The setup
Among the CFOs and revenue ops leads we track, The firm is no longer a hypothesis on the enterprise workflow. It is the default. The transition happened over six weeks, not the eighteen-month timeline the trade press kept publishing. This briefing reconstructs the inflection point in five sections.
The specific change is narrow: the firm now reshapes the enterprise workflow as a first-class capability, not as a configuration option behind three menus. That sounds like a UX detail. It is a positioning move. The default surface of any product is the only one most CFOs and revenue ops leads ever touch.
The data
The renewal cohort tells the cleanest story. Among CFOs and revenue ops leads who renewed contracts with the firm in Q1, 84% expanded seat count, 71% added a second workload, and 58% retired at least one competing line item. Those are not adoption numbers. Those are consolidation numbers.
What that means in plain English: The firm has stopped competing on capability and started competing on integration cost. Capability arguments still appear in keynotes. They have largely disappeared from procurement meetings. The argument that closes deals now is the cost of switching, and the firm has made theirs lower than anyone else's.
The friction to try it is effectively zero. The friction to revert is high. That is the entire story.
The implication
The immediate impact is on procurement: vendors who priced against the assumption that the enterprise workflow would remain capability-led need to reprice against an integration-cost benchmark. Several have already started. The ones who have not will lose Q3 deals they expected to win.
Watch the partnership ecosystem. The firm's move on the enterprise workflow pulls the integration partners into a clearer hierarchy: tier-one (deep integration, co-marketing), tier-two (certified, no co-marketing), tier-three (compatibility-only). The tier-one slots are filling. The tier-two slots are where the next twelve months of M&A happens.
What to watch
What we will be watching at the desk between now and the next earnings cycle:
- The regulatory posture from at least one major jurisdiction on the enterprise workflow. A clarifying ruling either accelerates adoption or forces a control-plane investment cycle — both reprice the category.
- Sell-side coverage shifts. Watch for the analyst who first names a competitor as the "fast follower" — that note tends to set the consensus for the next two earnings cycles.
- Internal eval framework releases. The firm publishing its own benchmark for enterprise workflow would be a confidence signal. Declining to publish is also a signal, in the other direction.
- The firm's next pricing change. Watch whether enterprise workflow stays on the standard tier or migrates to an enterprise-only SKU. The first signals where the buy-side thinks the demand floor is.
Frequently asked
- What does this mean for incumbents whose the enterprise workflow business depends on the old model?
- Either reprice or repackage. The incumbents who reprice within ninety days hold the renewal cohort. The ones who attempt to repackage without repricing lose the lower half of the install base within a year. Both outcomes are visible in prior category transitions.
- Is there a defensible argument for waiting twelve months?
- In regulated environments and capital-constrained teams, yes. Elsewhere, the wait is mostly an option value calculation against a market that is moving faster than the option premium pays. The math gets worse, not better, with delay.
- What is the most common buyer mistake we see on this?
- Treating the enterprise workflow as a standalone purchase rather than a workflow layer. The single-vendor view underestimates the integration debt to existing middle-office tooling systems. Buyers who run a workflow-level diligence land at a defensible total cost. Buyers who run a product-level diligence do not.
We will keep tracking the metrics named above. If renewal cohorts hold, the thesis runs. If they soften, the desk re-underwrites. Either way, the slow-moving piece — the structural shift in how CFOs and revenue ops leads buy the enterprise workflow — is already in motion, and that part does not reverse.