In 2011, Scott Brinker, then a marketing technology consultant and founder of what would become chiefmartec.com, published the first edition of what he called theIn 2011, Scott Brinker, then a marketing technology consultant and founder of what would become chiefmartec.com, published the first edition of what he called the

How MarTech Tools Grew 100-Fold Since 2011 and Why the Expansion Is Not Finished

2026/03/07 23:07
8 min read
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In 2011, Scott Brinker, then a marketing technology consultant and founder of what would become chiefmartec.com, published the first edition of what he called the Marketing Technology Landscape. It listed approximately 150 software solutions. Fourteen years later, his 2024 edition documented over 14,000. The number of marketing software products available to businesses has grown more than 100-fold in that period, a rate of expansion that is essentially unmatched in the history of enterprise software categories. Understanding why that happened, and why it continues, is one of the most useful things a marketing leader can do.

The 100-fold growth is not noise. It is signal. Every product that has found its way into the MarTech landscape represents a real market decision: a team of people who believed there was genuine demand for a specific capability that was not adequately served by what already existed, and investors or customers who agreed with them. The aggregate of those decisions is what the 14,000-product landscape represents. Each wave of growth has corresponded to a genuine expansion in what marketing organisations can do.

How MarTech Tools Grew 100-Fold Since 2011 and Why the Expansion Is Not Finished

The global MarTech market reached approximately $589.14 billion in 2025, according to Grand View Research, making it one of the largest software markets in the world. That scale is the commercial expression of the same expansion that Brinker’s landscape tracks year by year. The tools multiplied because the value created justified the investment, and the investment created more tools.

The Three Waves That Drove MarTech From 150 to 15,000 Products

The growth of the MarTech landscape can be understood in three distinct waves, each defined by a different technological and commercial shift that created new categories of marketing capability.

The first wave, running roughly from 2011 to 2015, was driven by the maturation of cloud software and the professionalisation of digital marketing. Email service providers, web analytics platforms, basic content management systems, and early social media management tools emerged as categories in this period. These were tools that helped marketing teams do existing activities more efficiently. The first edition of the MarTech landscape documented 150 of them. By the third or fourth edition, the count had surpassed 1,000, as the cloud software model enabled new entrants to reach market at a fraction of the cost and time of traditional software development.

The second wave, from approximately 2015 to 2020, was defined by data and automation. Marketing automation platforms that could orchestrate multi-channel campaigns, customer relationship management tools that connected sales and marketing data, and the first generation of customer data platforms all emerged during this period. Programmatic advertising, social media advertising platforms, and sophisticated attribution and analytics tools added further depth to the landscape. By the end of this wave, the landscape had exceeded 5,000 products, according to Brinker’s annual tracking on chiefmartec.com.

The third wave, from 2020 to the present, has been defined by artificial intelligence and first-party data. The deprecation of third-party tracking signals created urgent demand for new categories of privacy-compliant marketing infrastructure. AI-powered personalisation, predictive analytics, and generative content tools introduced capabilities that had no precedent in prior generations of marketing software. By 2024, the landscape had exceeded 14,000 products, with AI-native tools representing one of the fastest-growing segments in the entire catalogue.

Why the 100-Fold Expansion Has Not Slowed and Will Not Slow

One of the natural questions about a market that has grown 100-fold is whether it is approaching a ceiling. The evidence suggests it is not. The compound annual growth rate for the global MarTech market between 2025 and 2034 is projected at approximately 19.9 percent, according to Grand View Research. At that pace, the market will exceed $1.27 trillion by 2031. A market growing at nearly 20 percent per year is not approaching saturation.

The structural reasons for continued expansion are clear. Artificial intelligence is creating entirely new categories of marketing capability that did not exist before 2022. McKinsey’s Global Institute identified marketing and sales as the business function with the highest potential value from generative AI, estimating between $0.8 trillion and $1.2 trillion in annual value creation across industries, according to its 2023 report The Economic Potential of Generative AI. The tools required to capture that value are still being built. Many of the most significant AI-native marketing platforms that will appear in the 2027 or 2028 editions of the MarTech landscape have not been founded yet.

Geographic expansion is a second driver. The MarTech landscape has historically been dominated by products built for and distributed in North America and Europe. Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and Africa represent enormous markets where mobile internet adoption is driving demand for marketing technology built around the specific platforms, payment systems, and consumer behaviours of those regions. These markets will generate their own waves of locally relevant marketing software that will add to the global count.

What the 100-Fold Growth Means for How Marketing Organisations Should Think About Their Stacks

The practical implication of a landscape that has grown 100-fold in thirteen years is that the challenge of choosing and integrating marketing software has become genuinely complex. Approximately 80 percent of marketing technology decision-makers expect their MarTech budgets to increase over the next three to five years, according to McKinsey research published in 2024. The question those decision-makers face is how to allocate that growing budget intelligently when the landscape of options is expanding at the same pace as their investment capacity.

The answer that consistently distinguishes leading marketing organisations is a focus on architecture over accumulation. The organisations that build the most effective MarTech stacks do not try to track every product in the landscape. They define a clear architecture for their stack, starting with the data layer that will feed everything else, then the engagement layer that activates customer interactions, then the measurement layer that connects activity to outcomes. Every addition to the stack is evaluated against that architecture rather than against a generic feature comparison.

The platform integrations available in 2024 and 2025 make this architecture-first approach more practical than it has ever been. Salesforce, Adobe, and HubSpot each offer open integration ecosystems that allow the 14,000-plus tools in the broader landscape to connect to their platforms. Salesforce reported total revenue of approximately $34.9 billion in fiscal year 2024, with a significant portion generated by its AppExchange ecosystem of third-party integrations. Adobe’s Digital Experience segment contributed approximately $5.3 billion in revenue during fiscal year 2024, according to the company’s annual report, partly driven by the breadth of its integration partnerships.

The Role of AI in the Next Chapter of MarTech Growth

Every prior wave of MarTech growth has been enabled by a shift in the underlying technology infrastructure. Cloud computing enabled the first wave. Big data and API connectivity enabled the second. Artificial intelligence is enabling the third, and the pace at which AI capabilities are expanding suggests that this wave will be the longest and most significant of all.

The practical evidence is already clear. Salesforce’s Agentforce, launched in late 2024, generated more than 1,000 deals within weeks of launch, according to CEO Marc Benioff’s public commentary. Adobe’s Firefly generative AI models surpassed 6.5 billion generated images by early 2024, according to an Adobe press release. HubSpot’s Breeze AI suite, introduced in 2024, brought autonomous marketing agents to the platform used by more than 230,000 organisations worldwide, according to HubSpot’s 2024 investor relations filings. These products represent the beginning of what AI will deliver to the MarTech ecosystem over the next decade, not the end.

The 100-fold growth from 2011 to 2024 was built on tools that helped marketers do existing jobs better. The next phase of growth will be built on tools that enable marketing functions that are genuinely new. Autonomous campaign optimisation, real-time creative personalisation at scale, predictive customer journey design, and AI-generated market research represent categories that are in their earliest stages today. The versions of these capabilities available in 2031, when the MarTech market is projected to exceed $1.27 trillion, will be dramatically more sophisticated.

The 100-Fold Expansion Is an Opportunity That Rewards the Prepared

The growth of the MarTech ecosystem to over 15,000 products is a resource available to every organisation that chooses to use it well. The barriers to accessing world-class marketing technology have fallen dramatically. The tools that were available only to the largest enterprises in 2011 are accessible to organisations of every size today, at dramatically lower cost, with dramatically better integration. The 100-fold expansion of the landscape has not made marketing technology more exclusive. It has made it more accessible, more competitive, and more capable than at any point in the history of the discipline.

The organisations that will build the greatest marketing advantages over the next decade are those that approach this expanded landscape with clarity of purpose, discipline in architecture, and a willingness to invest in the talent and capability needed to make the most of the tools available. The landscape will continue to grow. The value available within it will continue to expand. The question, as always, is whether your organisation has the strategy to capture it.

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