Nimble vs KIMISUITE
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Nimble is turning its CRM into a full outbound-email hub for small teams.
Nimble keeps its small-business CRM core but the recent shipping is dominated by email marketing and outreach: drag-and-drop templates, AI-generated emails, multi-sender campaigns, group messages with team collaboration and per-link click analytics, and category-based unsubscribe lists. CRM-side work is mostly polish — customizable list views, fresh navigation, an AI-revamped business card scanner. Forms get incremental design controls.
Nimble is repositioning from a relationship-tracking CRM into an integrated outreach platform — the kind of customer that previously stitched HubSpot Free with Mailchimp. The AI work shows up as assistive (email composition, business card OCR) rather than agentic, and the email-marketing primitives (lists, unsubscribes, multiple senders, template editor) are becoming first-class rather than add-ons.
Expect the email surface to keep widening — automation/sequencing logic across senders, deliverability tooling like warmup or domain authentication helpers, or AI-driven send-time and segment recommendations using the new per-link click data.
Small all-in-one suite leaning on content marketing more than product news.
KIMISUITE is a small all-in-one business platform split across hospitality (Booking Hub) and CRM (Business Hub) with a connected App Store. The feed is overwhelmingly content marketing — hotel metrics primers, e-invoicing explainers, OTA-dependency posts — with a single substantive monthly product update covering new applications, guest communication features in Booking Hub, AI-powered support in the CRM, and App Store changes.
The platform is expanding modularly (Booking Hub, CRM Business Hub, App Store) while positioning itself as a transparent-pricing alternative to vendors who gate features behind module add-ons. AI appears as a CRM support helper rather than a headline bet. The hotel-software wedge — "become independent from Booking.com" — reads as the sharpest GTM angle but is still mostly aspirational copy.
Expect more vertical-specific content (hospitality, then likely restaurants or small retail) and incremental App Store applications, rather than directional product change.
See more alternatives to Nimble →
See more alternatives to KIMISUITE →