ComparisonTradeOS vs Salesforce

Salesforce is CRM. TradeOS is the operating system.

Salesforce is the dominant enterprise CRM — pipeline, contacts, opportunities, sales automation. For pure sales operations at enterprise scale, it's the standard. For international trade operators, it's typically one tool in a stack of 8–14, requiring custom integration and per-seat external-user costs that scale linearly with your network. TradeOS includes CRM functionality (the Clients section) as one of fifteen platform sections — alongside supplier collaboration, freight visibility, document chain, finance, and AI. Here's the scope difference.

Book a demoSee the scope difference →

Scope

15 sectionsvsCRM only

Clients is one of 15  ·  Sales / Service / Marketing

External seats

575 includedvs$30/seat

Suppliers · clients · logistics  ·  Experience Cloud community

AI surface

4 native productsvsEinstein add-on

Atlas · Bot Studio · Legal · Acct  ·  Sales Cloud Einstein

Customization

Plain EnglishvsApex

Bot Studio · no-code  ·  Java-like, developer-required

Where Salesforce leads

Honest assessment first.

A serious comparison page starts with the case for the other side. Salesforce is not a weak CRM — it is, on its own terms, the most operationally proven CRM on the market. The honest question is whether CRM alone is the right scope for a trade operator in 2026.

Pro-rival

Where Salesforce earns its market position.

Credit due
  • +
    Dominant enterprise CRM — 150,000+ customers; 25 years of operational learning across every sales-driven industry.
  • +
    Mature sales automation — pipeline, forecasting, opportunity management at depths few products match.
  • +
    Marketing Cloud integration (with the paid Marketing Cloud module) — campaign orchestration, lead nurture, paid-media attribution.
  • +
    Service Cloud for customer-support workflows — case routing, omnichannel, knowledge bases, SLA management.
  • +
    Deep customizability via Apex, Lightning Web Components, Flow — for orgs with developer resources.
  • +
    AppExchange ecosystem — 4,000+ third-party apps, decades of partner-channel maturity.
  • +
    Einstein AI for sales — lead scoring, opportunity insights, forecast intelligence; mature, well-funded.
Sweet spotSales-driven enterpriseImplementationPartner-drivenPricing logicPer-seat · per-cloud · AppExchange

Where the fit breaks

Where the fit breaks for trade operations.

Same product · wrong scope
  • Salesforce is CRM-first; trade ops require deeper coverage — orders, production, freight, documents, finance, supplier collaboration — none native.
  • External-user seats (Experience Cloud, Partner Community) at $25–$100/seat scale linearly with your network of suppliers, clients, and logistics partners.
  • Customization via Apex (Java-like) and Lightning Web Components requires a developer — not self-serve for ops teams configuring trade workflows.
  • Einstein AI is sales-focused; trade-specific AI (document intelligence, supplier audit, cold-chain anomaly) is not native and not on the Salesforce roadmap.
  • Integration with non-Salesforce tools (NetSuite, Flexport, DocuSign, etc.) typically requires MuleSoft, Boomi, or custom middleware — sold separately, often a Big-4 SI engagement.
  • Marketing automation is out of scope for TradeOS by design — operators who need Marketing Cloud should keep it, and integrate to TradeOS for operations.
MismatchCRM-only scope for ops-heavy buyerIntegration tax5–8 supporting tools typicalNetwork costExternal seats grow linearly

What each platform does

Salesforce is CRM. TradeOS is fifteen sections, one of which is CRM.

Salesforce's domain is sales and customer relationship management — four clouds, all CRM-adjacent. TradeOS includes that as one section plus fourteen others, plus four AI products, plus four Network portals. They are not direct competitors — they are different-scope products. Here is the actual surface area, drawn to scale.

Salesforce

Four sales-adjacent clouds.

CRM domain
01Sales CloudPipeline · opportunities · forecastingCRM
02Service CloudCase routing · omnichannel · knowledgeCRM
03Marketing CloudCampaigns · nurture · attributionCRM
04Experience CloudCommunities · partner portalsCRM
4 clouds · 1 domain+ Einstein add-on

TradeOS

Fifteen sections · four AI products · four Network portals.

TradeOS

15 platform sections01 — 15

01Dashboard
02Clients
03Manufacturers
04Orders
05Production
06Shipments
07Documents
08Communications
09Finance
10Tasks
11Logistics
12Inventory
13Items · Catalog
14Reports
15People

4 AI productsruns on the live graph

AI 01Atlas
AI 02Bot Studio
AI 03Legal AI
AI 04Accounting AI

4 Network portalsexternal participants

P 01Supplier portal
P 02Client portal
P 03Logistics portal
P 04Financier portal
Clients = CRMOne section. Native links into Orders, Documents, Finance, and Communications.23 surfaces · 1 graph
Takeaway

Salesforce's domain is sales and customer relationship management — deep, mature, market-leading for that scope. TradeOS includes that domain as one section — the Clients section — and adds fourteen others, plus four AI products, plus four Network portals. They are not direct competitors. They are different-scope products. Most TradeOS buyers do not replace Salesforce alone — they consolidate Salesforce plus five-to-eight other tools into one platform.

What you're probably running

Salesforce, plus the rest of the stack to operate trade.

Most operators who Google "edma vs salesforce" are not deciding whether to replace Salesforce alone — they are deciding whether to consolidate the Salesforce-centered stack into a single platform. Here is the typical bill of materials at $100M trade volume, with list pricing. Enterprise discounting is real and unevenly distributed; numbers below are public list.

Reference profile
$100M annual · 10 internal · 575 external

Salesforce-centered stackList pricing · Year 1
01Salesforce Sales Cloud Enterprise10 users · $210/user/month$25,200/year
02Salesforce Service CloudAdditional user licenses$6,000/year
03Experience Cloud — external seats575 users · $30/seat/month$207,000/year
04Sales Cloud Einstein AI$400/user/month add-on$4,800/year
05NetSuite or SAP · ERPQuote-dependent, NDA$40,000–$80,000/year
06Flexport or freight platformAnnual subscription$24,000+/year
07DocuSign · e-signatureBusiness Pro tier$4,800/year
08Other toolsAvalara · ZoomInfo · Outreach · etc.$20,000–$60,000/year
09MuleSoft or integration platformTie it all together$15,000–$80,000/year
ΣAnnual subscription totalList pricing · 9 vendors · 9 contracts$346,800–$526,800per year

Plus integration consulting · per-workflow customization · dedicated Salesforce admin · MuleSoft engineering

TradeOS Business — equivalent scopePublic pricing
One subscriptionTradeOS Business tierAll-in · 1 vendor · 1 contract$48,000per year

Clients section — CRM functionality (the 15 head-to-head rows below)

575 external seats included — suppliers, clients, logistics partners

4 AI products native — Atlas, Bot Studio, Legal AI, Accounting AI

14 other platform sections — orders, production, freight, documents, finance, more

60+ native integrations — NetSuite, Flexport, DocuSign included; no middleware tax

CSM-led migration — included in subscription, not professional services

Annualized savingsvs Salesforce-centered stack — $100M operator$298K–$478Kper year

Pricing noteSalesforce enterprise discounts exist (typically 10–30% off list at $250K+ ACV). The headline gap holds even at maximum negotiated discount.·Sources · Salesforce public pricing pages (May 2026) · NetSuite SuiteAnswers · Flexport public price sheet · TradeOS pricing page

Head-to-head on CRM functionality

Fifteen rows: how the Clients section compares to Salesforce.

For the buyer whose evaluation is specifically CRM-vs-CRM: here is TradeOS's Clients section line by line against Salesforce Sales Cloud + Service Cloud + Experience Cloud. Salesforce wins several — honestly noted.

15 rows · 3 groups
Last verified · Q2 2026

ComparisonCRM capability$100M trade operator · 575 external users
Subject ATradeOS · ClientsEDMA · Business tier
Subject BSalesforceSales + Service + Experience
01Core CRM8 rows
 
 
Contact management
Native — contacts unified with orders, communications, documents
Deeper customization — mature field schema, custom objects, validation rules
Account hierarchies
Native — parent/child accounts, ownership splits, multi-entity
Deeper — arbitrary depth, role-based access, mature in F500 deployments
Pipeline & opportunity tracking
Native — pipeline stages, stage transitions, probability, weighted forecast
Deeper, mature — the category-defining implementation
Forecasting
Basic — weighted forecast by stage; quotas configurable
Advanced — collaborative forecasting, territory management, multi-currency
Lead scoring
Atlas-driven — reasons across the operational graph, not just CRM signals
Einstein-driven — mature scoring; sales-data heavy; Sales Cloud Einstein add-on
Activity tracking
Native — 7 channels unified (WhatsApp, WeChat, email, SMS, Telegram, Teams, voice)
Email + calendar primary · other channels via paid integrations
Custom fields & objects
No-code — ops team adds fields and objects without dev time
Simple custom fields no-code · complex logic requires Apex
Mobile app
PWA + native — feature parity with desktop, not summary-only
Mature native — decades-deep iOS / Android apps; offline-capable
02Trade-specific extensions — where TradeOS goes further4 rows
 
 
Order lifecycle on the client record
Native — client ↔ Orders section, real-time status, no integration
Custom integration — NetSuite / SAP ↔ Salesforce via MuleSoft or Boomi
Document chain per client
Native — contracts, certificates, invoices, BLs joined on the graph
Custom — Files object + DocuSign integration + per-org folder structure
Multi-channel comms history
Native — 7 channels unified on the client record
Email primary · messaging via Conversation Cloud or third party
Health scoring with operational signals
Native — signals across orders, payments, shipments, support history
Custom — Sales-only signals; operational signals via integration
03External party collaboration3 rows
 
 
Client portal (branded)
Native · 575 free seats at Business tier
Experience Cloud — $30–$50/seat = $14K–$29K/yr at 575 users
Two-way data sync
Native — supplier updates flow back to the operational graph
Custom — portal writes back via Apex triggers + community config
Mobile-first external UX
Native — PWA, multi-language, designed for factory-floor & warehouse use
Generic Experience Cloud templates · mobile-secondary in practice
Native / includedPartial / depth variesAdd-on / custom build

Sources · Salesforce product docs (Sales Cloud Spring '26, Service Cloud, Experience Cloud) · public pricing pages · TradeOS migration modeling + EDMA Group’s own migration

Honest assessment

Three scenarios where Salesforce is the right answer.

If a comparison page never lets the other side win a row, it isn't a comparison — it's a sales sheet. Here are three buyer profiles where we'd recommend Salesforce over TradeOS without reservation.

01 · Sales-driven enterprise

Sales-driven enterprise with non-trade focus.

If your business is primarily sales-driven — subscriptions, services, non-physical products — Salesforce's depth on pipeline, forecasting, sales automation, and marketing integration is unmatched.

TradeOS optimizes for trade operations, not pure sales motion. If you don't have a physical order, document chain, or supplier-collaboration problem, TradeOS is the wrong tool.

No physical ordersPipeline depth mattersForecasting · territory

02 · Existing Salesforce investment

Deep existing Salesforce ecosystem investment.

If you've invested heavily in Salesforce customization — custom objects, Apex code, AppExchange tooling, partner-channel integrations — the cost of replacement may exceed the value.

In those cases TradeOS augments Salesforce rather than replacing it. Bi-directional Salesforce integration is planned for Q4 2026 at Team+ tier.

Deep Apex customizationAppExchange-reliantAugment, don't replace

03 · Marketing-driven ops

Marketing automation as a primary criterion.

If Marketing Cloud, Pardot, or Account Engagement is a primary buying criterion, Salesforce's marketing capabilities exceed TradeOS's scope — by design.

We don't focus on marketing automation. We focus on operational workflows. Operators needing both should keep Marketing Cloud, integrate to TradeOS for ops.

Marketing CloudPardot · Account EngagementOut of TradeOS scope

Where the fit shifts

Three scenarios where TradeOS is the better answer.

The mirror image. These are the buyer profiles where we'd recommend ourselves without hesitation — and where the Salesforce-centered stack you've been handed is, in our view, the wrong tool for the job.

01 · Trade across many workflows

Trade ops across many workflows.

If your operation involves orders + production + freight + documents + supplier collaboration + finance, TradeOS covers all of them natively.

Salesforce covers the client relationship side; you'd need 4–8 additional tools for the rest, plus middleware to make them talk.

Orders + freight + docsSingle source of truthNo middleware tax

02 · External collaboration at scale

External-party collaboration at scale.

If suppliers, clients, and logistics partners need to participate in your operational record (50+ external users), the math gets material fast.

TradeOS Business includes 575 free external seats. Experience Cloud at $30/seat × 575 users = $207K/year external-user cost alone.

575 free seats$207K/yr saved4 portal types

03 · Trade-specific AI depth

AI integration depth across operations.

Einstein is sales-AI focused and mature for that use case. TradeOS's 4 AI products cover trade-specific operations: Atlas across 7 channels, Bot Studio custom agents, Legal AI on contracts, Accounting AI on financial reconciliation.

Operators with both sales-AI and trade-AI needs may use both products — different scope, different optimization.

4 native AI productsMulti-provider routingBot Studio · plain English

Common questions

Specific questions from Salesforce-evaluating prospects.

Direct, verbatim — the questions our sales team gets most often from operators with a Salesforce-centered stack and a renewal coming up. No marketing answers; the honest ones.

8 questions · all open by default

Q.01“Can TradeOS replace Salesforce entirely?”

For trade-focused operators where CRM is one workflow among many: yes. The Clients section covers core CRM, and the deeper integration with Orders, Documents, Finance, and Communications often makes it operationally better than the Salesforce-equivalent for that buyer.

For sales-driven businesses where Salesforce is the primary tool of the GTM org — augmentation makes more sense than replacement. Keep Salesforce, integrate to TradeOS for ops.

Q.02“What about our Salesforce customizations and Apex code?”

Migration scope includes mapping custom objects to TradeOS native entities, plus recreating Apex logic in Bot Studio (plain English).

Most simple-to-moderate Apex translates cleanly; complex Apex with deep AppExchange dependencies may need bespoke replacement. We assess specifically during scoping — if >30% of your Salesforce value is in Apex you don't want to rebuild, augmentation is probably the right path.

Q.03“Marketing Cloud — is there a TradeOS equivalent?”

No. Marketing automation is out of scope for TradeOS — by design, not by oversight.

Operators needing Marketing Cloud (or Pardot, Account Engagement, HubSpot Marketing) functionality should keep that tool and integrate it to TradeOS for operations. We don't compete on campaign orchestration or lead nurture.

Q.04“What about Einstein AI?”

Different scope. Einstein is sales-AI focused — lead scoring, opportunity insights, forecasting. Mature, well-funded, expanding.

TradeOS's AI covers trade-specific operations: Atlas conversational across 7 channels, Bot Studio plain-English workflow agents, Legal AI on contracts, Accounting AI on reconciliation. Operators needing both AI surfaces can use both products.

Q.05“AppExchange — does TradeOS have an equivalent ecosystem?”

Not yet. Salesforce AppExchange has 4,000+ third-party apps and 20+ years of partner-channel maturity. We have no comparable ecosystem.

Our Plugin Marketplace launches 2027 with Bot Studio templates and third-party integrations — trade-specific, smaller, but built around the unified graph rather than as bolt-ons.

Q.06“How does the pricing math actually work for our 575 external users?”

Experience Cloud: $30/seat × 575 users = $207,000/year external-user cost alone. (Some Experience Cloud licenses run $50/seat — pricing depends on what they can read/write.)

TradeOS Business: 575 external seats included in the $48,000/year subscription. The external-seat math alone is most of why mid-market operators with active networks move.

Q.07“What about Salesforce's 99.99% uptime SLA?”

TradeOS Business tier: 99.95% uptime. Enterprise tier: 99.99% uptime — same as Salesforce's headline number.

Comparable architecture — multi-region failover, redundant infrastructure, real-time replication. Full SLA terms at edma.trade/legal/sla.

Q.08“Salesforce has 25 years of maturity. TradeOS has 6 months.”

Fair. Vendor-risk diligence is appropriate. Salesforce's 25 years of operational learning is real, and not a thing we can claim to match.

Multi-year contracts include data portability commitments and a 12-month wind-down notice clause. The trade-off: established maturity vs. purpose-built trade depth — you have to weigh which matters more for your scope.

Next step

Get a personalized scope & migration estimate.

Three depths of engagement, depending on where you are in evaluation. Self-serve if you're early; scoping call if you have a Salesforce renewal on the calendar; reference call if you're choosing between final-round vendors.

Track A · Self-servePublic PDF

Stack consolidation playbook.

Download our Salesforce-stack-to-TradeOS playbook — everything our solutions engineering team uses internally when consolidating a Salesforce + ERP + freight + signature stack into a single platform. PDF, 32 pages.

Stack inventory worksheet (9 categories)

Total cost calculator · your actual seats

Migration scope assessment

Apex translation reference

Change management checklist

Download playbook (PDF)
Track B · DiscoveryRecommended

Stack consolidation scoping call.

60-minute call with TradeOS solutions engineering. We review your Salesforce footprint, the supporting tools you'd consolidate, what migrates and what stays, expected timeline, and a TCO model on your actual seat counts.

Salesforce scope walked through

Stack consolidation timeline estimate

TCO model on your numbers

Apex / customization review

No commitment, NDA-bound

Book scoping call →
Track C · ReferenceActive evaluation

Talk to a customer who consolidated.

Reference calls with operators who consolidated a Salesforce-centered stack into TradeOS are available under NDA. Reserved for Business and Enterprise prospects in active evaluation.

3 operator profiles available

$120M · $180M · $250M revenue bands

CG · industrial · F&B sectors

30-minute peer-to-peer call

NDA + procurement-team friendly

Request reference

Book a demo

Three ways forward.

Whichever path fits your stage of evaluation — we'll meet you there. No 14-step gating funnel. No mystery pricing.

Track ADemo

Book a demo.

30-minute product walk-through focused on the Clients section, the 14 surrounding sections, and the 4 Network portals — the exact workflows your Salesforce-centered stack covers across multiple vendors. Live operator data, not a sandbox.

30 min · Solutions engineer + product · No deck

Book a demo
Track BRecommended

Get a consolidation estimate.

Detailed scope, timeline, and investment estimate built from your actual Salesforce deployment plus the supporting tools you'd consolidate. Fixed-scope proposal in 5 days.

60 min discovery · 5-day estimate turn-around · NDA-bound

Start estimate
Track CSelf-serve

See full pricing.

Public pricing across all five tiers — Solo, Starter, Team, Business, Enterprise. Includes the calculator that produced the $48K vs $346K–$526K figure on this page.

No login · No sales required · Stack comparison calculator included

See pricing →

Comparison prepared by EDMA Group for evaluation purposes. Salesforce, Sales Cloud, Service Cloud and Experience Cloud are trademarks or registered trademarks of Salesforce, Inc. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners, who do not sponsor or endorse this comparison. Figures reflect a $100M annual trade volume reference profile and vary by configuration; Salesforce information is drawn from publicly available documentation and analyst reports as of Q2 2026 and may change. TradeOS is pre-launch — forward-looking capabilities are identified as planned.

TradeOS vs Salesforce — CRM is one workflow. Trade is fifteen. | TradeOS