Tuesday, May 06, 2025

State of Martech Report: Customer Data Platforms Are Evolving, Not Dying

Scott Brinker’s State of Martech report has grown from a one-page logo jigsaw to a small industry, co-authored with MartechTribe’s Frans Riemersma and apparently produced by a small army of elves reviewing thousands of products each year. The latest edition, released yesterday, provides the now-expected deep analysis of industry trends covering category growth, the impact(s) of AI, stack architectures, and more. It’s all interesting and too complicated (or maybe complex?) to recap here, so I can only suggest that you read it on your own. 

In addition to data based on the 15,384 vendors now listed (up 9% from 2024), the report analyzes results from a survey of martech and marketing operations leaders. Again, there’s lots of fascinating information, but I was of course drawn to the sections related to Customer Data Platforms.

On its face, the report offers some pretty bad news for the CDP industry: the fraction of companies citing a CDP as the “center” of their martech stack fell from 15.5% in their similar 2024 survey to 12.5% in 2025. However, the 2025 survey is based on just 96 responses, meaning that’s a swing of three answers, so it’s not cause for too much alarm.* Still, it’s an interesting result, and even more intriguing when you separate B2B respondents (52% of the sample) from others (14% B2C and 34% mixed B2B/B2C). CDPs have never been widely adopted in the B2B world, and indeed, their share is unchanged from 2024 (7.9%) to 2025 (8.0%). The flip side to that is in the B2C and mixed group, the shift is larger: from 26.9% in 2024 to 17.4% in 2025. But, again, bear in mind the sample size: that 17.4% represents seven responses. A shift of three answers is well within the range of statistical noise.

Let’s put sampling issues aside and assume there’s some drop-off in reliance on CDP. The question is, what has taken its place?

Did you just answer “cloud data warehouse, of course”? That’s not entirely wrong – the data warehouse share grew from 20.9% to 23.9%. But the big winner was MAP/CEP (marketing automation/customer experience platform), which grew from 19.4% to 26.1%. CRM grew from 17.9% to 19.5%, or nearly as much as data warehouses. Multi-product suites fell from 1.4% to zero, which hints quite strongly that the respondents heavily skewed away from large enterprises.**

If we combine the MAP/CEP, CRM, and DXP or ecommerce categories into “customer-facing systems”, the combined share of that group grew from 43.3% to 52.1%. So if I were to read any trend from this data, it would be that companies are centering their martech stacks on customer-facing systems, not on data warehouses.

This is actually consistent with the trends we’ve seen in the CDP industry itself, where the most recent major acquisitions (ActionIQ by Uniphore , Lytics by ContentStack, mParticle by Rokt) all involved merging a CDP into a customer-facing product, and where customer-facing vendors like MessageGears, Klayvio, Insider, Listrak, and Braze have added CDP (or CDP-ish) capabilities***. The CDP Institute classifies all of these systems as CDPs, in addition to whatever else they do. So, the way I see it, companies that list those products as the “center” of their martech stack are still building their stack on a CDP, even if they don’t call it one. That’s good news for the industry, not bad.

The survey also takes another look at the role of data warehouses in the martech stack, asking “Do you have a customer data warehouse/lakehouse integrated with your martech stack?” More than half the respondents (56.2%) said they did, a number that climbs to 92% for B2C vendors and 80% for enterprise companies. What’s interesting here is the relation of those answers to the previous question: many more firms have integrated a warehouse than are using their warehouse as the center of their martech stack. This is far from shocking but, again, suggests that the mere presence of a warehouse doesn’t mean that warehouse is the primary customer data store.

If you’re a “warehouse-centric” composable CDP vendor, you could read the relatively small share of warehouse-as-central system either as cause for alarm – the market isn’t as big as you thought – or reason to rejoice – the potential for growth is huge. Both could be true at the same time. But if the primary industry trend is for CDP functions to migrate to customer-facing systems (run by marketing or other business units), then a shift of CDP functions toward the (IT-controlled) data warehouse seems to be the wrong way to bet.  (In this context, the recent sale of leading composable CDP Census to data movement platform Fivetran may signal incipient consolidation in the young-but-already-overcrowded composable CDP sector. That Census was bought by a data movement tool rather than a customer-facing system reinforces the notion that composable CDP products serve IT teams while customer-facing CDPs serve marketers and other end-users.)

Presumably all those non-central warehouses are acting as data sources to CDPs or customer-facing systems with a CDP inside.  Indeed, the Brinker/Riemersma report positions CDPs (stand-alone or embedded) as intermediaries between data systems and activation systems (which they call "systems of knowledge" and "systems of context," respectively), responsible for "organizing or framing the data in a way that best serves more situational needs."  I quite agree, and couldn't have said it better.  I would expand on this by noting that CDPs within customer-facing systems will have direct access to the data those systems generate, so the role of the data warehouse is limited to supplying data that the warehouse collects elsewhere. A CDP with direct access to customer-facing systems overcomes one of the main drawbacks of the warehouse-centric approach, which is that warehouses often can't provide the real-time access to behavior data that's needed for many customer-facing applications of CDP data.

I should stress that CDPs are a bit player in the Brinker/ Riemersma epic. Definitely download the report (it’s free and ungated) and focus on whichever portions you find most relevant. It’s all good.

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*The 2024 survey had 168 responses, of which 60% were B2B, 9% were B2C and 31% were mixed. Doing that math, that’s 67 responses in the B2C and mixed group, of which 18 cited CDP as the center of their stack.

**The 2025 report says 30 of the 96 responded were from ‘enterprise’ organizations, but doesn’t indicate how these split between B2B, B2C and mixed.

***In addition, at least one unacquired CDP (BlueConic) has repositioned as a customer-facing system.

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