Salesforce has relaunched its marketplace strategy under the AgentExchange banner, unifying AppExchange, Slack Marketplace, and the Agentforce ecosystem into a single destination for deploying AI agents, actions, and apps [1]. This rebrand signals a new era of agentic AI integration—and a significant strategic bet on ‘Agent’ as the organizing principle for Salesforce’s platform identity. The move intensifies the competitive landscape for hyperscalers and SaaS vendors vying to become the enterprise AI control plane. According to Futurum Group’s AI Platforms Decision Maker Survey (n=820), 72% of organizations are already researching, piloting, or deploying agentic AI, but security and reliability remain the top challenges.
What is Covered in this Article
- Salesforce’s AgentExchange relaunch and the unification of AppExchange, Slack Marketplace, and Agentforce
- The rising strategic importance of cloud marketplaces as a software procurement channel
- Vendor lock-in risk versus integration flexibility for enterprise buyers
- Comparative strategies from Microsoft, Google, and AWS
- Operational and governance challenges in scaling agentic AI
The News: Salesforce has relaunched its marketplace experience as AgentExchange, unifying the legacy AppExchange, Slack Marketplace, and Agentforce ecosystem into a single, pre-built marketplace where enterprises can browse, install, and deploy AI agents, actions, and applications [1]. The platform promises to simplify the integration of agentic AI into core workflows, positioning Salesforce as a one-stop shop for both vertical and horizontal automation needs. This relaunch comes as enterprise interest in agentic AI surges: according to Futurum Group’s AI Platforms Decision Maker Survey (n=820), 72% of organizations are already researching, piloting, or deploying agentic AI, and an additional 15% are orchestrating multi-agent systems. However, the top concern cited is security and data privacy, with reliability and hallucination management also ranking as leading adoption challenges.
Can AgentExchange Cement Salesforce’s Lead in the Agentic AI Platform Race?
Analyst Take: AgentExchange marks a structural escalation in the battle to control enterprise AI orchestration. By unifying AppExchange, Slack Marketplace, and Agentforce under a single brand, Salesforce is betting that a consolidated, agent-centric marketplace will drive platform stickiness and accelerate time-to-value. But the move also raises new risks around governance, interoperability, and long-term vendor dependency.
Retiring AppExchange: A Bold Bet on ‘Agent’ as Salesforce’s Agentic AI North Star
Departing from the AppExchange brand is no small decision. AppExchange has been a cornerstone of the Salesforce ecosystem since 2005, catalyzing the broader ISV marketplace model and cultivating one of the deepest partner networks in enterprise software. Salesforce was recognized as a Leader in the Futurum Signal on Marketplaces, owing to this long-standing history and the robust partner ecosystem it built through AppExchange, as well as recent planned investments around improving the procurement experience. Sunsetting that brand in favor of AgentExchange is a deliberate signal: Salesforce is increasingly orienting its entire platform identity around the concept of the agent. This is a big bet that ‘Agent’ will become the dominant paradigm for how enterprises discover, deploy, and orchestrate software—and that the marketplace gravity Salesforce has built over two decades can successfully transfer to this new framing.
Salesforce Re-Energizes Its Marketplace Ambitions for Agentic AI
The AgentExchange relaunch arrives at a moment when cloud marketplaces are becoming an increasingly prominent buying route for enterprise software. Futurum Group’s Channels Market Forecast projects that the hyperscaler marketplace opportunity will nearly triple from $14.2B in 2024 to $41.8B by 2029 under base-case assumptions [1], with AI, Data & Analytics emerging as the fastest-growing submarket. Channel partners are already feeling the shift: according to Futurum Group’s Channel Ecosystems Decision Maker Survey, 87% of partners report seeing customers purchasing through hyperscaler marketplaces ‘frequently’ or ‘somewhat frequently,’ and nearly a third say more than 10% of their vendor technology revenue now flows through these channels [2]. Salesforce itself has leaned into this trend, surpassing $2 billion in total bookings through AWS Marketplace in just two years—validating the procurement model from the seller side as well as the buyer side. Today, there are roughly 40 major cloud marketplaces across the hyperscaler and SaaS landscape. Most SaaS-operated marketplaces merely serve as extensions of their own platforms, curating add-ons and integrations for an existing user base. AgentExchange gives Salesforce an opportunity to break that mold—positioning itself as a broader technology procurement hub in the way that AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud Marketplaces have done for infrastructure and application software. The ambition is notable, but so is the competitive field: even Anthropic has entered the marketplace space, and as AI-native vendors embed deeper into enterprise tech stacks, they will command growing attention from procurement teams looking for best-of-breed agent capabilities outside the traditional platform incumbents.
Will Agentic Marketplaces Lock Enterprises In or Empower Flexibility?
The consolidation of AppExchange, Slack Marketplace, and Agentforce into AgentExchange echoes—and amplifies—the platform dynamics that made AppExchange so sticky in the SaaS era. The stakes are higher this time: agentic AI marketplaces risk cementing vendor lock-in if enterprises become dependent on proprietary agent orchestration and integration patterns. Futurum Group’s AI Platforms Decision Maker Survey (n=820) finds 66% of organizations now follow a platform-first approach for AI adoption, suggesting the gravitational pull of these ecosystems is growing. Yet, with 41% actively planning to reduce or consolidate app stacks, buyers are also seeking ways to rationalize complexity and avoid fragmentation. The tension between platform convenience and strategic flexibility will define sourcing decisions for the next wave of AI deployment.
Agent Reliability and Security Remain Unsolved at Scale
Despite the promise of plug-and-play automation, agent reliability and security are far from solved. According to Futurum Group’s AI Platforms Decision Maker Survey (n=820), AI agent reliability and hallucination management is the number one adoption challenge (55%), with data privacy close behind (53%). These concerns are not theoretical: as agentic AI takes on more mission-critical tasks, the risk of unpredictable behavior or data leakage grows. Vendors such as Microsoft and Google are racing to embed more granular controls and transparency into their AI platforms, but the operational reality is that most enterprises lack mature governance frameworks for multi-agent orchestration. Until vendors can prove robust reliability and auditability, broad adoption will remain gated.
The Control Plane Battle: Hyperscalers, SaaS Giants, or Open Orchestration?
AgentExchange is Salesforce’s bid to become the enterprise AI control plane, but the competition is fierce. Microsoft’s Copilot ecosystem and Azure OpenAI integrations offer deep horizontal reach, while Google is betting on Gemini and Workspace AI for productivity and workflow automation. AWS, though less visible in agentic orchestration, is investing in Bedrock and SageMaker agents. The core question is whether enterprises will entrust orchestration to a single vendor or demand open, interoperable agent standards. With 78% of organizations expecting to increase their AI budgets in the next 12 months, according to Futurum Group’s AI Platforms Decision Maker Survey (n=820), the battle for orchestration dominance will shape not just spend allocation, but the architecture of enterprise automation for years to come.
What to Watch
- Brand Transition: Will the shift from AppExchange to AgentExchange resonate with the existing ISV and partner ecosystem, or create friction during the transition?
- Marketplace Gravity: Will AgentExchange drive a new wave of ISV and developer innovation, or simply reinforce Salesforce-centric architectures?
- Interoperability Reality Check: Can Salesforce, Microsoft, and Google agree on open agent orchestration standards, or will proprietary lock-in win out by 2027?
- Reliability Threshold: When will agentic AI platforms deliver the reliability and auditability required for regulated industries?
- Buyer Agency: Will enterprise CIOs double down on single-vendor platforms, or push for hybrid, multi-platform agent orchestration as the default?
Sources
1. AgentExchange | What’s New on AgentExchange
2. AI Platforms Market Forecast – Scenario Analysis
Declaration of generative AI and AI-assisted technologies in the writing process: This content has been generated with the support of artificial intelligence technologies. Due to the fast pace of content creation and the continuous evolution of data and information, The Futurum Group and its analysts strive to ensure the accuracy and factual integrity of the information presented. However, the opinions and interpretations expressed in this content reflect those of the individual author/analyst. The Futurum Group makes no guarantees regarding the completeness, accuracy, or reliability of any information contained herein. Readers are encouraged to verify facts independently and consult relevant sources for further clarification.
Disclosure: Futurum is a research and advisory firm that engages or has engaged in research, analysis, and advisory services with many technology companies, including those mentioned in this article. The author does not hold any equity positions with any company mentioned in this article.
Analysis and opinions expressed herein are specific to the analyst individually and data and other information that might have been provided for validation, not those of Futurum as a whole.
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Author Information
Alex is Vice President & Practice Lead, Ecosystems, Channels, & Marketplaces at the Futurum Group. He is responsible for establishing and maintaining the Channels Research program as part of the overall Futurum GTM and Channels Practice. This includes overseeing the channel data rollout in the Futurum Intelligence Platform, primary research activities such as research boards and surveys, delivering thought-leading research reports, and advising clients on their indirect go-to-market strategies. Alex also supports the overall operations of the Futurum Research Business Unit, including P&L segmentation, sales and marketing alignment, and budget planning.
Prior to joining Futurum, Alex was VP of Channels & Enterprise Research at Canalys where he led a multi-million dollar research organization with more than 20 analysts. He played an integral role in helping the Canalys research organization migrate into Omdia after having been acquired in 2023. He is an accomplished research leader, as well as an expert in indirect go-to-market strategies. He has delivered numerous keynotes at partner-facing conferences.
Alex is based in Portland, Oregon, but has lived in numerous places, including California, Canada, Saudi Arabia, Thailand, and the UK. He has a Bachelor in Commerce and Finance Major from Dalhousie University, Halifax Canada.
