The MarTech landscape grew from 150 tools in 2011 to more than 15,000 by 2025 because supply-side and demand-side forces aligned simultaneously. According to Scott Brinker, an expert in marketing technology strategy, the cost of building and deploying software declined so steeply that it became economically viable for hundreds of specialist vendors to enter every marketing niche at once. On the demand side, B2B and B2C marketing teams were adding digital channels, attribution requirements, and go-to-market complexity faster than any single platform could address. These forces created a self-reinforcing market: more supply found genuine demand, which validated more supply.
The API economy accelerated this dynamic. When major platforms — including Salesforce, Adobe, and HubSpot — opened their architectures to independent software vendors, a compounding flywheel emerged: ISVs gained distribution through platform customer bases, users gained best-in-class specialized tools without leaving the core platform, and platforms gained stickiness through network breadth. Brinker observed this pattern directly during eight years building HubSpot's technology partner program — a program that transformed what would have been ephemeral point tools into durable ecosystem participants with genuine switching costs. The same flywheel now governs these coordination platforms, and it explains why companies that invested early in structured partner programs hold structural advantages that are difficult to reverse-engineer.
The deeper insight — relevant to every channel chief evaluating partner management software today — is that the tools that survived and compounded were those that became coordination nodes in a larger ecosystem rather than standalone products. The platforms with the deepest partner ecosystems accumulated network value that made them structurally harder to replace than their feature lists alone could justify. This is precisely the moat dynamic that now governs enterprise partner relationship management software selection.
"When there was 150 tools, people's reaction was: this is just way too much, this is all gonna consolidate. Not yet."
— Scott Brinker, Godfather of MarTech | Chief MarTech.