---
title: "Best Kustomer Alternatives for AI Customer Service in 2026: An Honest Comparison"
description: "Kustomer is a strong CRM-first support platform, and its AI assists human reps well. The reason teams shop is rarely the CRM. It is that they want AI that resolves tickets end to end on one bill, not a platform whose AI supports reps and whose voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and HIPAA are paid add-ons. This comparison defines six operational criteria before scoring, runs a matrix across Richpanel, Kustomer, Zendesk, Gorgias, and Gladly, names where each one beats Richpanel, and ends with a decision tree instead of a verdict."
url: https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-kustomer-alternatives
datePublished: 2026-06-18
dateModified: 2026-06-18
author: "Amit RG"
source: richpanel.com
---

# Kustomer's CRM is good. *That is not why teams shop for alternatives.*

Kustomer built one of the better CRM-first support data models in the category, organized around a unified customer timeline instead of a ticket queue, and its AI assists human reps capably. So the reason teams go looking for an alternative is rarely the CRM. It is the AI posture and the cost structure: AI that supports reps rather than resolving tickets end to end, with voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and HIPAA sold as paid add-ons that stack the bill. This guide defines six operational criteria before scoring anyone, runs a matrix across Richpanel, Kustomer, Zendesk, Gorgias, and Gladly, names the situation where each one is the better choice than Richpanel, and ends with a decision tree instead of a verdict.

> **Amit RG** is the founder of Richpanel, the AI-native helpdesk serving 2,000+ brands. He sits in vendor bake-offs against most of the platforms compared here, including CRM-first and Shopify-native incumbents, and the criteria below are the ones his own team uses when prospects ask "how are you different." Source data: 69 recorded buyer demos (April to May 2026) and production telemetry from live Richpanel deployments. On X: [@realamitrg](https://x.com/realamitrg).

## A genuinely good CRM-first platform, *and it deserves the credit.*

Kustomer reorganized support around the customer, not the ticket. Instead of a queue of disconnected tickets, every interaction lands on a single unified timeline tied to one customer object. For a high-volume B2C brand whose reps need rich history to handle a conversation well, that is a real advantage, and any honest "alternatives" guide has to start there.

That data model is why Kustomer became the system of record for large consumer brands, with names like Turo, Skims, and Sweetgreen in its customer base.[2] The timeline view, the omnichannel routing, and the workflow engine are mature and well-built. After Meta acquired the company in 2022 and a later sale to an investor group in 2023, Kustomer has stayed focused on that CRM-first thesis: give your human agents the best possible context to do their jobs.[2] When a buying committee wants a unified customer CRM and AI that makes its existing reps faster, Kustomer is a genuinely defensible answer, and we have lost deals to exactly that preference.[3]

So this guide is not "why Kustomer is bad." It is not. The honest question is narrower: **if the platform works, why do so many teams end up shopping for an alternative?** In our buyer conversations the answer is almost never the CRM. It is two structural things that have nothing to do with how good the customer timeline is. The first is what the AI is built to do. The second is what the full bill costs once you add the channels and compliance you actually need.

**One disclosure before the criteria.** Richpanel is one of the five platforms compared below, so I am a participant, not a referee. I will not claim we win every column, because we do not. I will define every criterion before the matrix appears, name a specific situation where each of the other four (Kustomer included) is the better choice, link each vendor's own pricing and product pages so you can check my reading, and publish a correction address at the bottom. Read it as a more useful starting point than a vendor listicle, not as a neutral analyst report.

## The AI assists reps, *and the channels are add-ons.*

Two facts about Kustomer sit underneath most of the alternative-shopping we see, and neither is a knock on the CRM.

**First, the AI posture.** Kustomer's AI, Kustomer IQ, is positioned to support human reps: suggesting replies, surfacing timeline context, classifying and routing conversations, and powering self-service deflection.[1] That is useful work, and for a team that wants to make its existing agents faster, it fits. But it is a fundamentally different posture from an AI agent that resolves routine conversations end to end and takes the action the request needs, with a human stepping in only on the exceptions. Assist-mode AI keeps a person in every conversation. Resolution-mode AI removes the person from the routine ones. Teams that arrive looking to take repetitive tickets off their humans, not just speed those humans up, are the ones who end up shopping.

There is a subtler issue too. When the AI's job is to assist rather than to resolve, the headcount math does not change much: you still staff for the volume, you just handle each ticket a little faster. *The teams shopping hardest are the ones who wanted the volume itself to stop landing on a human.* That is a different product, and it is the gap that most often sends a Kustomer evaluator looking.

**Second, the cost structure.** Kustomer's pricing is quote-based and sales-gated, with no public per-seat number, so the right move is to get a current quote rather than trust any figure you find online.[1] What matters more than the sticker price is the structure: voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and HIPAA are paid add-ons rather than bundled into the platform, and AI is metered on top. The all-in bill therefore depends heavily on which channels and compliance options you switch on. For a brand that needs voice and SMS and a compliance posture, the line items stack into something larger than the headline seat suggested.

Hold onto one more distinction before the criteria, because it reorders every published ranking: the difference between assist and resolve, which mirrors the difference between deflection and resolution. **Deflection** counts a ticket as handled when the customer stops asking, which includes the customer giving up and leaving. **Resolution** counts a ticket as handled only when the customer's actual problem is solved, validated, and confirmed, with no human required. We wrote the full breakdown in [AI chatbot vs. AI agent](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/ai-chatbot-vs-ai-agent); for this guide it matters because "AI that supports your reps" and "AI that resolves the ticket" are not the same purchase.

## Six criteria, weighted for a *team that wants the volume to stop.*

These are operational, not vibes. Each is defined so two evaluators would score a vendor the same way. The weights reflect the target reader for this guide: a CX or ops lead on Kustomer, at any volume from a few thousand to 100,000+ conversations a month, who likes the customer timeline but wants AI that resolves and a bill that stays predictable as support volume grows, not one that stacks add-on meters.

### 01. Resolution model (weight: high)

Does the AI resolve end to end autonomously, draft replies for a human to approve, or only assist a rep and deflect to FAQ content? Operational test: of 100 support tickets, how many are closed with no human touch and a confirmed outcome, not just a customer who stopped replying and not just a rep who replied faster?

### 02. Pricing-model alignment (weight: high)

Per-seat, per-resolution, per-conversation, or flat workspace, and are core channels bundled or sold as paid add-ons? The question is not "cheapest sticker price" but "does the full bill stay predictable as I add voice, SMS, WhatsApp, compliance, and AI?" This is the criterion that sends most Kustomer shoppers looking once the AI gap is clear, so it carries top weight here. Model the full stack you actually need through each vendor before deciding.

### 03. Pre-launch validation on your data (weight: high)

Will the vendor run the AI against a sample of your historical tickets and show per-response accuracy before go-live, against a published threshold? A demo on the vendor's curated example proves nothing about your catalog and your policies, and an aggregate resolution rate from a marketing page proves even less.

### 04. Action execution depth (weight: medium)

Can it execute real operations (refunds, cancellations, order edits, subscription changes) as validated, policy-bounded actions, or does it only generate text and hand off to a rep? For ecommerce, this is the line between a help-desk reply and an actual resolution.

### 05. Channel coverage on one bill (weight: medium)

Are email, chat, social, SMS, and voice covered without a stack of paid add-ons, and does one customer context follow the person across all of them, so customer communications stay connected across every channel? A platform that charges separately for each channel is a different commitment than one where the channels are part of the platform story. This is the criterion that distinguishes the add-on-heavy incumbents most sharply from a consolidated platform.

### 06. Multichannel and ecommerce fit (weight: medium)

Is the platform tuned for the ticket mix and customer journey you actually have? Kustomer is strongest as a unified B2C CRM; an ecommerce queue dominated by order-status, returns, and subscriptions has different needs than a relationship-led support model. For the channel cut, see our [multichannel AI support comparison](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-multichannel-ai-support-platform).

Criteria 1 through 3 carry the most weight because resolution quality, pricing alignment, and proof-on-your-data are what a Kustomer shopper is actually weighing. Criteria 4 through 6 decide fit once the economics work. The matrix below shows the five most comparable axes; channel coverage on one bill does not tabulate into a one-line cell cleanly, so the per-vendor notes carry it.

## Five platforms, *five comparable axes.*

Cells reflect each vendor's public product and pricing pages as of June 2026. Each platform name links to the page used to source its row. Where a capability is real but not separately documented, the cell says so rather than guessing.

| Platform | AI posture | Primary pricing model | Pre-launch eval on your tickets | Action execution | Channels bundled vs add-on |
| --- | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |
| **[Richpanel](https://www.richpanel.com/ai-agents)** | Autonomous resolution end to end, or collaborative draft mode | Per-conversation / flat workspace, one bill | Yes, per-customer threshold (95–99% on your historical tickets before go-live) | Typed, policy-bounded actions (refunds, cancellations, order and subscription edits) | Email, chat, social, SMS on one bill; voice via Aircall, Dialpad, JustCall |
| [Kustomer](https://www.kustomer.com/) | AI assists reps (Kustomer IQ): suggestions, routing, self-service deflection | Quote-based; AI metered on top | Not publicly documented as a per-customer pre-launch eval | Workflow automations; rep-assisted rather than autonomous actions | Voice, SMS, WhatsApp, HIPAA are paid add-ons |
| [Zendesk AI](https://www.zendesk.com/service/ai/) | Agentic resolution plus automations | Per-agent seats, plus AI add-on and per-resolution fees | Not publicly documented; QA via separately-priced Zendesk QA | Actions via triggers; AI-generated text less constrained | Talk (voice) is a separate product; QA add-on; AI metered on top |
| [Gorgias](https://www.gorgias.com/) | AI Agent resolves over knowledge plus actions, Shopify-tuned | Tickets, plus per-resolution AI Agent fee | Not publicly documented as a per-customer pre-launch eval | Shopify actions (refund, cancel, edit) via integrations | Widest app marketplace; AI billed per resolution on top of tickets |
| [Gladly](https://www.gladly.com/) | People-centered model; AI assist plus Gladly Sidekick resolution | Per-seat or per-conversation hero plans, quote-based | Not publicly documented as a per-customer pre-launch eval | Actions via integrations; B2C voice-forward | Voice-forward; channels vary by plan and quote |

If your reading of any cell differs from current product or pricing reality, email [amit@richpanel.com](mailto:amit@richpanel.com) and we will update it. The goal is to be accurate, not to win a column we have not earned. Kustomer's pricing is quote-based and its add-on bundle changes; verify it with a current quote before you model it.

The honest read of this table: the platforms split on two things a Kustomer shopper actually weighs. The first is AI posture, assist versus resolve. The second is whether the channels and AI come on one predictable bill or stack as separate meters. Kustomer and Zendesk both center on a broad customer service software stack with assist-leaning or add-on-heavy economics. Richpanel is the outlier: autonomous resolution and channels on one bill, with a pre-launch eval on your tickets. Gorgias resolves but bills per resolution on top of tickets, and Gladly leads with a people-centered B2C model. *Whether the outlier position is an advantage depends entirely on whether you want AI that resolves and a bill that stays flat.*

## The strength I would actually *send a buyer toward.*

For each competitor, here is a specific situation where it is the better choice than Richpanel. If your situation matches, take it seriously.

### Kustomer

Kustomer has one of the strongest CRM-first data models in the category, organized around a unified customer timeline rather than a ticket queue, with a mature workflow engine and deep traction among high-volume consumer brands. **Choose Kustomer over Richpanel if** you are a high-volume B2C brand whose reps need rich relationship history to handle each conversation well, and you want AI that assists those reps rather than replacing the human in the loop. If your support model is relationship-led and your priority is giving agents the best possible context to work in, the unified timeline is built for exactly that, and Kustomer IQ's suggestions, routing, and deflection make those agents measurably faster. For a team that values a single customer object across every channel above autonomous resolution depth, Kustomer's CRM is a legitimate edge, and it is one we lose to.

### Zendesk AI

Zendesk is a leading customer service software option and the broadest overall platform on this list, spanning use cases far beyond ecommerce CX, with a vast app marketplace and a mature, separately-sold QA product. **Choose Zendesk over Richpanel if** you are a large organization standardizing one vendor across many functions (IT service, internal help desks, large-enterprise workflows) and you value that breadth over AI-native resolution depth, or if its proven-platform reputation is what your leadership needs to sign off. The trade-off is that Zendesk's AI is a paid add-on, its QA is a separate product, and Talk (voice) is sold separately, so the bill stacks the same way Kustomer's add-ons do. If you are weighing Zendesk specifically, our [Zendesk alternatives comparison](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-zendesk-alternatives) breaks down the full cost stack.

### Gorgias

Gorgias is the most Shopify-native option on this list, with the widest ecommerce app marketplace and deep, out-of-the-box integration into the Shopify order and customer model. **Choose Gorgias over Richpanel if** you are a Shopify-first brand whose top priority is the broadest possible catalog of pre-built app integrations and you are comfortable with AI billed per resolution on top of your ticket plan. For a team that lives inside the Shopify ecosystem and wants the largest marketplace, that breadth is a real edge. The trade-off is the per-resolution meter on top of tickets; if you are weighing Gorgias specifically, our [Gorgias alternatives comparison](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/best-gorgias-alternatives) breaks down the double-meter math.

### Gladly

Gladly is built around a people-centered, voice-forward B2C model, where the unit of work is the customer rather than the ticket and phone is a first-class channel. **Choose Gladly over Richpanel if** you are a consumer brand whose highest-CSAT channel is voice and whose support philosophy is a single ongoing relationship per customer across phone, chat, and email, rather than discrete tickets. For that profile, its conversation-centric model and voice-forward design are a real fit. Note that Richpanel does not host native voice; we integrate with Aircall, Dialpad, and JustCall, so a brand that wants voice as the central, native channel should weigh Gladly seriously.

### Richpanel

For completeness, here is where we are the right answer, stated as plainly as the others. Richpanel is a team of AI agents that runs customer service end to end, resolving 70-80% of conversations autonomously while your people handle the exceptions. **Choose Richpanel if** you are a DTC or mid-market brand that wants AI that resolves the repeat work end to end (not just assists your reps), proven on your own tickets before go-live, flat per-conversation economics instead of a CRM seat with add-on meters for voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and compliance, channels on one bill, multi-brand support in one workspace, and a resolution guarantee with money attached: 50% resolution in 30 days or your money back. In production that has looked like [a wellness brand running 4,881 fully autonomous AI replies in 42 days at 4.43 out of 5 CSAT](https://www.richpanel.com/case-studies/wellness), higher than its own human team's average.[5] Where we are weaker than Kustomer: we are younger and our CRM-timeline depth and B2C relationship tooling are less established than Kustomer's, so if a unified customer CRM is your top criterion or you need native voice as a central channel, Kustomer or Gladly is the fair choice.

## Match your situation to the *shortlist.*

There is no single best Kustomer alternative. There is a best one for your channels, your ticket mix, your support volume, and what you want the AI to do. Map yourself to a line below.

- **High-volume B2C, relationship-led support, want a unified customer timeline and AI that assists your customer service agents:** stay on Kustomer. The CRM is built for exactly that, and the assist-mode AI fits a team keeping a human in every conversation.
- **DTC or mid-market, want AI that resolves the repeat work end to end on one predictable bill, want proof on your own tickets and a guarantee:** Richpanel, the team of AI agents that resolves the routine work end to end.
- **Large org standardizing one platform across many functions, breadth and proven-platform trust over AI-native depth:** Zendesk.
- **Shopify-first brand that wants the widest ecommerce app marketplace and is fine with per-resolution AI billing:** Gorgias.
- **Consumer brand whose highest-CSAT channel is native voice and whose model is one ongoing relationship per customer:** Gladly.

Notice that the right answer flips on facts about you (your volume, your channels, what you want the AI to do), not on which vendor wrote the article. That is what a real comparison is supposed to do. If a single name appeared on every line, you would be reading marketing again. Note too that one line here says stay with Kustomer, because for a relationship-led B2C team that wants its reps assisted, it usually is the right call.

## Six tests that cut through the *pitch.*

Whichever shortlist you land on, these six tests separate platforms that resolve from platforms that demo well. The first one is the one most Kustomer shoppers skip and most regret skipping. For the full version, see our [40-question vendor RFP template](https://www.richpanel.com/learn/ai-customer-service-vendor-rfp-template).

### 1. Does the AI resolve the ticket, or assist my rep?

Ask, for 100 routine tickets, how many close with no human at all versus how many still need a person who just replied faster. Assist-mode AI keeps the human in every conversation; resolution-mode removes it from the routine ones.

### 2. Show me the full bill with every add-on I need.

If voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and HIPAA are sold separately, the headline seat price is not your bill. Get a quote with every line item you will actually switch on, plus the AI meter, before comparing.

### 3. Run the agent on 100 of my historical tickets.

Ask for per-response accuracy and a walk-through of the failures. A vendor that will not do this is selling a demo, not production.

### 4. Show me a refund executed as a tool call, not free text.

Ask to see the typed parameters and the policy constraints. Free-text "I'll refund you" with no validation layer is how a bot sells a car for one dollar.

### 5. Does one customer context follow the person across every channel?

Test the omnichannel claim directly across all your support channels. Ask whether email, chat, social, SMS, and voice land on one timeline, or whether customer conversations are split across channels into separate silos and separate line items.

### 6. Connect me with three customers like me, live within your timeframe.

Reference customers at your size and vertical are a more reliable signal than any ranking, including this one.

## What this guide *cannot tell you.*

An honest comparison names its own blind spots. Three apply here.

- **It is written by a participant.** Richpanel is in the matrix, and no amount of even-handedness fully removes that. The mitigation is structural: criteria defined before scoring, a named competitor strength on every row including a line that says stay with Kustomer, linked source pages, and a public correction address. Read it as a more useful starting point than a vendor listicle, not as a neutral analyst report.
- **Kustomer's pricing is quote-based, so the cost claims are structural, not numeric.** Because there is no public per-seat number, this guide argues about the shape of the bill (add-ons for voice, SMS, WhatsApp, HIPAA, plus AI metered on top), not a specific dollar figure. Get a current quote with your real channel mix before you model your own bill against any alternative.
- **The matrix omits valid platforms.** Intercom Fin, Sierra, Decagon, Ada, Freshdesk, and Salesforce Agentforce are real options we did not score, chosen to keep the comparison legible rather than exhaustive. Their absence is editorial, not a judgment.

The claim this guide is willing to stand behind is narrow and defensible: Kustomer's CRM is rarely the reason teams shop, the assist-versus-resolve AI posture and the add-on bill structure usually are, and a vendor's willingness to prove resolution accuracy on your own tickets is the single most predictive signal you can test before signing.

## Leaving Kustomer, *in plain English.*

### Why do teams look for Kustomer alternatives if the platform works well?

Rarely because the CRM is weak. Kustomer's unified customer timeline is one of the better CRM-first support data models in the category, and its AI assists human support agents capably. The two reasons teams shop are the AI posture and the cost structure. Kustomer's AI (Kustomer IQ) is positioned to support reps rather than to resolve tickets autonomously, so teams that want an agent to close routine conversations end to end have to look elsewhere. And core channels like voice, SMS, WhatsApp, plus HIPAA, are paid add-ons rather than bundled, with AI metered on top, so the bill stacks as you add what you need. If you want AI that resolves on one bill rather than a CRM with assist-mode AI and add-on meters, a different architecture can fit better.

### How much does Kustomer cost in 2026?

Kustomer's pricing is quote-based and sales-gated, so there is no published per-seat number we can stand behind, and you should get a current quote rather than rely on any figure online. What matters more than the sticker price is the structure: voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and HIPAA are paid add-ons rather than bundled, and AI is metered on top of the platform. The practical implication is that your all-in bill depends heavily on which channels and compliance options you switch on, on how much AI you run, and on your support volume. Model the full stack you actually need, including the add-ons, before comparing it to a flat or per-conversation plan elsewhere.

### Does Kustomer's AI resolve tickets or just assist agents?

Kustomer IQ is positioned primarily as an assistant that supports human reps: suggesting replies, surfacing context from the customer timeline, classifying and routing, and powering self-service deflection. That is genuinely useful, and for a high-volume B2C team that wants to make its existing agents faster, it fits. It is a different posture from an AI agent that resolves routine conversations end to end and takes the action the request needs, with a human handling only the exceptions. The distinction matters because assist-mode AI keeps a human in every conversation, while resolution-mode AI removes the human from the routine ones. Decide which job you are buying for before you compare scores.

### Is a CRM-first support platform better than an AI-native one?

Neither is universally better. A CRM-first platform like Kustomer organizes everything around a unified customer object and a timeline, which is excellent when your reps need rich context to handle high-volume B2C conversations and relationship history matters. An AI-native platform is built so the AI resolves the routine work first, with the data model serving that loop, which fits teams whose main goal is to take repetitive tickets off humans. If your priority is giving human agents the best possible context to work in, lean CRM-first. If your priority is having the AI close the repeat tickets so humans handle only the exceptions, lean AI-native. Match the architecture to the job, not to a category label.

### Which Kustomer alternative is best for an ecommerce brand?

For a DTC or mid-market ecommerce team choosing a customer support platform, the deciding factors are usually action depth on order operations (refunds, cancellations, subscription and address edits), proof of accuracy on your own tickets before go-live, and a pricing model that does not stack add-on meters on top of a CRM seat. Richpanel is built for that profile with per-conversation economics, voice via Aircall, Dialpad, and JustCall integrations included in the platform story, and a pre-launch eval on your historical tickets. Kustomer remains strong if you are a high-volume B2C brand that wants a unified customer timeline and AI that assists reps. Gorgias fits a Shopify-native team that wants the deepest app marketplace, Zendesk fits breadth across many functions, and Gladly fits a people-centered, voice-heavy B2C model. Match the platform to your ticket mix and customer journey, not to a ranking.

### What are the main alternatives to Kustomer?

They group by what you want to replace. For a like-for-like customer service platform with a shared inbox, live chat, and a knowledge base, the closest are Zendesk, Gladly, Freshdesk, Zoho Desk, and Help Scout. For ecommerce specifically, Gorgias is the Shopify-native option. If you want to keep a helpdesk but swap the AI, standalone agent layers like Decagon, Sierra, and Ada sit on top. And if you want the helpdesk and the AI rebuilt as one AI-native platform that resolves on one bill, Richpanel is built for that. Most match Kustomer on the basic ticketing system and live chat features, so score them on ticket management, on whether the AI resolves rather than assists, and on whether the channels are bundled or sold as add-ons.

### Is there a free Kustomer alternative?

Yes. Zoho Desk and Freshdesk offer free or low-cost entry tiers, HubSpot Service Hub has a free plan, and most vendors offer a free trial so you can test on real conversations. Those free tiers suit smaller teams handling low volume through a shared inbox, live chat, and a basic knowledge base, but they cap the automation tools, the customer feedback tools, and the AI. If you are leaving Kustomer because the add-on bill (voice, SMS, WhatsApp, HIPAA, plus AI) got expensive, model the all-in cost of any alternative at your real channel mix and resolved-conversation volume, because a cheap base seat with separate channel meters on top can still cost more than flat per-conversation pricing on one bill.

### What should a Kustomer alternative actually do?

More than assist a rep or deflect to help articles. A real alternative reads the customer's message, pulls the answer from your knowledge base, and resolves routine customer inquiries end to end across live chat, email, and social, taking the action the request needs rather than only drafting a reply for a human. It should give your agents one shared inbox with full customer context, offer self-service options that actually resolve instead of looping website visitors back to a search box, and hand off cleanly to a person when judgment is required. The test is confirmed resolution on your own tickets, not a feature list, because that is what actually lifts customer satisfaction.

## Where the claims come from.

Inline citations [1]–[5] map to the entries below. Vendor product and pricing pages used to source matrix rows are linked inline in the table.

1. **Kustomer, product and pricing.** Kustomer IQ positioned as AI that assists human reps (suggestions, routing, self-service deflection); pricing quote-based and sales-gated; voice, SMS, WhatsApp, and HIPAA offered as paid add-ons. Get a current quote before modeling your bill. [kustomer.com](https://www.kustomer.com/)
2. **Kustomer, company background.** CRM-first unified-customer-timeline model; consumer-brand customer base including Turo, Skims, and Sweetgreen; Meta acquisition (2022) and subsequent sale to an investor group (2023). [kustomer.com](https://www.kustomer.com/)
3. **Richpanel buyer demo dataset (April to May 2026).** 69 recorded inbound demo calls. The observations on the assist-versus-resolve AI gap, the add-on cost structure, and the "unified CRM" preference are drawn from this dataset. Underlying call data is confidential; aggregate counts are publishable. Methodology available on request via [amit@richpanel.com](mailto:amit@richpanel.com).
4. **Richpanel LLM-citation tracking (2026).** Internal tracking of which AI customer service vendors ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity name when asked for recommendations, used to scope which comparisons buyers see first. Methodology available on request via [amit@richpanel.com](mailto:amit@richpanel.com).
5. **Richpanel production case study (wellness brand).** 4,881 fully autonomous AI replies over 42 days at 4.43/5 CSAT, above the brand's human-team average. [richpanel.com/case-studies/wellness](https://www.richpanel.com/case-studies/wellness)

Version history, v1.0 (2026-06-18): initial publication. Matrix cells are a snapshot of public vendor product and pricing documentation as of the publication date.
