Compare/Clay 3.0 vs Gro v2

AI tool comparison

Clay 3.0 vs Gro v2

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

C

Marketing

Clay 3.0

AI research agent that enriches leads and syncs to your CRM automatically

Ship

100%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Clay 3.0 introduces an AI Research Agent that autonomously browses company websites, LinkedIn, and news sources to enrich lead data without manual input. The new waterfall enrichment logic cuts costs by hitting cheaper data sources first before escalating to premium ones. Enriched, structured data syncs directly into HubSpot or Salesforce, reducing the gap between prospecting and CRM hygiene.

G

Sales & Marketing

Gro v2

Spot high-intent social posts and auto-trigger sales outreach

Mixed

50%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Gro v2 is an AI-powered sales platform that adds social signal monitoring to its existing prospecting engine. The key new feature in v2 is Content Search — it scans LinkedIn, Twitter/X, and other platforms in real-time for posts that indicate buying intent, then automatically triggers workflows: alerts, connection requests, comment drafts, and email sequences, all from one interface. Underneath that is a database of over 1 billion contact records with AI-driven propensity scoring that ranks accounts by likelihood to convert. The system coordinates multi-channel outreach (email + LinkedIn + others) and tries to collapse what used to be a stack of five or six point solutions — Apollo, Clay, Phantombuster, etc. — into one system. Gro v2 targets growth-focused B2B teams who currently have to stitch together multiple tools for their outreach stack. It offers a free tier, though the full intent-monitoring and automation features are presumably gated behind paid plans.

Decision
Clay 3.0
Gro v2
Panel verdict
Ship · 4 ship / 0 skip
Mixed · 2 ship / 2 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free tier / $149/mo Starter / $800/mo Explorer / Custom Enterprise
Free tier / Paid plans
Best for
AI research agent that enriches leads and syncs to your CRM automatically
Spot high-intent social posts and auto-trigger sales outreach
Category
Marketing
Sales & Marketing

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
78/100 · ship

The primitive here is a configurable enrichment pipeline with waterfall fallback logic and a CRM write API on the backend — and that's actually a real, annoying problem that previously took custom Zapier chains or a hand-rolled Lambda hitting Clearbit, Apollo, and Hunter in sequence. The DX bet Clay makes is no-code table-first configuration, which is the right call for the ops and GTM engineers who live in this space rather than terminal. My concern is the AI Research Agent is still a black box — there's no visibility into what the agent actually scraped, why it chose one source over another, or what confidence score it assigned. That's not a feature gap, that's a trust gap. Ships because the waterfall enrichment logic alone is worth the price of admission, but the agent needs an audit trail before I'd call it production-grade.

80/100 · ship

Social signal monitoring that auto-triggers structured outreach is a real workflow upgrade. If the signal quality is high — not just keyword matching — this replaces three separate tools in the stack immediately.

Skeptic
74/100 · ship

Category is GTM data enrichment, direct competitors are Apollo.io, Instantly, and the Clearbit-now-HubSpot-native play — and Clay's real moat is that it's an enrichment router, not just another data provider, which is a structurally different position. The scenario where this breaks is any enterprise with a GDPR-sensitive data stack, because autonomous web scraping of LinkedIn and news sources is a legal minefield that Clay's marketing copy sidesteps entirely. What kills this in 12 months isn't a competitor — it's HubSpot or Salesforce shipping native AI enrichment agents and neutralizing the CRM sync value prop. Clay survives that only if the waterfall multi-source logic stays genuinely better than what the CRM platforms build natively, and I'd give that a coin-flip probability.

45/100 · skip

The '1B+ contact database' claim is table stakes in 2026, and every Sales AI promises to unify the stack. The real question is whether the intent signals are actually predictive or just keyword noise. No independent validation here.

Founder
82/100 · ship

The buyer is the VP of Sales or Head of RevOps, and this comes out of the sales tools budget — a budget that exists, is well-defined, and is under constant pressure to justify ROI, which Clay can actually do because reduced data costs via waterfall logic is a line-item saving you can calculate. The moat is the enrichment routing layer: Clay doesn't own the data, but it owns the workflow that decides which data sources to call in what order, and that workflow becomes stickier every time a team customizes their waterfall. The existential risk is that Apollo, which does own data, ships a waterfall router tomorrow, and the switching cost evaporates. Clay needs to convert free waterfall users into CRM-sync-dependent power users fast, because workflow lock-in is the only durable defense here.

No panel take
PM
80/100 · ship

The job-to-be-done is singular and well-scoped: take a list of companies or contacts and return a structured, CRM-ready record without a human touching each row — that's a complete job with a clear before and after state. The onboarding path for a new user is table-import or CSV upload, column mapping, then watching the agent fill cells, which reaches demonstrable value in under five minutes if the data is clean. Where Clay has an opinion — and it's the right one — is the waterfall logic: the product has decided that cost-optimization is the user's problem and baked the solution in, rather than making users configure priority order from scratch every time. The gap is that CRM sync still requires field mapping that feels like a 2019 integration experience — that's the one place where the product's confidence in its own abstraction breaks down.

No panel take
Futurist
No panel take
80/100 · ship

Real-time social intent layered on top of structured outreach automation is the logical next step for B2B AI. The companies that nail signal fidelity will eat the legacy CRM market.

Creator
No panel take
45/100 · skip

Auto-triggering comments and connection requests from detected 'intent' is the kind of feature that makes LinkedIn even more of a spam hellscape. I'd use this sparingly unless the personalization is genuinely thoughtful.

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