The annual MarTech Landscape report, compiled by Scott Brinker and the team at Chief MarTec, has become one of the most widely cited documents in the marketing technology industry. When Brinker first published his visual map of the marketing technology landscape in 2011, it catalogued approximately 150 distinct software products. The 2024 edition documents more than 14,000 solutions — a number that has grown by more than 100-fold in just over a decade, as documented in the analysis of how MarTech tools grew 100-fold since 2011. Understanding how the landscape has changed is essential context for any organisation navigating the modern $589 billion MarTech market.
The First Wave: Point Solutions and the Marketing Automation Era (2011–2016)
The early MarTech map was characterised by the dominance of a relatively small number of broad platform categories: CRM, email marketing, web analytics, and the first generation of marketing automation tools. Salesforce was already the dominant CRM, Google Analytics was the near-universal web measurement platform, and companies like Marketo, Eloqua, and HubSpot were building out the marketing automation category.

The growth from 150 to approximately 1,800 tools by 2015 was driven by the proliferation of point solutions — specialist tools addressing specific functions including social media management, SEO analytics, webinar technology, and landing page optimisation. The rise of mobile internet created new channel-specific tool categories, and the growth of content marketing as a discipline drove investment in content management, distribution, and performance platforms.
The Consolidation That Did Not Come (2016–2020)
In the mid-2010s, many industry observers predicted that the MarTech landscape would consolidate rapidly — that a small number of large platform vendors would acquire their way to dominance and the long tail of point solutions would disappear. This consolidation did not materialise in the way predicted. While large vendors including Salesforce, Adobe, and Oracle did make significant acquisitions — Salesforce acquiring Pardot, ExactTarget, and Tableau; Adobe acquiring Marketo; Oracle building out its Marketing Cloud — the overall number of tools in the landscape continued to grow, reaching approximately 7,000 by 2019.
The reason consolidation did not reduce the number of solutions is that the cloud SaaS model dramatically reduced the cost of building and distributing software, enabling new entrants to emerge faster than incumbents could acquire. As noted in the analysis of cloud-based MarTech, the subscription model and API-first architecture of modern software created a structure where specialised best-of-breed tools could thrive alongside large platform suites rather than being displaced by them.
The Maturity Phase: Consolidation Within Categories (2020–2024)
The period from 2020 onwards has seen a different kind of consolidation — not the disappearance of tools but a stabilisation in the rate of new entrant growth within established categories, alongside continued explosion in newer categories. According to the 2024 MarTech Landscape report, the number of tools has stabilised in some mature categories including email marketing and social media management, while continuing to grow rapidly in areas including AI-powered content tools, conversational marketing, and revenue intelligence.
The slowdown to 7 to 10 percent annual growth in platform expansion that characterises the current phase of MarTech maturity reflects this dynamics of category stabilisation. The absolute number of tools remains high — exceeding 15,000 when accounting for the full breadth of the global ecosystem — but the growth trajectory has moderated compared with the exponential expansion of the 2012 to 2019 period.
How the Category Mix Has Changed
The composition of the MarTech landscape has shifted significantly since 2011 in ways that reflect broader trends in how digital marketing operates. Customer Data Platforms, which did not exist as a recognised category in 2011, are now one of the most actively invested segments. Revenue intelligence, sales enablement, and account-based marketing tools — categories that bridge marketing and sales functions — have grown substantially. Conversational marketing platforms (chatbots, live chat, messaging automation) represent a category that barely existed fifteen years ago.
Meanwhile, some categories that were dominant in the early landscape have contracted or been absorbed. Standalone web analytics tools have largely been supplanted by integrated analytics within broader platforms. Simple email broadcast tools have been replaced by more sophisticated marketing automation suites. Basic social media schedulers have evolved into comprehensive social media management and listening platforms.
The AI Inflection Point
The arrival of large language models and generative AI since 2022 has introduced what may be the most significant structural change to the MarTech landscape since the shift to mobile. AI-powered content generation, image creation, conversational interfaces, and predictive analytics tools have created an entirely new set of platform categories and have forced every existing platform to integrate AI capabilities to remain competitive.
The 2024 MarTech Landscape includes hundreds of tools that did not exist two years ago, most of them in AI-adjacent categories. This inflection point connects directly to the analysis of AI-driven MarTech and is expected to sustain the ecosystem’s growth momentum through the late 2020s, even as more established categories mature.
Reading the Map Today
For organisations attempting to navigate the current MarTech landscape, the scale and complexity of 15,000-plus tools presents genuine decision-making challenges. The most effective approach is category-first — identifying which functional needs the marketing operation has that are not currently met, mapping those needs to established tool categories, and evaluating the leading vendors within those categories against integration, pricing, and support criteria.
The evolution of the MarTech map since 2011 demonstrates both the dynamism of the industry and its underlying stability. CRM, analytics, and email have been core categories throughout the entire period. What has changed is the depth of capability within each category and the breadth of new categories that have emerged to address challenges that did not exist when Scott Brinker first drew his map. The trajectory through 2034 suggests the landscape will continue to evolve, with AI driving the next wave of category creation and the underlying platform categories becoming ever more capable and integrated.


