HubSpot has established itself as a leading platform to centralize CRM, marketing, sales, customer service and operations within a single environment. Its clear interface, inter-departmental workflows and integration ecosystem appeal to many companies looking to unite marketing, sales and support around a unified customer database.
However, this unifying strength can quickly create a lock-in effect, where every new requirement pushes you to upgrade tiers, add contacts or users, and spend ever more on hubs and add-on modules. This growing dependence raises a strategic question: should you stick with the all-in-one approach or favor a more modular, scalable and contextual stack that aligns with your organization’s maturity?
Why HubSpot Appeals and Where It Excels
HubSpot delivers a seamless, unified user experience ideal for breaking down silos between teams. Its built-in reporting and powerful automations simplify coordination of sales and marketing operations. The extensive integrations marketplace and combined hubs enable rapid activation of new use cases without deploying multiple isolated tools.
A Unified Platform to Bring Teams Together
HubSpot allows you to pool CRM, marketing automation, sales pipeline and service in a single tool. This centralization avoids multiple log-ins, data duplication and sync errors—often costly for organizations.
Thanks to a shared customer history, each department gains a complete view of interactions, whether marketing emails, sales calls or support tickets. This traceability boosts team efficiency and the relevance of campaigns.
In a context where responsiveness is critical, the ability to trigger cross-departmental workflows without manual data integration is a significant advantage. Managers especially value this direct link between marketing, sales and support.
Accessible Automations and Reporting
The visual workflows in HubSpot simplify automation creation: dynamic segmentation, lead nurturing, opportunity attribution and support alerts. All of this is configured without code, speeding up go-live times.
Built-in reporting offers customizable dashboards combining marketing metrics (open rates, conversions), sales metrics (pipeline, close rates) and support metrics (response times, customer satisfaction). Decision-makers thus have a consolidated view to steer growth.
The graphical interface and preconfigured templates reduce onboarding time and facilitate internal best-practice sharing, even for non-technical users.
Rich Integration Ecosystem
Hundreds of apps connect to HubSpot, from finance and e-commerce solutions to webinar platforms. This variety enriches the CRM with data from across the digital ecosystem.
As business processes evolve, you can add new connectors or automate data flows with HubSpot Operations Hub, enhancing information consistency without heavy development.
The ability to quickly integrate a video-conferencing tool, an online chat solution or an ERP expands use cases—if you accept the dependency on the HubSpot environment.
Example of a Swiss SME
An industrial SME in Switzerland adopted HubSpot to replace three separate tools for marketing, sales and support. The initial deployment cut manual operations between teams by 40%.
Lead-nurturing workflows and automated follow-ups boosted the MQL-to-SQL conversion rate by 30%. This productivity gain convinced management to activate Sales Hub Enterprise for advanced reporting.
This example shows that a unified foundation delivers measurable short-term ROI, but moving to paid modules can become unavoidable once multiple departments start using it.
Hidden Flaws of Uniformity: Costs and Dependencies
HubSpot’s all-in-one design can become a pricing trap when usage exceeds the limits of basic plans. The tiered structure often forces migration to higher plans for essential features. Locked-up functionality, multiplying seats and marketing contact fees drive up total cost just as the business accelerates.
Cyclical Cost Increases
Each added contact in Marketing Hub or new user in Sales Hub raises the bill. Pricing is often based on contact volume, without regard for the actual value each segment generates.
Once the database passes a certain threshold, higher tiers become mandatory, triggering disproportionate price hikes. For a growing organization, this mechanism undermines budget predictability.
Beyond direct costs, negotiating contact or license adjustments takes time—and sometimes requires an agency to convince leadership and optimize usage without hidden surcharges.
Essential Features Locked Behind Higher Tiers
Critical functions—advanced reporting, custom lead scoring, bespoke objects and properties or granular permissions—are locked in Professional or Enterprise plans. This pricing granularity doesn’t always translate to flexibility for organizations with specific needs.
Needing a higher plan just to edit a simple dashboard, create complex segments or link business objects can create operational and budgetary constraints.
Ultimately, the “all or nothing” logic pushes you to use every hub to justify the cost, even if you’re not fully exploiting all modules.
Governance Complexity and Risk of Chaos
Over time, a company can accumulate automations, properties, lists and workflows invisible to non-technical teams. This growing complexity makes internal audits laborious and exposes you to errors or service interruptions.
The major risk arises if you decide to move off HubSpot: without exhaustive mapping, migration can become chaotic, with data loss, broken automations or service continuity issues.
Dependence on the HubSpot ecosystem also drives up maintenance costs, since each product update can impact dozens of custom-built workflows.
Example of a Public Agency
A mid-sized public agency saw its HubSpot bill double after adding new hubs and increasing its contact volume. Yet the organization didn’t gain major new features—it had to upgrade plans just to retain existing dynamic lists.
The need for custom objects to track internal processes resulted in over 60% annual extra charges. This example shows how tiered pricing can become a budgetary and operational block.
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Building a Modular Stack: Specialized Alternatives
For a more adaptive approach, it may be wise to break down your CRM, marketing and support stack with specialized tools. Each addresses a specific need while limiting vendor lock-in.
The goal is to orchestrate data flows and ensure consistency, rather than force every function into one software suite.
Lightweight, Flexible CRM: Attio and Planhat
Attio positions itself as a modern relational CRM designed for startups and B2B teams seeking an AI-native experience. Its flexible data model and clean interface let you adjust pipelines and properties quickly without custom development.
For customer-success-oriented organizations, Planhat offers a robust account management solution, with health scoring and net revenue retention (NRR) oversight. It focuses on retention and expansion, with dedicated dashboards and product-data integrations.
However, Attio can lack depth for complex marketing needs, and Planhat doesn’t cover acquisition or conversational support—making these tools complementary depending on your company’s profile.
Targeted Automation: Loops, ActiveCampaign, Brevo
Loops stands out with its product-centered approach, ideal for SaaS companies running lifecycle campaigns. Its simplicity and pricing model make it a smart choice for advanced email workflows.
ActiveCampaign is more mature for multi-channel automation, granular segmentation and personalized sequences. It strikes a solid balance between marketing capabilities and CRM integration.
Brevo attracts with low marketing-contact costs and tools for email, SMS and chat. You’ll need to plan connectors to sync data with your main CRM, though.
Conversational Support: Intercom and Competitors
Intercom remains a benchmark for B2B conversational support, onboarding and knowledge bases. Its bots and AI facilitate self-service resolution and ticket qualification.
However, costs can climb quickly with more users and higher conversation volumes. Freshdesk, Zendesk or Help Scout offer more modular alternatives tailored to ticket volume and SLA needs.
The choice depends on required CRM integration and response-automation strategy. Crisp, for example, suits small teams seeking a simple, cost-effective chat solution.
Example of a Swiss Tech Company
A Swiss SaaS startup chose Attio for CRM, Loops for retention campaigns and Intercom for support. This combination cut CRM marketing costs by 45% while maintaining high service quality.
The flexibility of these specialized tools allowed rapid iteration on internal processes without punitive pricing as contacts grew.
From Audit to Bespoke RevOps Architecture
Rather than switching hastily, it’s crucial to map usage, costs and dependencies precisely. This step identifies truly critical features and those suitable for outsourcing. Three scenarios then emerge: optimize HubSpot, decompose the stack or build a custom layer atop standard tools.
Characterizing Usage and Costs
An usage audit catalogs every active hub, automation, custom object and dynamic list, forming the basis to modernize your IT system.
Distinguishing between used features and under-utilized licenses reveals possible optimizations within HubSpot, without tool changes.
This diagnostic phase is essential to build a reliable scenario, uncover hidden costs and estimate migration effort for workflows and data.
Three Scenarios for Your CRM Roadmap
First scenario: stay on HubSpot by optimizing contact governance, closing unnecessary hubs and negotiating a plan matching your actual volumes.
Second scenario: decompose the stack with specialized tools for each function (CRM, marketing automation, support), while building connectors to ensure data consistency.
Third scenario: develop a custom software layer that centralizes critical data in an internal portal, leveraging open-source building blocks and microservices to limit recurring fees and vendor lock-in.
The Edana Approach to a Coherent Architecture
Edana’s expertise combines a precise audit of sales and marketing processes, an objective comparison of market alternatives and the design of robust integrations between chosen components.
We favor open-source, scalable solutions to guarantee long-term flexibility and cost control, with the option to build custom modules when needs exceed standards—turning concepts into a scalable, profitable SaaS product.
Our methodology relies on co-construction, security and RevOps governance tailored to each organization’s business reality.
Example of a Multi-Service Group
A multi-service group tasked Edana with optimizing its RevOps ecosystem. After an audit, we recommended retaining Sales Hub for pipeline management, migrating marketing automation to ActiveCampaign and developing an internal portal for Customer Success Management.
This setup reduced recurring costs by 35%, accelerated cross-silo campaign time-to-market and ensured clear customer data governance.
Design a Winning RevOps Architecture
HubSpot remains a powerful short-term solution to centralize sales and marketing operations. Yet its all-in-one model can become costly and rigid compared to an intelligently unified architecture built around your needs.
By decomposing the stack with specialized tools or developing a custom layer, organizations optimize ROI, limit vendor lock-in and maintain valuable operational agility.
Edana’s experts are ready to audit your processes, design a modular, secure architecture and support you in implementing your RevOps strategy.















