If you represent a software vendor or service provider and your product or firm is not yet on TechVendorIndex, you can request inclusion. Listing is free. The only criterion is that your offering meets the relevant category definition and serves the enterprise market.
Email listings@techvendorindex.com with the information above. We'll respond within five business days with a decision or a follow-up request.
Companies are placed into categories based on what their product or service primarily does, not on what they market themselves as. A platform that markets itself as "the AI-powered everything platform" but in practice does customer relationship management will be listed in CRM, not AI. We aim for categories that match how buyers actually search and shortlist, which is usually narrower than how vendors position themselves.
For software products: a working enterprise-grade offering with documented features, transparent pricing tiers, customer references we can verify, and a clear deployment model. For service providers: an established practice in the relevant service category with named partners, public case studies, and at least one identifiable region of operation. Pre-launch companies, products in stealth mode, or offerings without verifiable customer references are not currently listed.
Once your company is listed, you can request profile updates by emailing the listings team with the changes you would like reflected. We aim to process update requests within five business days. Material changes to functional claims will be cross-checked against public documentation and customer references before being incorporated.
If you disagree with how your company is characterised, ranked, or compared, send a written objection to the editorial team. We will review the source materials behind the decision and respond with either an update or an explanation of the reasoning. We do not change rankings in exchange for advertising or referral relationships.
TechVendorIndex is organised around four main views, each of which exists because buyers approach technology decisions from a different starting point. Buyers who already know the kind of tool they need typically start with the software categories. Buyers who need help selecting or implementing software start with the services categories. Buyers who have narrowed the field to two options usually go straight to the comparisons. Buyers who need a local partner — for compliance, language coverage, or in-region delivery — start with the regional pages. Every page on the site cross-links to the other three views so you can switch perspectives without losing context.
The software section covers the categories that account for the majority of enterprise software spend: ERP, CRM, cloud infrastructure, data analytics, cybersecurity, IT service management, marketing automation, identity and access management, observability, supply-chain management, financial management, human capital management, collaboration platforms, content management, and dozens of vertical-specific categories. Each category lists the most commonly considered products with a brief description of who each product is best for, the target company size, deployment options, and standout capabilities. We deliberately keep these descriptions concise — buyers tell us they prefer to scan ten short summaries rather than read three long ones.
The services section covers consulting and implementation firms across the major service categories: cloud migration, SAP and Oracle implementation, Microsoft and Salesforce delivery partners, managed IT services, cybersecurity services, data engineering, DevOps and SRE, generative AI implementation, and many more. Each provider profile notes regional coverage, target engagement size, sector focus, and the specific kinds of work the firm has a track record in. Buyers can navigate from any software category page directly into the relevant services category — for example, from CRM platforms straight into Salesforce implementation partners — without re-searching.
The comparison section contains structured head-to-head matchups of the most commonly compared products — Salesforce versus HubSpot, AWS versus Azure, Snowflake versus Databricks, and many others — plus a separate set of buyer's guides organised by buyer profile rather than by individual product. The "best for" guides are decision-support tools for buyers who have a category in mind but have not yet narrowed to two finalists. They explicitly list which products are not appropriate for a given profile and why, which is information that vendor-sourced shortlists rarely provide.
The regional section organises providers by country, with coverage across 48 markets. From each country page, buyers can drill into a specific service category to see providers operating in that country, with both local specialists and global firms with regional offices included. This view is particularly useful for buyers who need provider proximity for compliance, data residency, language coverage, or follow-the-sun delivery reasons. Coverage is currently strongest in North America, Western Europe, India, Australia, Japan, and Singapore, with progressive expansion across Latin America, the Middle East, and Africa.