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Best Cloud Marketplace Platforms in 2026: Honest Comparison

Strategy
14 min read

We have been deep in cloud marketplace operations since before most of these platforms existed. Over 60 listings across AWS, Azure, and GCP. Hundreds of private offers. Enough co-sell pipeline to know exactly where each tool breaks and where it shines. So when our customers ask us "which platform should I use?" — we don't give them a diplomatic non-answer. We tell them what we actually think.

This is that answer, written down. Seven platforms compared on what actually matters: pricing model, marketplace coverage, CRM integrations, co-sell support, implementation speed, and the stuff that only surfaces after you've been running deals for six months.

No affiliate links. No sponsored rankings. We obviously have a horse in this race — Automatum is one of the seven — and we will be upfront about that throughout. But the goal here is to help you pick the right tool for your specific situation, even if that tool is not us.

The Master Comparison Table

Before we get into the narratives, here is the feature-by-feature breakdown across all seven platforms. This table covers 16 dimensions that we think matter most when evaluating a cloud marketplace platform.

Print it out, stick it on the wall, argue about it with your partnerships team.

FeatureAutomatumTackle.ioSuger.ioLabra.ioInvisoryWorkSpanClazar
Platform TypeSelf-serve SaaSSaaSSaaSSaaSAdvisory / ConsultingEnterprise EBMSaaS (AI-powered)
Pricing ModelFlat subscriptionRevenue share + base feeSubscription (flat)Freemium + paid tiersConsulting feesCustom enterpriseSubscription
Revenue Share0%~3-5%0%0% (free tier) / 0% (paid)N/A (consulting)Not disclosed0%
AWS MarketplaceYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
Azure MarketplaceYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
GCP MarketplaceYesYesYesYesYesYesYes
SnowflakeNoNoYesNoNoNoNo
RedHat MarketplaceYesNoNoNoNoNoNo
Salesforce AppExchangeNoNoNoNoYesNoNo
CRM IntegrationsHubSpot + SalesforceSalesforceSalesforce + HubSpot + 50 moreLimitedN/A (manual delivery)Salesforce + ServiceNowSalesforce + HubSpot
Co-Sell SupportAWS ACE + Azure Co-SellStrong enterprise co-sellAWS ACE + Azure Co-SellAWS ACE (Enterprise tier)Manual (consulting-led)Full partner managementAWS ACE + Azure Co-Sell
Private OffersYes (AWS + Azure)Yes (all clouds)Yes (all clouds)Yes (AWS + Azure)Manual (consulting-led)Yes (all clouds)Yes (all clouds)
MeteringYesYesYes (strong)YesNoLimitedYes
AI FeaturesAI-assisted listingLimitedAutomation-focusedSmartGTM AI (Enterprise)Human-led strategyWorkSpan.AI (launched 2026)AI-native core
Implementation SpeedDaysWeeks to monthsDays to weeksDays (free tier) / Weeks (enterprise)30-60-90 day programsMonthsDays to weeks
Best ForSMBs wanting fast, flat-cost multi-cloudEnterprise Salesforce shopsTeams needing Snowflake + broad integrationsEarly-stage ISVs testing marketplaceCompanies needing GTM strategy, not just toolingLarge orgs managing complex partner ecosystemsTeams wanting AI-first automation

Now let's get into each platform individually.

Automatum: Flat Pricing, No Engineering Required

Automatum is a self-serve SaaS platform built for ISVs that want to get listed on cloud marketplaces without hiring a marketplace engineer or paying a percentage of every deal. Flat subscription pricing with zero revenue share means your unit economics stay clean as you scale.

We have facilitated over 60 listings across AWS, Azure, GCP, and RedHat Marketplace — and no, we don't charge more when your deals get bigger.

Strengths: The pricing model is the most transparent in the category. You pay a predictable monthly fee. That is it. No surprises when a $500K private offer closes and suddenly your marketplace platform wants $15K-$25K of that deal.

The HubSpot CRM integration is a differentiator — most competitors either support Salesforce only or treat HubSpot as an afterthought. RedHat Marketplace support is unique in this group.

Implementation is measured in days, not months, and the self-serve approach means you are not waiting for a customer success manager to schedule your onboarding call.

Weaknesses: No Snowflake Marketplace support (Suger wins there). The platform is younger than Tackle, which means fewer case studies from Fortune 500 companies.

If you need a massive partner ecosystem management layer — think managing 200 channel partners across multiple reseller tiers — WorkSpan is built for that scale of complexity and Automatum is not.

Tackle.io: The Incumbent Enterprise Player

Tackle is the platform most people think of first when they hear "cloud marketplace platform." Founded in 2016, they have been at this longer than anyone else on the list and have the enterprise customer logos to prove it.

If your VP of Partnerships has already heard of one platform in this category, it is probably Tackle.

Strengths: Brand recognition matters in enterprise sales, and Tackle has the most of it. Their co-sell support is mature and battle-tested — they have been helping ISVs navigate AWS ACE and Microsoft Partner Center since those programs were in their infancy.

The Salesforce integration is deep.

If your company runs exclusively on Salesforce and you want a platform that your enterprise AE team will trust, Tackle is a safe choice. Their customer success team is large and experienced.

Weaknesses: The revenue share model is the elephant in the room. Paying 3-5% of every marketplace transaction on top of a base fee means your marketplace platform cost scales linearly with your success.

On a $2M ARR marketplace business, that is $60K-$100K per year just in revenue share — before the base subscription.

Implementation timelines tend to be longer than the newer platforms. And the Salesforce-only CRM integration is a dealbreaker for the growing number of ISVs running on HubSpot.

Suger.io: The Integration Machine

Suger positions itself as the most connected platform in the marketplace automation category. With 50+ integrations spanning CRM, billing, analytics, and partner tools — plus Snowflake Marketplace support — they are targeting ISVs that want their marketplace operations to plug into a complex existing tech stack without custom engineering work.

Strengths: The integration breadth is genuinely impressive. HubSpot, Salesforce, Stripe, Chargebee, Metronome, and dozens more. If you have a specific billing or CRM tool and you need marketplace data flowing into it, Suger probably has a connector for it.

Snowflake Marketplace support is a real differentiator — if you sell data products or analytics and Snowflake is part of your distribution strategy, Suger is the only platform on this list that supports it. Metering capabilities are strong, which matters for usage-based pricing models.

Weaknesses: The sheer number of integrations can create complexity. We have seen teams spend more time configuring Suger's integration layer than they would have spent just building a simple webhook.

The platform is newer than Tackle (founded around 2021) so the enterprise track record is shorter. Pricing, while subscription-based without revenue share, is not the cheapest option in the category.

Labra.io: The Freemium Path to Marketplace

Labra takes an unusual approach for the category: a genuine free tier. Their starter plan costs $0 for ISVs doing up to $100K in AWS Marketplace transactions, with paid tiers starting at $415 per month.

For early-stage companies that are not sure if marketplace is going to work for them, Labra removes the financial risk of finding out.

Strengths: The free tier is a real free tier, not a 14-day trial. You can list on AWS Marketplace, run transactions up to $100K, and evaluate whether marketplace is a viable channel — all without spending a dollar on platform fees.

The SmartGTM AI features available on the Enterprise tier are genuinely interesting, using AI to identify co-sell opportunities and optimize listing positioning. For seed-stage and Series A ISVs with small budgets and big marketplace ambitions, Labra is the lowest-risk way to start.

Weaknesses: The free tier is AWS-only. Azure and GCP support require paid plans. The jump from free to Enterprise (where the AI features live) is significant — you go from paying nothing to paying for a full enterprise subscription.

CRM integrations are more limited than Suger or Automatum. The platform is still maturing (founded around 2020), and some features feel early-stage compared to more established competitors.

Invisory: GTM Strategy, Not Just Software

Invisory is fundamentally different from the other entries on this list. It is not a SaaS platform — it is a consulting and advisory firm that helps ISVs build their cloud marketplace go-to-market strategy from scratch. They won the 2025 Inc.

Power Partner Award, and their approach is human-led rather than software-led. If what you need is someone to sit in a room with your leadership team and build a 90-day marketplace launch plan, Invisory is that someone.

Strengths: For ISVs that do not have internal marketplace expertise and need strategic guidance — not just a tool — Invisory fills a gap that pure software platforms cannot. Their sales enablement assets (battle cards, competitive positioning, pricing strategy decks) are polished and immediately useful.

Salesforce AppExchange support is unique on this list.

Their 30-60-90 day launch programs provide structure for teams that would otherwise be figuring it out on their own. And for companies that need someone to manage the actual conversations with AWS or Microsoft partner teams, Invisory's consultants do that work.

Weaknesses: The consulting model does not scale the way software does. Once the engagement ends, you are on your own for ongoing marketplace operations — unless you sign another engagement.

There is no self-serve platform for managing listings, sending private offers, or tracking metering.

The cost structure is project-based rather than subscription-based, which can make budgeting harder. And if what you need is a platform that automates marketplace operations day-to-day, Invisory is not that.

WorkSpan: The Enterprise Ecosystem Machine

WorkSpan occupies a different category than the other platforms on this list. It is an Ecosystem Business Management (EBM) platform designed for large organizations that manage complex, multi-partner ecosystems — think a company that has 50 channel partners, runs co-sell programs with all three cloud providers simultaneously, and needs a system to manage the entire web of partner relationships, deal registrations, and shared pipeline.

Strengths: If you are a large ISV or a GSI/MSP managing a partner ecosystem with dozens or hundreds of relationships, WorkSpan is the only platform on this list built for that scale of complexity. The Salesforce and ServiceNow integrations are enterprise-grade.

WorkSpan.AI, launched in 2026, brings AI-powered insights to partner ecosystem management — identifying which partner relationships are generating revenue and which are dormant. The co-sell management capabilities across all three clouds are the most sophisticated in the category.

Weaknesses: Custom enterprise pricing means you are in for a multi-month procurement cycle just to buy the platform. Implementation is measured in months, not days.

The platform is dramatically over-engineered for a 50-person ISV that just wants to list on AWS Marketplace and start running private offers.

If you do not have a dedicated partnerships team of 5+ people, you probably do not need WorkSpan — and you definitely do not want to pay for it. The learning curve is steep.

Clazar: Honorable Mention

Clazar is a newer entrant in the cloud marketplace automation space, positioning itself as an AI-native platform for marketplace listing and transaction management across AWS, Azure, and GCP. The AI-first approach is promising, and the platform is worth evaluating if you are looking at multiple options.

However, the limited track record compared to more established players means we recommend thorough evaluation before committing.

The Real Cost Breakdown: What You Actually Pay

Pricing in this category is deliberately opaque. Most platforms want you on a sales call before they reveal what the bill looks like. So here is our best attempt at making the actual economics clear, based on a hypothetical ISV doing $1M in annual marketplace transactions.

PlatformEstimated Annual Cost at $1M GMVCost Model
AutomatumFlat subscription (fixed, regardless of GMV)Predictable, scales to zero marginal cost
Tackle.ioBase fee + $30K-$50K revenue shareCosts increase with marketplace success
Suger.ioSubscription (varies by tier)Predictable, tiered by feature set
Labra.io$0 (under $100K AWS) / $4,980+ (paid)Free entry, scales with needs
InvisoryProject-based ($25K-$100K+ engagements)One-time or recurring consulting fees
WorkSpanCustom enterprise (typically $50K+/year)Multi-year enterprise contracts
ClazarSubscription (contact for pricing)Subscription-based

The revenue share model deserves special attention. At $1M in marketplace GMV, a 3-5% revenue share costs $30K-$50K per year. At $5M, it costs $150K-$250K.

At $10M, you are paying $300K-$500K annually — for a platform. That is the salary of 2-3 marketplace operations hires who could run the whole thing in-house.

We have watched companies hit $3M in marketplace GMV and suddenly realize their platform bill has become their third-largest vendor expense after AWS and Salesforce.

Decision Framework: Choose X If You Need Y

After working with dozens of ISVs evaluating these platforms, we have found that the right choice almost always comes down to one or two non-negotiable requirements. Here is the framework we use when advising companies.

Choose Automatum if:

You want flat, predictable pricing that does not punish you for closing bigger deals. You need HubSpot CRM integration (not just Salesforce). You want multi-cloud coverage including RedHat Marketplace.

You value self-serve implementation measured in days, not weeks. You are an SMB or mid-market ISV that does not need Fortune 500 case studies on the vendor's website to make a purchasing decision.

You want to keep your marketplace operations cost below a fixed ceiling regardless of how much revenue flows through the channel.

Choose Tackle if:

You are an enterprise company with a Salesforce-only tech stack and your VP of Partnerships wants the biggest brand name in the category on the purchase order. You value a mature customer success team with deep co-sell expertise built up over 10 years.

You are comfortable with the revenue share model because your deal sizes are moderate and the percentage cost is manageable relative to the value of the platform's enterprise co-sell support. You need case studies from companies that look like yours to get internal buy-in.

Choose Suger if:

Snowflake Marketplace is a critical distribution channel for your product (data, analytics, AI/ML). You have a complex tech stack with 10+ tools that need to receive marketplace data, and you need pre-built connectors rather than custom integrations.

You value integration breadth over pricing simplicity. Your metering requirements are complex and you need a platform with strong usage-based billing infrastructure.

Choose Labra if:

You are an early-stage ISV (seed through Series A) and you want to test whether cloud marketplace is a viable channel without committing budget. AWS Marketplace is your starting point and you do not need Azure or GCP support yet.

You are comfortable starting on a free tier and graduating to paid plans as marketplace revenue materializes. You want to explore AI-powered GTM features but only when you are ready for the Enterprise tier.

Choose Invisory if:

You need go-to-market strategy and consulting, not just a software platform. Your team has zero internal marketplace expertise and needs someone to build the playbook from scratch. You want Salesforce AppExchange support alongside cloud marketplace (a unique combination).

You value human-led strategy development over self-serve automation. You need sales enablement assets — battle cards, competitive positioning, pricing strategy — delivered as part of the engagement.

Choose WorkSpan if:

You are managing a complex multi-partner ecosystem with 50+ channel partners, reseller relationships, and GSI/MSP programs running simultaneously across multiple clouds. You have a dedicated partnerships team of 5+ people who need a system of record for partner engagement.

You need Salesforce and ServiceNow integration at enterprise depth. Your marketplace challenges are less about listing and private offers and more about orchestrating a partner ecosystem where marketplace is one of many transaction mechanisms.

Choose Clazar if:

You want to evaluate another AI-native option alongside Labra and Automatum. You are comfortable being an early adopter of a newer platform in exchange for potentially faster feature iteration and more responsive support.

You value AI automation as a core capability rather than an add-on feature.

What We Got Wrong Last Year

Honest comparisons require honest admissions. Here is what we predicted about this market 12 months ago that turned out to be wrong.

We thought revenue share pricing would die faster than it has. Tackle's model has proven more resilient than we expected, partly because their enterprise customers are less price-sensitive than mid-market ISVs and partly because the co-sell value they deliver justifies the cost for large accounts.

Revenue share is still declining as a percentage of the market, but it is not disappearing as fast as we predicted.

We underestimated Snowflake Marketplace as a distribution channel. Suger's bet on Snowflake looked niche 12 months ago.

It looks prescient now. The data-product economy has grown faster than anyone expected, and ISVs selling data, analytics, or AI models are finding Snowflake Marketplace to be a genuine revenue channel — not just a branding exercise.

We overestimated how quickly AI features would differentiate platforms. Labra's SmartGTM and WorkSpan.AI are interesting, but most ISVs we talk to are still buying marketplace platforms based on fundamentals — pricing, coverage, integration — rather than AI features.

The AI differentiation will matter more in 2027 than it does today.

The Consolidation Question

Every year someone asks whether this market is going to consolidate. Our answer: yes, eventually, but not yet. The category is still growing fast enough that multiple platforms can thrive by serving different segments.

Tackle owns enterprise. Automatum owns SMB and mid-market with flat pricing.

Suger owns the integration-heavy segment. Labra owns early-stage. Invisory owns consulting. WorkSpan owns ecosystem management.

When consolidation happens, our prediction is that it will look like acquisitions rather than platform deaths. A cloud provider or a large CRM vendor (Salesforce, HubSpot) will acquire one of these platforms to build native marketplace management into their ecosystem.

That acquisition has not happened yet, but the strategic logic is obvious enough that we would be surprised if it does not happen by 2028.

Automatum simplifies cloud marketplace operations across AWS, Azure, and GCP.

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FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about the topics covered in this guide.

What are the best cloud marketplace platforms in 2026?+

The seven leading platforms are Automatum, Tackle, Invisory, WorkSpan, Labra, Suger, and Clazar. Each has different strengths in pricing model, marketplace coverage, co-sell management, and target customer segment.

How do I choose a cloud marketplace platform?+

Evaluate four criteria: pricing model compatibility with your deal volume, marketplace coverage for your target clouds, CRM integration with your sales stack, and co-sell management for your partner strategy. Trial the top 2 to 3 candidates.

What is the difference between platform and consulting approaches?+

Platforms like Automatum, Tackle, and Suger provide self-serve automation. Invisory provides consulting-led services. WorkSpan focuses on ecosystem management. The right choice depends on whether you want automation or managed services.

Do I need a marketplace platform or can I manage manually?+

Manual management works for a single listing on one marketplace. Once you have private offers, co-sell, or multi-cloud listings, a platform eliminates operational overhead and reduces the risk of metering errors and missed renewals.

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