I’ll be blunt: Most marketing tech stacks today are a graveyard of good intentions.
At some point, we all bought something to solve a specific problem—to automate a task, track a funnel, enrich a lead, or visualize attribution.
Fast-forward to 2025, and many CMOs are staring at stacks that are:
If that sounds familiar, you're not alone. But the question isn't whether your stack is bloated, it’s whether that bloat is costing you speed, alignment, and growth.
When your tech stack becomes a patchwork of tools, you waste money and lose momentum.
Here’s what I see most often inside marketing and RevOps teams:
And the biggest red flag? When your team is building Google Sheets to cross-reference dashboards from five different platforms.
If your most strategic decisions rely on duct tape and VLOOKUPs… it’s time to reassess.
Not sure where you stand? Here's a quick gut-check for CMOs and RevOps leaders?
If more than three of these hit home, your stack is likely slowing your GTM engine down.
In a recent Gartner survey, 61% of CMOs said they plan to reduce the number of martech vendors in their ecosystem this year. Why? Because the ROI of adding “just one more tool” is shrinking. Instead, high-performing teams are rethinking how they orchestrate GTM activity:
No one needs another dashboard. We need more connected action and fewer silos standing in the way.
Let’s be clear: Consolidation doesn’t mean ripping out your CRM or switching MAPs mid-quarter. It means tightening the loop between data, insight, and execution.
Here’s what modern consolidation looks like in action:
Unifying first-party, third-party, and product usage data into a central GTM brain
Replacing 2–3 point solutions (like lead scoring tools, enrichment vendors, and basic attribution software) with a single orchestration layer
Prioritizing platforms that integrate deeply, adapt in real time, and serve cross-functional teams
In other words: fewer tools, working smarter.
Less noise. More motion.
I'm not advocating for minimalism as an ideal. I'm not suggesting that you declutter your tech stack just for the sake of having fewer tools. I'm talking about precision. How are you ensuring every tool serves a purpose—and that purpose is directly linked to GTM performance?
The true test? Ask your team: Which tools enable us to make quicker, more effective go-to-market decisions? If there's hesitation, you're carrying unnecessary weight.
In 2025, speed and orchestration matter more than ever. Your buyers aren’t waiting for your systems to sync up. Neither should you.
Your tech stack should: 1) unify data, 2) surface insight, and 3) power action.
If your current setup is making your team slower, more siloed, or more reactive—it’s time to consolidate.
And the good news? There's no need to start over. Just rethink what you connect and how you activate it.