Zoho Flow vs Lytics
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Zoho Flow stacks enterprise integrations (SAP, Xero) while adding AI to the workflow builder itself.
Zoho Flow is shipping on two parallel tracks: enterprise-integration expansion (SAP S/4HANA, SAP HANA, SAP Business One, Xero) and platform depth (subflows, outgoing webhooks, Notes, If-Else, Tags, Custom Notifications). February's AI release added intelligence directly into the workflow-building experience.
The integration list is moving distinctly up-market — SAP and Xero are not SMB-only choices — while the builder itself is gaining the engineering-discipline features (subflows, conditional branches, tagging) that larger workflows need to stay maintainable. The AI work is framed as a builder accelerant, not a magic agent, which fits the pragmatic positioning.
Expect deeper finance-system coverage — NetSuite or Oracle Fusion next — and the AI surface to extend from initial workflow generation into runtime suggestions, error-recovery hints, and step explanations.
Lytics retires the legacy audience builder, ships zero-copy Salesforce Data Cloud sync, and pushes integrations weekly.
Lytics is a CDP shipping at a steady weekly cadence. Recent work cuts across three vectors: a forced migration off the legacy audience builder (sunset May 4, 2026) toward a redesigned builder with geolocation rules; heavy expansion of cloud-warehouse and ad-platform integrations (Salesforce Data Cloud, The Trade Desk, Microsoft UET, Pushly, Algolia, GCS); and admin-side governance — naming conventions, metric threshold alerts, easier OAuth recovery.
Two arcs are visible. First, the integration catalog is being deepened toward server-side conversion APIs and zero-copy data movement — Salesforce Data Cloud's bidirectional sync with zero-copy bulk via GCS is the architecturally interesting move and likely a template for what's next. Second, the platform itself is being made more legible to large operators: naming conventions, threshold alerts, and reconnect-in-place auth all target customers running Lytics at scale rather than acquiring net-new ones.
Expect the next quarter to bring more zero-copy/streaming export jobs patterned after the Salesforce Data Cloud blueprint (Snowflake or Databricks are the obvious next targets), plus additional governance features — likely per-team audience permissions or audit-log enhancements — as the natural follow-on to naming conventions.
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