responses. Its emphasis on self-service makes it strong for brands looking to reduce overall ticket volume.

Richpanel works well for Shopify brands that want to offer comprehensive self-service account experiences while maintaining a streamlined support operation.

Pricing:

  • Starter plans begin at $29 per month
  • Custom pricing for AI features

eDesk

eDesk is built specifically for online sellers operating across multiple marketplaces. It consolidates customer messages from Amazon, eBay, Walmart, and Shopify into a single inbox.

The platform's key strength is its deep integration with these marketplaces, allowing agents to see order details and customer information directly within tickets. While it offers automation features, its AI capabilities are less advanced than other platforms.

eDesk is the go-to solution for multichannel marketplace sellers who need unified message management across platforms.

Pricing:

  • Plans start from $79 per month
  • Per-ticket pricing model

Ringly.io

Ringly.io is a conversational AI platform with strong voice automation capabilities. It helps companies manage inbound and outbound calls using AI agents that can answer questions, book appointments, and route calls.

For ecommerce brands receiving high phone call volumes, Ringly.io can reduce contact center load. Its voice capabilities differentiate it from primarily text-based AI alternatives. Some brands also explore similar tools like Hurumo AI for voice automation.

The platform also supports chat and other digital channels beyond voice.

Pricing:

  • Custom pricing
  • Usage-based model

How to choose the right Siena AI alternative for ecommerce

Start with your biggest operational pain points. Different platforms excel at solving different problems, and tracking the right support metrics helps identify your biggest operational pain points.

For high ticket volume: Focus on platforms with strong automation capabilities and proven deflection rates. Look for tools that can handle common questions without human intervention.

For complex products: Prioritize AI training capabilities and knowledge base integration. You need AI that understands nuance and provides detailed, accurate answers.

For multichannel selling: Look for marketplace integrations and unified inbox features if you sell on Amazon, eBay, or other platforms beyond your website.

For Shopify brands: Choose platforms with native Shopify integration and order management features that let you handle transactions directly within the helpdesk.

Key evaluation criteria include:

  • Integration depth: Native vs API connections to your tech stack
  • AI control: Ability to customize responses and set guardrails
  • Deployment speed: Time from signup to first automated response
  • Scalability: How pricing and performance change as you grow
  • Support quality: Vendor's own customer support and onboarding resources

Why settle for AI alone when you can have a full helpdesk too?

Siena automates conversations, but it still needs a separate helpdesk to manage tickets, agents, and customer data. Gorgias gives you ecommerce-native AI and a full helpdesk in one platform.

If you're locked into a current contract, Gorgias's Buyout Program covers your remaining term so you can switch without waiting. Or, book a demo to see it in action.

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Help Scout Alternatives

9 Help Scout Alternatives: Best Options, Comparisons, and How to Choose

By Gorgias Team
min read.
0 min read . By Gorgias Team

TL;DR:

  • Why teams switch from Help Scout: It’s easy to use, but reporting is basic, omnichannel support is limited, and structured workflows like SLAs and escalations are missing.
  • Who Help Scout is best for: Small to mid-size, email-first teams that want a simple shared inbox, quick setup, and lightweight collaboration without a lot of complexity.
  • Top Help Scout alternatives by use case: Gorgias (ecommerce), Freshdesk (budget-conscious omnichannel teams), Intercom (product-led SaaS), and Zendesk (enterprise support ops).
  • Key gaps to watch: Help Scout can become limiting if you need deeper analytics, more channel coverage, stronger automation, or a more flexible knowledge base.
  • What to consider before switching: Compare pricing predictability, channel needs, SLA requirements, reporting depth, and how well the platform connects to your ecommerce or CRM stack.

Whether you're outgrowing Help Scout or shopping for your first helpdesk, you're probably looking for the same thing: a tool that brings all your customer conversations into one place without the chaos.

Help Scout is a solid starting point, but contact-based pricing gets unpredictable as you grow, reporting is limited, and omnichannel support is an afterthought.

This guide covers nine alternatives to help you find the right fit.

What you need to know about Help Scout

Help Scout is a shared inbox platform built for small to mid-size teams that want simple, email-first customer support. It comes with a built-in knowledge base (Docs) and a chat widget (Beacon), and it's known for being easy to set up and easy to use.

Where it works well:

  • Clean, intuitive interface that's easy to learn
  • Docs module for building a knowledge base
  • Beacon widget for embedded chat and Self-service
  • Collision detection to prevent duplicate responses

Where it falls short:

  • Basic reporting with limited customization
  • No native SLA enforcement or escalation rules
  • Single knowledge base template
  • Minimal support for phone, SMS, or social channels
  • Some users report connection reliability issues

Pricing:

Help Scout charges per user, not per contact. Standard starts at $20/user/month, Plus at $40/user/month. Both plans include unlimited mailboxes, but costs can get unpredictable as your customer base grows.

Why consider Help Scout alternatives

Help Scout is easy to love at first, but here's where it tends to fall short as you grow:

  • Reporting is too basic. No custom dashboards, no real-time analytics, and limited ability to track agent performance or spot customer trends. As one G2 reviewer put it, the reporting "doesn't allow for much drilldown or custom views."
  • One knowledge base template. Limited customization and no collaborative editing make it hard to scale your self-service content. One reviewer noted it "limits how we can structure our help content."
  • Reliability hiccups. Some users report connection drops and image handling issues during busy periods, making it "frustrating to use during busy periods" according to one G2 reviewer.
  • Pricing gets unpredictable. Contact-based pricing means seasonal spikes or marketing campaigns can inflate your bill without warning.
  • No SLAs or escalation rules. If your team needs structured workflows as you grow, Help Scout doesn't have the tools to support them.

Best Help Scout alternatives at a glance

Platform

Best For

Starting Price

Free Trial

Key Features

Gorgias

Ecommerce brands

$50/350 tickets/month

seven days

Shopify integration, AI automation, multichannel

Zendesk

Enterprise teams

$55/agent/month

14 days

AI Copilot, skills-based routing, 1,000+ integrations

Freshdesk

Budget-conscious teams

Free (up to 10 agents)

21 days

Freddy AI, built-in telephony, omnichannel

Intercom

Product-led SaaS

$39/user/month

14 days

Fin AI chatbot, in-app messaging, product tours

Front

Email-style collaboration

$25/seat/month

seven days

Shared drafts, AI Topics, calendar integration

Zoho Desk

Zoho ecosystem users

$14/agent/month

15 days

Zia AI, low-code customization, CRM integration

Kayako

On-premise deployment

$79/month + $1/AI ticket

14 days

SingleView timeline, self-learning KB, guest access

LiveAgent

Global multilingual support

$15/agent/month

14 days

40+ languages, call center, social routing

Hiver

Gmail users

$19/user/month

7 days

Works in Gmail, collision detection

9 Best Help Scout alternatives (deep dive)

Gorgias

Gorgias

Gorgias is built specifically for ecommerce brands that need to manage customer conversations across multiple channels while accessing order data in real time. The platform integrates deeply with Shopify, Magento, and BigCommerce. This lets support teams view order details, process refunds, and update shipping addresses without leaving the help desk.

Key features:

  • Multichannel support for email, Live Chat, phone, SMS, and social media (Facebook Messenger, Instagram)
  • Deep ecommerce integrations with Shopify, Magento, BigCommerce, and apps like Yotpo and Smile.io
  • Powerful automation with Macros, Rules, and customer sentiment tagging
  • Mobile apps on Google Play and Apple App Store for on-the-go support
  • Ticket management with search, assignment, tags, and resolution tracking

Pricing: Starts at $50 per 350 tickets per month, billed annually.

Free trial: 7 days. No credit card required.

Best for: Ecommerce businesses that need ecommerce-focused integrations and ticket-based pricing aligned with store size.

What makes Gorgias better than Help Scout:

  • Ticket-based pricing that scales with volume, not contacts
  • Ecommerce-focused integrations designed for online stores
  • Pricing plans consistent with store size and support needs
  • Feature-rich ticket management with tags and automation

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Zendesk

Zendesk workspace

Zendesk is an enterprise-grade platform with deep automation capabilities and AI-powered support tools. It's designed for large teams that need advanced routing, comprehensive reporting, and integration with thousands of third-party apps.

Key features:

  • Omnichannel ticketing across email, chat, voice, and social media
  • AI Copilot for automated triage and response suggestions
  • Skills-based routing and advanced SLA management
  • Access to over 1,000 integrations through the Zendesk marketplace
  • Custom reporting with flexible data visualizations

Pricing: Suite Team plan starts at $55 per agent per month.

Free trial: 14 days. No credit card required.

Best for: Large teams, regulated industries, and companies with complex workflows.

Zendesk vs Help Scout: HeliosX, a Zendesk customer, noted that "automation was much easier to set up in Zendesk compared to our previous platform. We could create rules and triggers without needing developer help, which saved us weeks of onboarding time."

Freshdesk

Freshdesk workspace

Freshdesk offers a budget-friendly alternative with omnichannel support and AI-powered automation. The platform includes a free plan for up to 10 agents, making it accessible for growing teams that aren't ready for enterprise pricing.

Key features:

  • Free plan available for up to 10 agents
  • Freddy AI for ticket triage, chatbots, and sentiment analysis
  • Built-in telephony and WhatsApp support
  • Automation rules and SLA management with escalation workflows
  • Connect with Freshworks products like Freshsales and Freshchat

Pricing: Free plan available. Growth plan starts at $15 per agent per month.

Free trial: 21-day free trial for paid plans. No credit card required.

Best for: Growing teams needing multichannel support without high costs.

Freshdesk vs Help Scout: Freshdesk's multichannel approach and free tier make it easier for budget-conscious teams to test omnichannel support before committing to paid plans.

Intercom

Intercom is designed for product-led SaaS companies that need to support customers within the app. Its Fin AI chatbot handles complex queries, and in-app messaging lets you guide users through features without email back-and-forth.

Intercom workspace

Key features:

  • Fin AI chatbot for automated responses to complex questions
  • In-app messaging and product tours for onboarding
  • Unified inbox with full customer context
  • Custom bots for lead qualification and routing
  • Outbound messaging for proactive support

Pricing: Starter plan at $39 per user per month.

Free trial: 14 days. Credit card required.

Best for: SaaS companies focused on in-app support and customer onboarding.

Intercom vs Help Scout: Intercom's strength lies in product-led growth strategies, where Help Scout focuses on traditional email support. If your product requires in-app guidance, Intercom offers tools Help Scout doesn't provide.

Front

Front brings an email-style interface to team collaboration, making it feel familiar for teams transitioning from Gmail or Outlook. It combines a shared inbox with internal comments, shared drafts, and real-time collaboration features.

Front works

Key features:

  • Shared inbox with internal comments and collaborative drafts
  • AI Topics for automatic categorization and routing
  • Calendar and scheduling integration
  • Familiar email-style interface
  • Collision detection to prevent duplicate work

Pricing: Starter plan at $25 per seat per month (up to 10 seats).

Free trial: 7 days

Best for: Teams wanting an email-like interface with real-time collaboration.

Front vs Help Scout: Both platforms prioritize email support, but Front's collaborative features - like shared drafts and internal comments - make it easier for teams to work together on complex replies.

Zoho Desk

Zoho Desk workspace

Zoho Desk offers budget-friendly pricing and low-code customization tools for teams that need to tailor workflows without hiring developers. It integrates natively with the Zoho ecosystem, including Zoho CRM, for unified customer data.

Key features:

  • Low-code customization tools for workflows and ticket forms
  • Zia AI for sentiment analysis and automated responses
  • Multichannel support across email, chat, phone, and social media
  • Native Zoho CRM integration
  • GDPR compliance features

Pricing: Standard plan at $14 per agent per month. Free plan available for up to 3 agents.

Free trial: 15 days. No credit card required.

Best for: Teams using the Zoho ecosystem or needing custom workflows.

Kayako

Kayako uses a timeline-based interface called SingleView that shows a customer's full interaction history in one place. It's designed for IT and regulated industries that need on-premise deployment options and granular control over data.

Key features:

  • SingleView timeline showing full customer interaction history
  • Self-learning knowledge base that suggests articles based on ticket content
  • On-premise deployment option for data security
  • Guest collaborator access for external partners
  • Facebook and Twitter integration

Pricing: Kayako One at $79 per month flat fee plus $1 per AI-resolved ticket.

Free trial: 14 days. No credit card required.

Best for: IT and regulated industries needing on-premise control.

LiveAgent

LiveAgent is built for global teams that need multilingual support. The platform offers 40+ language translations with automatic detection, plus a built-in call center and social media routing.

Key features:

  • 40+ language support with automatic detection
  • Built-in call center with recording and transcription
  • AI chatbot and answer assistant
  • Agent collision detection
  • Unlimited mailboxes, automation rules, and chat buttons

Pricing: Small plan starts at $15 per agent per month. Free plan available.

Free trial: 14 days. No credit card required.

Best for: Global ecommerce, hospitality, and travel brands needing multilingual support.

Hiver

Hiver is a Gmail-native shared inbox that requires no separate login or interface. Teams already using Google Workspace can add shared labels, collision detection, and SLA reminders directly within Gmail.

Hiver workspace

Key features:

  • Gmail-native interface with no separate platform
  • Live Chat and WhatsApp channels
  • Collision detection and shared drafts
  • SLA reminders and automation rules
  • Analytics dashboard within Gmail

Pricing: Lite plan at $19 per user per month.

Free trial: 7 days

Best for: Teams already using Google Workspace who want shared inbox features without leaving Gmail.

How to choose the best Help Scout alternative

The best way to find the right fit is to start by looking at where Help Scout may not meet  your needs. Ask yourself:

  • Is your pricing predictable? If seasonal spikes or a growing customer base are inflating your bill, look for seat-based or flat pricing instead of contact-based models. It's worth calculating the true cost of your customer support before committing to a new platform.
  • Are you email-only or do you need more? If customers are reaching you on chat, social, or SMS and you're managing it outside Help Scout, you need omnichannel coverage.
  • Do you need SLAs and structured routing? If tickets are falling through the cracks or the wrong agents are handling the wrong issues, look for platforms with native SLA enforcement and skills-based routing.
  • Can you actually measure your team's performance? If you're making decisions without data, you need custom dashboards and real-time analytics, not just basic canned reports.
  • Does it connect with your ecommerce stack? If your agents are switching tabs to check orders, look for platforms that embed Shopify or Magento data directly in the ticket view.
  • What do you actually need from AI? Chatbots, auto-tagging, and sentiment analysis can cut ticket volume, but only if the pricing model makes sense for your usage. Read more on building an AI customer support strategy.
  • How much migration support do you need? Most platforms offer import tools for tickets, articles, and customer data. One HappyFox customer migrated over 50,000 tickets and 200 knowledge base articles in under two weeks with the help of their migration team. If you're ready to move, here's how to migrate your helpdesk.

Which Help Scout alternative is right for you?

You've seen the alternatives. Now your decision boils down to your team's size, channels, and budget. Here's where to go from here:

  • Still early-stage and email-focused? Help Scout might still work, but keep an eye on your contact count and reporting needs as you grow.
  • Scaling fast and need omnichannel? Freshdesk or Zendesk gives you the channel coverage and SLA tools to keep up.
  • Running an ecommerce brand? You need a platform built for it, like Gorgias. That means order data in the ticket view, no tab switching, and AI that handles the repetitive stuff.

Before committing, test a few platforms with a real support workflow and factor in migration costs and AI fees beyond the base price.

Ready to see what a helpdesk built for ecommerce looks like? Book a demo to see how Gorgias scales with your brand.

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