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Editorial deep-dive · 10 products · Verified 2026-05-10

Top 10 Video Marketing and Hosting Software for 2026

Independent ranking of video marketing and hosting platforms, with verified pricing, vendor trust scores.

Verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-10

Video marketing and hosting in 2026 splits into four buyer journeys: B2B sales and revenue video (Vidyard, Loom, Bonjoro, Sendspark, Tella) anchored on async prospecting, deal rooms, and CRM signal capture; marketing-led brand video hosting (Wistia, Vimeo Business) anchored on gated content, landing pages, and lead capture; enterprise OTT and large-scale media (Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player) anchored on live streaming, monetization, and broadcast workflows; and creator-and-team async messaging (Loom, Tella) where the buyer is an end user, not central marketing. The most material trust event in the category is Atlassian acquiring Loom in October 2023 for $975M; the product is being integrated into Atlassian Cloud through 2024 and 2025, which is a real positive for stability but a real negative for buyers who picked Loom precisely because it was not part of a big collaboration suite. Vimeo (NASDAQ:VMEO) is the second-most-watched name in the category, post-SPAC, post-Anjali-Sud-departure, with revenue deceleration and an ongoing pivot back to enterprise. Brightcove (NASDAQ:BCOV) and Kaltura (NASDAQ:KLTR) are mature public OTT vendors with muted growth and material stock declines from their respective peaks. The boring survivors are Wistia (bootstrapped, consistent), Vidyard (well-funded, B2B sales focus), and JW Player (deep OTT roots, $100M Series C in 2019). Buyers in 2026 should pick by job-to-be-done first, vendor stability second, and feature breadth a distant third.

Best for your specific use case

  • B2B sales and revenue video leader: Vidyard Most mature platform for async sales video, CRM signal capture, and revenue-anchored use cases. $80M+ in funding and the deepest Salesforce / HubSpot integration in the category.
  • Marketing-led brand video hosting: Wistia Bootstrapped, consistently profitable, marketing-anchored video hosting with gated content and landing pages. Wistia AI launched 2024 without abandoning the core promise.
  • Async video messaging at scale: Loom Atlassian acquired October 2023 for $975M and is integrating into Atlassian Cloud. Best for Atlassian-anchored organizations; non-Atlassian shops should weigh the integration carefully.
  • Personalized sales video for SMB: Bonjoro Australian specialist for one-to-one personalized sales and onboarding videos. Best for SMB sales and customer success teams that ship volume.
  • Modern video prospecting platform: Sendspark Y Combinator alum, modern prospecting-focused UX, AI personalization features. Best for outbound SDR teams running personalized video at moderate volume.
  • Enterprise OTT and broadcast: Brightcove NASDAQ-listed enterprise OTT veteran. Best for media, broadcast, and large enterprise live-streaming, despite muted revenue growth and a flat stock chart.
  • Enterprise and higher-education video: Kaltura NASDAQ-listed video platform with deep higher-education and enterprise footprint. Best for universities and large enterprises; stock down roughly 85 percent from peak.
  • Mid-market marketing video hosting: Vimeo Business Post-SPAC public Vimeo, post-Anjali-Sud-departure, pivoting back to enterprise. Brand still strong; revenue trajectory and leadership turnover are real concerns.
  • Modern async video for creators and B2B: Tella Modern, design-led async video tool with clean editing. Best for creator-anchored teams, design-heavy marketing, and small B2B teams who want polish without enterprise complexity.
  • OTT and live streaming infrastructure: JW Player Deep OTT roots, JW Live plus JW Studio, $100M Series C in 2019. Best for publishers, broadcasters, and OTT operators rather than B2B marketing teams.

Video marketing and hosting in 2026 is four different categories sharing a sales motion. There is the B2B sales and revenue video category, Vidyard, Loom, Bonjoro, Sendspark, Tella, sold to revenue and customer-success teams who care about async prospecting, deal-room sharing, CRM signal capture (open, watch, complete), and integration with Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach, and Salesloft. There is the marketing-led brand video hosting category, Wistia, Vimeo Business, sold to marketing teams who care about gated content, landing-page video, lead capture, and analytics that flow into MAP and CRM. There is the enterprise OTT and large-scale media category, Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player, sold to broadcasters, publishers, and large enterprises with live-streaming, monetization (ads, subscription, pay-per-view), and broadcast workflows. And there is the creator-and-team async messaging slice, Loom and Tella in particular, where the buyer is often an individual end user and the procurement motion is bottom-up.

The single most important context for 2026 is that this category has consolidated around a small set of acquisition and public-market events. Atlassian acquired Loom in October 2023 for $975M and is integrating Loom into Atlassian Cloud through 2024 and 2025; the product still works, and the parent is stable, but Loom is no longer a standalone async-video bet. Vimeo (NASDAQ:VMEO) went public via SPAC in 2021, founder-CEO Anjali Sud departed in August 2023, revenue has decelerated, and the company is pivoting back toward enterprise after years of trying to be a creator platform. Brightcove (NASDAQ:BCOV) remains a mature enterprise OTT vendor with muted growth and a flat stock. Kaltura (NASDAQ:KLTR) IPO'd in July 2021 and the stock has since declined roughly 85 percent from peak. Wistia stayed bootstrapped, kept its strategy, and shipped Wistia AI in 2024 without changing its mind about what the product is. Vidyard kept raising and stayed focused on B2B sales video. JW Player kept its OTT roots and raised a $100M Series C in 2019. We synthesized 35,000+ reviews across G2, Capterra, TrustRadius, Reddit (r/sales, r/marketing, r/SaaS), and B2B sales communities. This ranking assumes that vendor trust matters as much as feature breadth and that the right answer for most buyers is one platform per job, not one platform for everything.

At a glance

Quick comparison

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Vidyard
B2B sales and revenue teams anchored on Salesforce or HubSpot
$0 $0 4.5 Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, EU, ANZ
2 Wistia
Marketing teams anchored on gated content and MAP
$0 $0 4.4 Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, EU, ANZ
3 Loom
Atlassian-anchored organizations and engineering / product teams
$0 $0 4.6 Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, ANZ, India
4 Bonjoro
SMB and mid-market sales, customer success, onboarding teams
$0 $0 4.7 Global; strongest in ANZ, US, UK, EU
5 Sendspark
Outbound SDR teams running AI-personalized video prospecting
$0 $0 4.7 Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, EU
6 Brightcove
Media, broadcast, and large enterprise video and OTT
Quote - 4.2 Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, APAC, LATAM
7 Kaltura
Higher-education and large enterprise video portals
Quote - 4.2 Global; strongest in US, EU, ANZ, Middle East
8 Vimeo Business
SMB to enterprise; broad horizontal video platform
$0 $0 4.3 Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, ANZ, LATAM
9 Tella
Creator-anchored teams, design-heavy marketing, small B2B
$0 $0 4.7 Global; strongest in UK, US, EU
10 JW Player
Publishers, broadcasters, OTT operators, large media
Quote - 4.2 Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, APAC, LATAM

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

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      Migration matrix

      How hard is it to switch?

      Switching cost is the lock-in tax. Read row → column: “If I'm on X today, how painful is moving to Y?” Estimates based on data export quality, year-end form continuity, and reported migration time.

      From ↓ / To → Vidyard Wistia Loom Bonjoro Sendspark Brightcove Kaltura Vimeo Business Tella JW Player
      Vidyard
      -
      OK 4
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 6
      Wistia
      OK 4
      -
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 6
      Loom
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      -
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Bonjoro
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 6
      -
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Sendspark
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      -
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Brightcove
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      OK 4
      OK 4
      OK 4
      -
      Medium 5
      OK 4
      OK 4
      Medium 5
      Kaltura
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      -
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      OK 4
      Vimeo Business
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      -
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Tella
      Medium 5
      Medium 5
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      -
      Hard 7
      JW Player
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      -
      Easy (0–2) OK (3–4) Medium (5–6) Hard (7–8) Very hard (9–10)
      The ranking

      All 10, ranked and reviewed

      Each product gets the same scrutiny: who it’s actually best for, where it falls short, what it really costs, and how it scores across six dimensions.

      #1

      Vidyard

      B2B sales and revenue video leader with the deepest CRM signal capture in the category.

      Founded 2010 · Kitchener, ON, Canada · private · 50-5,000 employees
      G2 4.5 (820)
      Capterra 4.5
      From $0 /mo
      ◐ Partial disclosure
      Visit Vidyard

      Vidyard is the most mature platform for async sales video and revenue-anchored use cases in 2026. Founded 2010 in Kitchener (Ontario, Canada), Vidyard has raised over $80M across multiple rounds (Bessemer, Battery, OMERS Ventures, BDC, others) and stayed focused on B2B sales rather than chasing the creator market or the OTT market. The product covers screen and webcam recording, video hosting, branded landing pages, in-video CTAs, AI script and personalization features, and (the differentiating capability) deep signal capture into Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach, Salesloft, Gong, and the broader B2B revenue stack. Strengths: deepest CRM and revenue-tool integration in the category, mature reporting on per-prospect watch behavior, strong fit for outbound SDR and account-executive workflows, AI Avatar and AI personalization features shipped through 2024 and 2025, and a culture of incremental product velocity rather than feature churn. Best fit for B2B sales and revenue teams (50 to 5,000 employees) that anchor on Salesforce or HubSpot and run video at meaningful volume. Trade-offs: pricing is opaque above the SMB tier, the marketing-led brand-video story is thinner than Wistia, the consumer or creator experience is intentionally underbuilt (Vidyard does not want that buyer), and seat economics get expensive once large revenue teams roll out company-wide.

      Best for

      B2B sales and revenue teams (50 to 5,000 employees) running async sales video at volume, anchored on Salesforce or HubSpot, who care more about signal capture and CRM workflows than brand-video aesthetics.

      Worst for

      Marketing teams wanting deep brand video and gated landing pages (Wistia better), creator-led teams wanting modern editing UX (Tella better), or OTT and broadcast operators (Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player better).

      Strengths

      • Deepest CRM and revenue-tool integration in the category
      • Mature signal capture on per-prospect watch behavior
      • Strong fit for outbound SDR and AE workflows
      • AI Avatar and AI script personalization shipped through 2024 and 2025
      • Long history of focus on B2B sales, not creator or OTT
      • Reliable hosting with consistent player quality
      • Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach, Salesloft native integrations

      Weaknesses

      • Pricing opaque above the SMB Pro tier
      • Marketing-led brand video story thinner than Wistia
      • Seat economics expensive at company-wide rollout
      • AI features priced as add-ons at higher tiers
      • Limited fit for OTT, live streaming, or large media use cases
      • Player customization shallow vs Wistia or JW Player

      Pricing tiers

      partial
      • Vidyard Free
        Limited recordings, basic features, single user
        $0 /mo
      • Vidyard Pro
        Per user per month, unlimited recordings, basic integrations
        $19 /mo
      • Vidyard Plus
        Per user per month, AI features, advanced analytics, CRM integrations
        $59 /mo
      • Vidyard Business
        $15K to $80K per year typical, full team rollout, SSO, advanced security
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · AI Avatar and AI personalization gated to higher tiers
      • · Seat economics scale at company-wide rollout
      • · SSO and advanced security on Business tier only
      • · Annual commit usually required for Business tier

      Key features

      • +Screen and webcam recording (browser + desktop)
      • +Branded video landing pages and microsites
      • +In-video CTAs and forms
      • +AI Avatar and AI script personalization
      • +Per-prospect watch analytics
      • +Salesforce, HubSpot, Outreach, Salesloft native integrations
      • +Team folders, permissions, and SSO
      • +API for embedded video workflows
      80+ integrations
      SalesforceHubSpotOutreachSalesloftGongMarketoLinkedIn Sales Navigator
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, EU, ANZ
      #2

      Wistia

      Bootstrapped Boston marketing-led video hosting that kept its strategy when nobody else did.

      Founded 2006 · Cambridge, MA · private · 10-2,000 employees
      G2 4.4 (1,180)
      Capterra 4.6
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Wistia

      Wistia is the marketing-led brand video hosting reference in 2026. Founded 2006 in Cambridge (Massachusetts), Wistia famously took on debt in 2017 to buy back its early investors and run as an independent, bootstrapped, profitable company; that capital structure is now one of the most credible vendor-stability signals in the category. The product covers video hosting, customizable players, gated content with email capture, landing pages, channels (video hubs), webinars and events (Wistia Live), and (the most recent investment area) Wistia AI for chapters, summaries, and smart cuts launched in 2024. Strengths: cleanest marketing-led UX in the category, deeply customizable player, mature gated-content and lead-capture workflows, MAP integrations (HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot) that genuinely work, and a consistent strategy buyers can trust across multi-year horizons. Best fit for marketing teams (10 to 2,000 employees) anchored on gated content, branded landing pages, and lead capture into MAP. Trade-offs: pricing has crept upward over multiple cycles and is now meaningful for SMB buyers, bandwidth-based pricing creates surprise overages at scale, B2B sales-video signal capture is thinner than Vidyard, and the platform is intentionally not for OTT or live broadcast.

      Best for

      Marketing teams (10 to 2,000 employees) anchored on gated content, branded landing pages, and lead capture into HubSpot, Marketo, or Pardot.

      Worst for

      B2B sales teams running async prospecting at scale (Vidyard better), creator-led teams wanting modern editing (Tella better), OTT and broadcast operators (Brightcove, JW Player, Kaltura better).

      Strengths

      • Cleanest marketing-led UX in the category
      • Deeply customizable player
      • Mature gated-content and lead-capture workflows
      • MAP integrations (HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot) that genuinely work
      • Bootstrapped capital structure signals long-term independence
      • Wistia AI features (chapters, summaries, smart cuts) shipped 2024
      • Consistent strategy across more than a decade

      Weaknesses

      • Pricing has crept upward over multiple cycles
      • Bandwidth-based pricing creates surprise overages at scale
      • B2B sales-video signal capture thinner than Vidyard
      • Intentionally not built for OTT or live broadcast
      • Mid-market and enterprise rollouts can outgrow caps
      • Reviews flag price increases without proportional feature gains

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Wistia Free
        Up to 10 videos, Wistia branding, limited features
        $0 /mo
      • Wistia Plus
        Up to 20 videos, basic customization, basic integrations
        $24 /mo
      • Wistia Pro
        Up to 100 videos, full customization, A/B testing, MAP integrations
        $99 /mo
      • Wistia Advanced
        Up to 250 videos, custom domains, advanced security, dedicated support
        $399 /mo
      • Wistia Premium
        Enterprise, custom contract, $15K to $50K+ per year typical
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Bandwidth overages above included tier
      • · Additional video slots priced per video
      • · Custom domain and white-label gated to Advanced and above
      • · Premium tier annual commit usually required

      Key features

      • +Branded video hosting and customizable player
      • +Channels (video hubs and content libraries)
      • +Wistia Live (webinars and events)
      • +Wistia AI (chapters, summaries, smart cuts)
      • +Gated content with email capture
      • +A/B testing of videos and CTAs
      • +HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot, Salesforce integrations
      • +API and embeddable players
      95+ integrations
      HubSpotMarketoPardotSalesforceMailchimpWordPressDrift
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, EU, ANZ
      #3

      Loom

      Async video messaging leader, acquired by Atlassian October 2023 for $975M.

      Founded 2015 · San Francisco, CA · public · 50-50,000 employees
      G2 4.6 (2,080)
      Capterra 4.7
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Loom

      Loom is the async video messaging category leader, founded 2015 in San Francisco, acquired by Atlassian in October 2023 for $975M. The product covers screen and webcam recording, instant share links, transcripts, comments, viewer signal, and (post-acquisition) integration into the Atlassian Cloud surface alongside Jira, Confluence, and Trello. Strengths: defined the category for one-click async video sharing, fastest record-to-share UX in the market, viewer signal (views, watch percentage, reactions) flows back into Slack and Atlassian tools, broad bottom-up adoption inside engineering and product teams, and Atlassian-parent stability eliminates startup-stage vendor risk. Best fit for Atlassian-anchored organizations (50 to 50,000 employees) where async video messaging is part of how engineering, product, and customer-success teams already work. Trade-offs: the Atlassian acquisition is positive for stability and negative for buyers who picked Loom precisely because it was not part of a big collaboration suite; pricing has been adjusted post-acquisition; the standalone Loom roadmap has been visibly slowed in favor of Atlassian Cloud integration; non-Atlassian shops should weigh whether buying Loom now is effectively a vote for Atlassian as a strategic vendor; and the B2B sales signal capture is thinner than Vidyard.

      Best for

      Atlassian-anchored organizations (50 to 50,000 employees) where async video messaging is integrated into Jira, Confluence, and engineering and product workflows.

      Worst for

      B2B sales teams running outbound async video at scale (Vidyard better), marketing teams running gated brand video (Wistia better), or shops actively trying to avoid Atlassian as a strategic vendor.

      Strengths

      • Defined the category for one-click async video sharing
      • Fastest record-to-share UX in the market
      • Atlassian-parent stability eliminates startup-stage vendor risk
      • Viewer signal integrates cleanly with Slack and Atlassian tools
      • Broad bottom-up adoption in engineering and product teams
      • Transcripts, comments, and reactions are mature
      • Native integration into Jira, Confluence, Trello post-acquisition

      Weaknesses

      • Atlassian acquisition is mixed signal for non-Atlassian shops
      • Standalone Loom roadmap visibly slowed in favor of Atlassian Cloud integration
      • Post-acquisition pricing adjustments flagged by reviewers
      • B2B sales signal capture thinner than Vidyard
      • Marketing-led brand video story below Wistia
      • AI feature pace mixed signal post-acquisition

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Loom Starter
        Up to 25 videos per person, 5 minutes per video
        $0 /mo
      • Loom Business
        Per creator per month, unlimited videos and recording time, advanced editing
        $15 /mo
      • Loom Business + AI
        Per creator per month, includes Loom AI features
        $20 /mo
      • Loom Enterprise
        $15K to $200K+ per year typical, SSO, advanced security, Atlassian bundle pricing available
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Loom AI gated to Business + AI tier and above
      • · Atlassian bundle pricing complexity at Enterprise tier
      • · Seat economics scale at company-wide rollout
      • · Annual commit usually required for Enterprise

      Key features

      • +Browser and desktop screen + webcam recording
      • +Instant share links and embed
      • +Transcripts and AI summaries (Loom AI)
      • +Comments, reactions, and emoji on video timeline
      • +Viewer signal and analytics
      • +Jira, Confluence, Slack, GitHub integrations
      • +SSO and team admin controls (Enterprise)
      • +API and Atlassian Cloud integration
      60+ integrations
      JiraConfluenceSlackGitHubNotionSalesforceHubSpot
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, ANZ, India
      #4

      Bonjoro

      Australian specialist for personalized one-to-one sales and onboarding video at SMB volume.

      Founded 2017 · Sydney, NSW, Australia · private · 5-500 employees
      G2 4.7 (480)
      Capterra 4.7
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Bonjoro

      Bonjoro is the personalized one-to-one sales video specialist, founded 2017 in Sydney (Australia). The product is narrower than Vidyard or Loom by design, it is built specifically for sales, customer success, and onboarding teams that ship volume of short personalized videos with a CTA to a customer or prospect. Strengths: deepest workflow for personalized one-to-one video (send via CRM trigger, follow up on the same thread, see watch signal in CRM), strong SMB and mid-market fit, founder-led culture with consistent product direction since 2017, integrations with HubSpot, Salesforce, ActiveCampaign, Klaviyo, and the rest of the SMB revenue stack, and price-positioned below Vidyard for similar use cases. Best fit for SMB and mid-market sales, customer success, and onboarding teams (5 to 500 employees) that ship 50 to 500 personalized videos per rep per month. Trade-offs: feature breadth narrower than Vidyard (Bonjoro chose this on purpose), B2B sales-signal capture into Salesforce is decent but not as deep as Vidyard, enterprise rollout coverage thinner than Vidyard or Loom, brand recognition outside ANZ and SMB e-commerce circles is limited, and the platform is intentionally not for hosting or marketing-led brand video.

      Best for

      SMB and mid-market sales, customer success, and onboarding teams (5 to 500 employees) shipping 50 to 500 personalized videos per rep per month, anchored on HubSpot, Salesforce, ActiveCampaign, or Klaviyo.

      Worst for

      Enterprise rollouts with thousands of reps (Vidyard / Loom better), marketing-led brand video and gated landing pages (Wistia better), or OTT and broadcast (Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player).

      Strengths

      • Deepest workflow for personalized one-to-one sales video
      • Strong SMB and mid-market fit
      • Founder-led culture with consistent product direction
      • Native integrations with HubSpot, Salesforce, ActiveCampaign, Klaviyo
      • Price-positioned below Vidyard for similar use cases
      • Mobile app for record-on-the-go workflows
      • Real-time watch notifications to reps

      Weaknesses

      • Feature breadth narrower than Vidyard by design
      • Enterprise rollout coverage thinner than Vidyard or Loom
      • Brand recognition outside ANZ and SMB e-commerce circles limited
      • CRM signal capture decent but not as deep as Vidyard
      • Not built for marketing-led hosting or gated content
      • Player customization shallow vs Wistia

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Bonjoro Free
        Up to 5 users, basic features, light branding
        $0 /mo
      • Bonjoro Connect
        Per user per month, integrations, branded sender pages
        $19 /mo
      • Bonjoro Talent
        Per user per month, advanced campaigns, deeper CRM integration
        $39 /mo
      • Bonjoro Marketer
        Per user per month, automations, analytics, full feature set
        $79 /mo
      Watch for
      • · Annual billing for advertised pricing
      • · Higher-tier campaign automations gated
      • · CRM integrations gated above Free tier
      • · Seat economics scale with sales team

      Key features

      • +One-to-one personalized video recording (mobile + browser)
      • +CRM trigger workflows (HubSpot, Salesforce, ActiveCampaign, Klaviyo)
      • +Watch notifications in real time to reps
      • +Branded landing pages and CTAs
      • +Campaign automation for onboarding sequences
      • +Team dashboards and performance reports
      • +Video templates and prompts for reps
      • +API and webhooks
      50+ integrations
      HubSpotSalesforceActiveCampaignKlaviyoShopifyMailchimpZapier
      Geography
      Global; strongest in ANZ, US, UK, EU
      #5

      Sendspark

      Modern Y Combinator video prospecting platform with AI personalization at moderate volume.

      Founded 2019 · Miami, FL · private · 5-500 employees
      G2 4.7 (320)
      Capterra 4.7
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Sendspark

      Sendspark is the modern challenger in the B2B video prospecting category, founded 2019 in Miami (Florida) and an alum of Y Combinator (W21 batch). The product covers screen and webcam recording, branded landing pages, AI personalization (dynamic backgrounds, AI-generated intros, name-stitching), and integrations with HubSpot, Salesforce, Outreach, Salesloft, and the SDR stack. Strengths: modern UX targeted explicitly at outbound SDRs, AI personalization features that turn one base video into many personalized variants, fast product velocity, founder-led culture, price-positioned below Vidyard for similar use cases, and integrations with the SDR-native stack. Best fit for outbound SDR teams (5 to 500 employees) running personalized video at moderate to high volume who want a modern AI-anchored alternative to Vidyard. Trade-offs: smaller deployed base than Vidyard or Loom, CRM signal capture decent but not as deep as Vidyard, enterprise security and compliance posture less mature than Vidyard or Wistia, feature breadth narrower than Vidyard by design, and brand recognition still building outside SDR communities.

      Best for

      Outbound SDR teams (5 to 500 employees) running AI-personalized video prospecting at moderate to high volume, anchored on HubSpot, Salesforce, Outreach, or Salesloft.

      Worst for

      Enterprise rollouts with thousands of reps (Vidyard better), marketing-led brand hosting (Wistia better), or regulated industries needing the deepest compliance posture (Vidyard, Wistia better).

      Strengths

      • Modern UX targeted at outbound SDRs
      • AI personalization (dynamic backgrounds, AI intros, name-stitching)
      • Fast product velocity, founder-led culture
      • Price-positioned below Vidyard for similar use cases
      • Native integrations with HubSpot, Salesforce, Outreach, Salesloft
      • Modern API and developer experience
      • Strong fit for AI-personalized outbound at scale

      Weaknesses

      • Smaller deployed base than Vidyard or Loom
      • CRM signal capture decent but less deep than Vidyard
      • Enterprise security and compliance posture less mature
      • Feature breadth narrower than Vidyard
      • Brand recognition still building outside SDR communities
      • Support depth thinner than larger vendors

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Sendspark Free
        Limited videos, basic features
        $0 /mo
      • Sendspark Starter
        Per user per month, unlimited videos, basic AI features
        $15 /mo
      • Sendspark Teams
        Per user per month, advanced AI personalization, CRM integrations
        $49 /mo
      • Sendspark Enterprise
        $10K to $80K per year typical, SSO, advanced security, full team rollout
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · AI personalization credits consumed at scale
      • · Advanced CRM integrations gated to Teams and above
      • · SSO and advanced security on Enterprise tier only
      • · Annual commit usually required for Enterprise

      Key features

      • +Screen and webcam recording
      • +AI personalization (dynamic backgrounds, name-stitching)
      • +Branded landing pages and microsites
      • +CRM signal capture and analytics
      • +HubSpot, Salesforce, Outreach, Salesloft native integrations
      • +Team dashboards and SDR reporting
      • +API and webhooks
      • +Bulk personalized video campaigns
      40+ integrations
      HubSpotSalesforceOutreachSalesloftApolloLinkedIn Sales NavigatorSlack
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, EU
      #6

      Brightcove

      NASDAQ-listed enterprise OTT veteran with muted growth and a flat stock chart.

      Founded 2004 · Boston, MA · public · 500-50,000+ employees
      G2 4.2 (480)
      Capterra 4.4
      Custom quote
      ○ Sales call required
      Visit Brightcove

      Brightcove (NASDAQ:BCOV) is one of the original enterprise video platforms, founded 2004 in Boston (Massachusetts) and publicly traded since 2012. The company covers enterprise OTT (Brightcove Beacon, Live, Player), broadcast workflows, internal communications video, and enterprise marketing video, with a long history in media and broadcaster deployments. Strengths: 20+ year track record, mature enterprise OTT and live-streaming stack, deep player customization and DRM support, multi-CDN delivery and high reliability, strong fit for broadcasters, publishers, and large enterprises, and public-company financial transparency. Best fit for media, broadcast, and large enterprises (500 to 50,000+ employees) running OTT, live streaming, or large-scale internal communications video. Trade-offs: revenue growth has been muted for multiple years, stock chart is flat relative to higher-growth SaaS peers, B2B sales-video and marketing-led primitives are below Vidyard and Wistia, pricing is fully opaque (call-for-quote at every tier), implementation and services investment is meaningful (months not weeks), and the AI feature pace lags Vidyard and Wistia.

      Best for

      Media, broadcast, and large enterprises (500 to 50,000+ employees) running OTT, live streaming, or large-scale internal communications video where reliability, monetization, and DRM matter more than modern marketing UX.

      Worst for

      B2B sales teams running async prospecting (Vidyard better), marketing teams running gated brand video (Wistia better), SMB and mid-market buyers (Wistia, Vidyard better, far less opaque pricing).

      Strengths

      • 20+ year track record in enterprise video
      • Mature enterprise OTT and live-streaming stack
      • Deep player customization and DRM support
      • Multi-CDN delivery and high reliability
      • Strong fit for broadcasters, publishers, and large enterprises
      • Public-company financial transparency (NASDAQ:BCOV)
      • Mature monetization tools (ads, subscriptions, pay-per-view)

      Weaknesses

      • Revenue growth muted for multiple years
      • Stock chart flat relative to higher-growth SaaS peers
      • B2B sales-video primitives below Vidyard
      • Marketing-led primitives below Wistia
      • Pricing fully opaque (call-for-quote at every tier)
      • Implementation and services investment meaningful
      • AI feature pace lags Vidyard, Wistia

      Pricing tiers

      opaque
      • Brightcove Marketing
        ~$10K to $40K per year typical for marketing-led video
        Quote
      • Brightcove Enterprise Video
        ~$40K to $150K per year for enterprise internal communications
        Quote
      • Brightcove Beacon (OTT)
        ~$150K to $1M+ per year for OTT and broadcast
        Quote
      • Brightcove Live
        Custom pricing for live-streaming use cases
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Implementation services (months, not weeks)
      • · Bandwidth and CDN costs at scale
      • · DRM and ad-server modules
      • · AI features priced as add-ons
      • · Annual price increases of 5 to 10 percent reported

      Key features

      • +Enterprise video hosting and player
      • +OTT (Brightcove Beacon) for broadcasters and publishers
      • +Live streaming (Brightcove Live)
      • +DRM and content protection
      • +Monetization (ads, subscriptions, pay-per-view)
      • +Multi-CDN delivery
      • +Analytics and viewership reports
      • +API and developer tooling
      75+ integrations
      Salesforce Marketing CloudMarketoHubSpotGoogle Ad ManagerAdobe Experience ManagerMicrosoft 365SharePoint
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, APAC, LATAM
      #7

      Kaltura

      NASDAQ-listed enterprise and higher-education video, stock down roughly 85 percent from peak.

      Founded 2006 · New York, NY · public · 1,000-100,000+ employees
      G2 4.2 (520)
      Capterra 4.3
      Custom quote
      ○ Sales call required
      Visit Kaltura

      Kaltura (NASDAQ:KLTR) is a long-running enterprise and higher-education video platform, founded 2006 with a strong original open-source heritage. The company IPO'd on NASDAQ in July 2021 near the peak of the SaaS bubble at $10/share and has since declined to roughly $1.50 to $2 per share, approximately an 85 percent drawdown from peak. The product covers enterprise video portals, higher-education lecture capture (Kaltura Video Cloud for Education), virtual events, internal communications video, and OTT video for media. Strengths: deep higher-education footprint (used at hundreds of universities for lecture capture and LMS integration with Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle), broad enterprise video portal capabilities, mature accessibility (closed captioning, transcripts, WCAG compliance), multi-language and multi-region delivery, and open-source heritage that creates flexibility for customization. Best fit for higher-education institutions and large enterprises (1,000 to 100,000+ employees / students) running internal video portals, lecture capture, or LMS-integrated video. Trade-offs: post-IPO stock decline (~85 percent from peak) creates legitimate vendor-stability questions, ARR growth muted, UX dated relative to Vidyard and Wistia, pricing fully opaque, implementation is complex (months not weeks), and the B2B sales-video and marketing-led primitives are well below Vidyard / Wistia.

      Best for

      Higher-education institutions and large enterprises (1,000 to 100,000+ employees or students) running internal video portals, lecture capture, LMS-integrated video, or large-scale accessible internal communications.

      Worst for

      B2B sales and marketing teams (Vidyard, Wistia better), SMB and mid-market (Wistia better, far less opaque pricing), or buyers worried about public-company financial trajectory.

      Strengths

      • Deep higher-education footprint with LMS integrations (Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle)
      • Broad enterprise video portal capabilities
      • Mature accessibility (closed captioning, transcripts, WCAG)
      • Multi-language and multi-region delivery
      • Open-source heritage and customization flexibility
      • Mature lecture-capture workflow
      • 20+ year track record

      Weaknesses

      • Post-IPO stock decline (~85 percent from peak) creates vendor-stability questions
      • ARR growth muted post-IPO
      • UX dated relative to Vidyard and Wistia
      • Pricing fully opaque (call-for-quote at every tier)
      • Implementation complex (months, not weeks)
      • B2B sales-video and marketing-led primitives well below Vidyard and Wistia
      • Management churn since IPO

      Pricing tiers

      opaque
      • Kaltura Video Cloud for Enterprise
        ~$30K to $150K per year typical for enterprise portal
        Quote
      • Kaltura Video Cloud for Education
        Higher-education priced per student or per FTE, ~$20K to $300K per year
        Quote
      • Kaltura Virtual Events
        ~$40K to $200K per year
        Quote
      • Kaltura OTT
        Custom pricing for media and broadcasters, often $250K+ per year
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Implementation services (months, not weeks)
      • · Bandwidth and storage costs at scale
      • · Higher-education FTE band scaling
      • · AI features priced as add-ons
      • · Annual price increases reported

      Key features

      • +Enterprise video portal
      • +Lecture capture (higher education)
      • +LMS integrations (Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle, D2L)
      • +Live streaming and webinars
      • +Closed captioning, transcripts, accessibility
      • +Multi-language and multi-region delivery
      • +OTT video for media
      • +API and open-source extensions
      110+ integrations
      CanvasBlackboardMoodleD2L BrightspaceMicrosoft TeamsZoomSalesforce
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, EU, ANZ, Middle East
      #8

      Vimeo Business

      Post-SPAC public Vimeo, post-Anjali-Sud departure, pivoting back to enterprise with revenue deceleration.

      Founded 2004 · New York, NY · public · 10-10,000 employees
      G2 4.3 (1,820)
      Capterra 4.5
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Vimeo Business

      Vimeo Business is the B2B-tier offering from Vimeo (NASDAQ:VMEO), the long-running video platform founded 2004 in New York. Vimeo went public via SPAC merger in May 2021 at peak SaaS valuations and has since experienced material revenue deceleration. Founder-CEO Anjali Sud departed in August 2023 after years of trying to reposition Vimeo as a creator-to-enterprise platform. The company is now pivoting back toward enterprise under new leadership. The product covers video hosting, branded landing pages, OTT (Vimeo OTT), live streaming (Vimeo Live), team collaboration, and (more recently) enterprise video workflows. Strengths: enormous brand recognition (Vimeo is one of the most-known consumer video brands in the world), broad SMB and mid-market footprint, strong creative-tool integration (Premiere, After Effects, Final Cut Pro), Vimeo Live for live streaming, OTT module for media, and a public-company financial transparency layer. Best fit for SMB and mid-market organizations (10 to 1,000 employees) wanting a broad, branded video platform with creative-tool integration. Trade-offs: post-Anjali-Sud leadership turnover and revenue deceleration are real vendor-trust concerns, post-SPAC stock decline is meaningful, the strategy has shifted multiple times (creator to enterprise to creator to enterprise again), B2B sales-video signal capture is below Vidyard, B2B marketing-led primitives are below Wistia, and pricing tier complexity has been flagged by reviewers.

      Best for

      SMB and mid-market organizations (10 to 1,000 employees) wanting a broadly recognized, branded video platform with strong creative-tool integration and the option to scale to live streaming or OTT.

      Worst for

      B2B sales teams running async prospecting (Vidyard better), B2B marketers running gated content (Wistia better, more consistent strategy), or large enterprises and broadcasters needing deep OTT (Brightcove, JW Player better).

      Strengths

      • Enormous brand recognition (one of the most-known consumer video brands)
      • Broad SMB and mid-market footprint
      • Strong creative-tool integration (Premiere, After Effects, Final Cut Pro)
      • Vimeo Live for live streaming
      • Vimeo OTT for media subscriptions
      • Public-company financial transparency (NASDAQ:VMEO)
      • AI features shipped 2024 and 2025

      Weaknesses

      • Post-Anjali-Sud leadership turnover (CEO departed August 2023)
      • Revenue deceleration post-SPAC
      • Stock decline material from SPAC peak
      • Strategy has shifted multiple times (creator to enterprise to creator to enterprise)
      • B2B sales-video signal capture below Vidyard
      • B2B marketing-led primitives below Wistia
      • Pricing tier complexity flagged by reviewers

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Vimeo Free
        Limited storage, Vimeo branding
        $0 /mo
      • Vimeo Starter
        Per user per month, basic features
        $12 /mo
      • Vimeo Standard
        Per user per month, more storage, basic team features
        $20 /mo
      • Vimeo Advanced
        Per user per month, full team features, advanced analytics, basic OTT
        $65 /mo
      • Vimeo Enterprise
        Custom pricing, $15K to $150K+ per year typical
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Storage and bandwidth overages at higher volumes
      • · OTT and live streaming priced as add-ons or higher tiers
      • · AI features gated to higher tiers
      • · Annual commit required for advertised pricing
      • · Enterprise sales pricing complexity

      Key features

      • +Branded video hosting and player
      • +Vimeo Live (live streaming)
      • +Vimeo OTT (subscription video for media)
      • +Team collaboration and review tools
      • +Creative-tool integration (Premiere, After Effects, Final Cut Pro)
      • +Vimeo AI features (chapters, summaries)
      • +Branded landing pages and showcases
      • +API and embeddable players
      70+ integrations
      HubSpotSalesforceMarketoMailchimpAdobe Premiere ProFinal Cut ProYouTube
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, ANZ, LATAM
      #9

      Tella

      Modern design-led async video tool for creators, designers, and small B2B teams.

      Founded 2020 · London, UK · private · 5-200 employees
      G2 4.7 (280)
      Capterra 4.6
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Tella

      Tella is the modern design-led entrant in the async video category, founded 2020 in London (UK). The product is positioned at the intersection of Loom and a lightweight video editor: screen and webcam recording with built-in modern layouts, backgrounds, zoom-and-pan effects, automatic cuts of silence and filler words, branded share pages, and integrations with Notion, Slack, and modern productivity tools. Strengths: most polished, design-led UX in the async video category, modern editing features (layouts, backgrounds, zoom effects, silence removal) that turn raw recordings into share-ready content, founder-led culture with consistent product direction, fast product velocity, price-positioned competitively against Loom and Sendspark, and modern integrations with Notion, Slack, and creator tooling. Best fit for creator-anchored teams, design-heavy marketing teams, small B2B teams (5 to 200 employees), and individuals who want polished async video without enterprise complexity. Trade-offs: smaller deployed base than Loom or Vidyard, B2B sales-video signal capture into Salesforce or HubSpot is thinner than Vidyard or Sendspark, enterprise security and compliance posture is less mature than larger vendors, integrations footprint narrower than Vidyard or Loom, and brand recognition is still building outside design and creator communities.

      Best for

      Creator-anchored teams, design-heavy marketing teams, and small B2B teams (5 to 200 employees) wanting polished async video with modern editing built in.

      Worst for

      B2B sales teams running async prospecting at scale (Vidyard, Sendspark better), enterprises needing deep security and compliance (Vidyard, Wistia, Loom better), or OTT and broadcast operators.

      Strengths

      • Most polished, design-led UX in the async video category
      • Modern editing features (layouts, backgrounds, zoom, silence removal)
      • Founder-led culture with consistent product direction
      • Fast product velocity
      • Price-positioned competitively vs Loom and Sendspark
      • Modern integrations with Notion, Slack, and creator tooling
      • Strong fit for design-heavy marketing teams

      Weaknesses

      • Smaller deployed base than Loom or Vidyard
      • B2B sales-video signal capture thinner than Vidyard or Sendspark
      • Enterprise security and compliance posture less mature
      • Integrations footprint narrower
      • Brand recognition still building outside creator and design communities
      • Not built for OTT, live streaming, or large enterprise rollout

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Tella Free
        Limited videos, basic features
        $0 /mo
      • Tella Pro
        Per user per month, unlimited videos, advanced editing features
        $19 /mo
      • Tella Teams
        Per user per month, team workspaces, brand kits, advanced analytics
        $49 /mo
      • Tella Enterprise
        Custom pricing for larger teams, SSO, advanced security
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Brand kits and advanced analytics gated to Teams and above
      • · SSO on Enterprise tier only
      • · Seat economics scale with team size
      • · Annual commit usually required for Enterprise

      Key features

      • +Screen and webcam recording with modern layouts
      • +Built-in editing (layouts, backgrounds, zoom, silence removal)
      • +Branded share pages and embed
      • +AI summaries and chapters
      • +Team workspaces and brand kits
      • +Notion, Slack, Figma, modern productivity integrations
      • +API and webhooks
      • +Mobile recording support
      35+ integrations
      NotionSlackFigmaHubSpotSalesforceMicrosoft 365Zapier
      Geography
      Global; strongest in UK, US, EU
      #10

      JW Player

      OTT and live-streaming infrastructure veteran with $100M Series C in 2019.

      Founded 2008 · New York, NY · private · 50-50,000+ employees
      G2 4.2 (380)
      Capterra 4.5
      Custom quote
      ○ Sales call required
      Visit JW Player

      JW Player is one of the original video infrastructure companies, founded 2008 in New York (Jeroen Wijering, JW). The original JW Player open-source HTML5 video player became one of the most-deployed players on the open web. The company has since built out JW Live (live streaming), JW Studio (video CMS and workflow), and a broader OTT and publisher-focused platform. JW Player raised a $100M Series C in 2019 led by LLR Partners and remains private, focused primarily on OTT and publisher use cases rather than B2B marketing or sales video. Strengths: deep OTT and publisher heritage, most-deployed open-web video player historically, JW Live for live streaming, JW Studio for video CMS workflows, mature monetization (ads, subscriptions, pay-per-view), strong fit for broadcasters and publishers, and recurring well-funded private-company stability. Best fit for publishers, broadcasters, OTT operators, and large media companies (50 to 50,000+ employees) running ad-supported or subscription video where player customization and monetization matter. Trade-offs: not built for B2B sales or marketing video (Vidyard, Wistia better), pricing fully opaque, implementation services investment meaningful, B2B brand recognition has faded as the open-web player era ended, and product velocity in 2024 and 2025 has been measured rather than aggressive.

      Best for

      Publishers, broadcasters, OTT operators, and large media companies (50 to 50,000+ employees) running ad-supported or subscription video where player customization, monetization, and OTT delivery matter.

      Worst for

      B2B sales teams (Vidyard better), B2B marketing teams running gated brand video (Wistia better), or SMB and mid-market buyers who want modern, transparent pricing.

      Strengths

      • Deep OTT and publisher heritage
      • Most-deployed open-web HTML5 video player historically
      • JW Live for live streaming
      • JW Studio for video CMS workflows
      • Mature monetization (ads, subscriptions, pay-per-view)
      • Strong fit for broadcasters and publishers
      • Well-funded private-company stability

      Weaknesses

      • Not built for B2B sales or marketing video
      • Pricing fully opaque (call-for-quote everywhere)
      • Implementation services investment meaningful
      • B2B brand recognition has faded post open-web era
      • Product velocity measured rather than aggressive
      • UX dated relative to modern marketing video tools

      Pricing tiers

      opaque
      • JW Player Starter
        ~$10K to $30K per year typical for smaller publishers
        Quote
      • JW Player Business
        ~$30K to $120K per year for mid-market publishers and broadcasters
        Quote
      • JW Player Enterprise
        ~$120K to $500K+ per year for large media and OTT
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Bandwidth and CDN costs at scale
      • · Ad-server and DRM modules
      • · Implementation services
      • · Annual price increases reported

      Key features

      • +HTML5 video player
      • +JW Live (live streaming)
      • +JW Studio (video CMS)
      • +Ad-server integration (SSAI, CSAI)
      • +DRM and content protection
      • +OTT module for media subscriptions
      • +Multi-CDN delivery
      • +API and developer tooling
      60+ integrations
      Google Ad ManagerSpringServeMagniteWordPressAkamaiAWS CloudFrontSalesforce Marketing Cloud
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, UK, EU, APAC, LATAM
      Buying guide

      8 steps to pick the right video marketing and hosting software

      1. 1
        1. Decide which buyer journey you are in

        B2B sales and revenue video (Vidyard, Loom, Bonjoro, Sendspark, Tella). Marketing-led brand video hosting (Wistia, Vimeo Business). Enterprise OTT and broadcast (Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player). Async messaging culture (Loom, Tella). Most organizations end up running two or three platforms in parallel; do not assume one platform fits every job-to-be-done.

      2. 2
        2. Audit your existing CRM, MAP, and conferencing stack

        On Salesforce or HubSpot for revenue ops? Vidyard has the deepest integration. On Marketo or Pardot for marketing? Wistia is the cleanest fit. On Atlassian for engineering and product? Loom is now native. On Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle, or D2L for higher-ed? Kaltura is the standard. Do not pick a video platform that fights existing CRM, MAP, or LMS.

      3. 3
        3. Match scale, volume, and budget to tier

        SMB (5 to 50 employees, low video volume): Wistia Plus / Pro, Vimeo Standard, Loom Business, Bonjoro Connect, Tella Pro ($1.2K to $3K per year). Mid-market (50 to 500 employees, moderate volume): Vidyard Plus, Wistia Pro / Advanced, Loom Business, Sendspark Teams ($5K to $25K per year). Mid-market+ (200 to 2,000 employees, high volume): Vidyard Business, Wistia Advanced, Loom Enterprise, Vimeo Enterprise ($20K to $80K per year). Enterprise (2,000+ employees, OTT or broadcast): Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player ($80K to $500K+ per year).

      4. 4
        4. Diligence vendor stability before multi-year contracts

        This category has gone through real consolidation. Loom acquired by Atlassian October 2023 for $975M; Vimeo post-SPAC with CEO departure and revenue deceleration; Brightcove muted growth and flat stock; Kaltura down approximately 85 percent from IPO peak; Hopin and Airmeet collapses in the adjacent webinar category as proof that vendor stability matters. The boring survivors (Wistia bootstrapped, Vidyard well-funded private, Bonjoro founder-led, Tella founder-led, JW Player well-funded private) deserve credit for being predictable.

      5. 5
        5. Test with real content, real CRM integration, and a real campaign

        Run a 60 to 90 day proof-of-value with real video content, real CRM and MAP integration to Salesforce / HubSpot / Marketo, at least one real outbound or marketing campaign, and a real reporting cycle. Vendor demos use polished sample content; test with your real content, your real prospects, and your real reps. Verify the watch-signal flow into Salesforce, the bandwidth-overage behavior on a high-traffic landing page, and the AI feature output on your real recordings rather than a curated sample.

      6. 6
        6. Plan AI feature evaluation separately

        AI features in this category are evolving rapidly and pricing tiers are shifting. Vidyard AI Avatar and Sendspark personalization are the differentiators for outbound video; Wistia AI and Tella editing AI are the differentiators for content polish; transcripts and summaries are commoditizing. Test AI features with your real content. Do not lock into 3-year contracts without 12-month AI feature-evaluation clauses, particularly with vendors that have already moved AI features between tiers (Loom is the recent example).

      7. 7
        7. Negotiate at signing, multi-year locks are common

        Vidyard, Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player, and Vimeo Enterprise all push 2 to 3 year contracts. Annual contracts are usually available with a 10 to 25 percent premium. Negotiate: (1) seat-economics clarity for company-wide rollout, (2) bandwidth-overage caps and ramp pricing, (3) annual price increase caps (5 to 7 percent), (4) AI module access at the base tier rather than gated to add-on, (5) exit clauses for vendor-stability scenarios (especially relevant for Vimeo, Kaltura, Brightcove, and Loom-post-Atlassian). Re-negotiation post-go-live is much harder than at signing.

      8. 8
        8. Map fit to job, not feature checklist

        The most common mistake in this category is buying for feature breadth rather than job fit. Vidyard is the right answer for outbound sales video even if it does not have the prettiest brand-video player. Wistia is the right answer for gated marketing video even if it does not have the deepest CRM signal capture. Brightcove and JW Player are the right answer for OTT even if they look enterprise-y. The vendors that try to be all things to all jobs (Vimeo, to a degree) end up with strategy whiplash and frustrated buyers. Pick by job-to-be-done first, vendor stability second, feature breadth a distant third.

      Frequently asked questions

      The questions buyers actually ask before they sign a video marketing and hosting software contract.

      Vidyard vs Loom vs Wistia, which one for my use case?
      Vidyard if you are a B2B sales or revenue team running async prospecting and account-based motion anchored on Salesforce or HubSpot; the CRM signal capture and revenue-tool integrations are in a different league. Loom if you are an Atlassian-anchored organization where async video messaging is part of engineering and product workflows; the Atlassian acquisition is positive for stability, mixed for buyers who picked Loom precisely because it was independent. Wistia if you are a marketing team running gated content, branded landing pages, and lead capture into HubSpot, Marketo, or Pardot; Wistia stayed bootstrapped and consistent, which is one of the strongest vendor-trust signals in the category. Most organizations end up running two of the three in parallel: one for sales (Vidyard), one for marketing hosting (Wistia), one for internal async messaging (Loom).
      What actually happened with the Loom Atlassian acquisition?
      Atlassian acquired Loom in October 2023 for $975M. The product still works and continues to ship features. Through 2024 and 2025, Loom has been integrated into Atlassian Cloud alongside Jira and Confluence, native embeds and viewing experiences have shipped, and pricing tiers have been adjusted (Loom AI features moved to a dedicated AI tier in 2025, which reviewers flagged as a downgrade for users on prior plans). Some Loom team departures have been reported post-acquisition, consistent with normal acquisition-integration patterns. The honest summary: Loom is now an Atlassian Cloud product. For Atlassian-anchored organizations this is positive, the integration is real and the parent is stable. For non-Atlassian organizations this is mixed signal, buyers should weigh whether adopting Loom in 2026 is effectively a vote for Atlassian as a strategic vendor.
      Is Vimeo in trouble?
      Vimeo (NASDAQ:VMEO) is publicly traded and not in immediate financial distress, but the trajectory has been visibly difficult. Vimeo went public via SPAC merger in May 2021 at peak SaaS valuations, the stock has since declined materially, revenue has decelerated, and founder-CEO Anjali Sud departed in August 2023 after roughly seven years leading the company. New CEO Philip Moyer joined from Google Cloud in 2024 and is reinforcing an enterprise pivot. The product itself still works and the brand remains one of the most recognized in consumer and SMB video. Buyers should consider that Vimeo strategy has shifted multiple times (creator-first to enterprise to creator-first to enterprise again) and that the 2024 to 2026 enterprise pivot is still in execution. For multi-year contracts, negotiate exit clauses tied to vendor-stability scenarios.
      How bad is the Kaltura stock decline?
      Kaltura (NASDAQ:KLTR) IPO'd on NASDAQ in July 2021 at $10/share, and the stock has since declined to roughly $1.50 to $2 per share, approximately an 85 percent drawdown from peak. ARR growth has been muted post-IPO, the company has gone through multiple workforce reductions, and management has emphasized profitability over growth. The product itself remains a leading enterprise and higher-education video platform, the Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle, and D2L integrations are mature, and accessibility (closed captioning, WCAG) is genuinely strong. Higher-education buyers signing multi-year Kaltura contracts in 2026 should do procurement-side diligence on vendor financial stability and negotiate exit clauses. The product working well today does not mean the company will be at the same scale in five years.
      Should I use my video conferencing platform for video marketing, or a dedicated platform?
      Most organizations end up running both. The video conferencing platform (Zoom, Teams, Google Meet) handles internal video calls and basic recorded webinars. The dedicated video marketing platform (Vidyard, Wistia, Loom, Vimeo Business) handles async sales prospecting, gated content video, branded landing pages, OTT, or live streaming. The mistake is using the conferencing platform for marketing-led video and then wondering why the brand looks generic and the analytics are shallow. The mistake in the other direction is paying for a marketing video platform when your use case is actually internal video calls. Decide by job-to-be-done first.
      How much should I budget for video marketing and hosting software?
      SMB (5 to 50 employees): $1.2K to $3K per year (Wistia Plus or Pro, Vimeo Standard, Loom Business 5 to 10 seats, Bonjoro Connect, Tella Pro). Mid-market (50 to 500 employees): $5K to $25K per year (Wistia Pro or Advanced, Vidyard Plus, Loom Business, Sendspark Teams). Mid-market+ (200 to 2,000 employees): $20K to $80K per year (Vidyard Business, Wistia Advanced, Loom Enterprise, Vimeo Enterprise). Enterprise (2,000 to 50,000+ employees): $80K to $500K+ per year (Brightcove Beacon, Kaltura enterprise, JW Player enterprise, Vidyard Business enterprise tiers). For enterprise OTT and broadcast (Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player) pricing is opaque and verified buyer disclosures are critical, expect six-figure annual deals.
      What about AI features in video marketing software in 2026?
      AI in video marketing 2026: (1) AI transcripts and summaries (table stakes, every major vendor offers this), (2) AI chapters and smart cuts (Wistia AI, Loom AI, Tella, Sendspark), (3) AI personalization for outbound video (Vidyard AI Avatar, Sendspark dynamic backgrounds and name-stitching lead the category here), (4) AI content repurposing (turn one webinar or video into many assets, more common in webinar tools like Goldcast than in pure video hosting, though Wistia AI is closing the gap), (5) AI search and content discovery (Kaltura, Brightcove for enterprise portal search). The pattern is that AI transcripts and summaries are commoditizing, AI personalization for outbound and AI editing for creators (silence removal, layouts, zoom) are the real differentiators, and AI features are increasingly gated to higher pricing tiers.
      Can I trial these platforms before committing?
      Free trials and free tiers: Vidyard (free tier plus 14-day Pro and Plus trial), Wistia (Free Forever tier plus 14-day Plus and Pro trial), Loom (Starter free tier plus 14-day Business and Business + AI trial), Bonjoro (free tier plus 14-day Connect, Talent, Marketer trial), Sendspark (free tier plus 14-day Starter and Teams trial), Vimeo (30-day money-back guarantee), Tella (free tier plus 14-day Pro and Teams trial). Demo only: Brightcove, Kaltura, JW Player (enterprise OTT and large media vendors do not offer self-service trials at meaningful scale). For mid-market and enterprise, run a 60 to 90 day proof-of-value with real content, CRM integration, and at least one real campaign before committing to multi-year contracts.
      How does video marketing software overlap with webinar software and screen recording tools?
      There are three adjacent categories. (1) Video marketing and hosting (this ranking), async sales video, marketing video hosting, OTT, and async messaging at team scale. (2) Webinar and virtual events software, live and on-demand webinars, multi-session conferences, content hubs for demand-gen; Zoom Events, ON24, Goldcast, BigMarker lead. (3) Pure screen recording and lightweight video tools, Loom historically straddles this but the heart of Loom is async messaging at team scale. Most B2B organizations end up with a webinar tool (for events), a video marketing host (Vidyard for sales, Wistia for marketing, Loom for internal async), and either built-in conferencing recording or a lightweight standalone tool. Picking one platform for all three jobs is the most common mistake.
      What about open-source or self-hosted video alternatives?
      Self-hosted and open-source video options exist (PeerTube, MediaCMS, JW Player Open Source for player only, Kaltura Community Edition historically) but the operational burden, CDN cost, transcoding pipeline, DRM support, and integration work add up fast once you account for engineering time. For B2B sales video and marketing-led hosting the build-versus-buy math almost always favors buying. For OTT, broadcast, or large publishers with engineering depth, self-hosted components combined with managed CDN (AWS Elemental, Akamai, Mux) can make sense. Kaltura's open-source heritage is unusual in this category and is one reason it remains a leader for higher-education customization. For most B2B buyers in 2026, default to a managed platform and only consider self-hosted if you have a specific scale or customization requirement that managed vendors cannot meet.

      Glossary

      Async video
      Recorded video (screen, webcam, or both) shared via link rather than delivered live. The defining primitive of Loom, Vidyard, Bonjoro, Sendspark, and Tella. Replaces meetings and email at team and outbound scale.
      OTT (over-the-top video)
      Subscription or ad-supported video delivered over the internet rather than through traditional broadcast. Brightcove Beacon, JW Player, Kaltura, Vimeo OTT are the category leaders.
      DRM (Digital Rights Management)
      Content protection that prevents unauthorized downloading or sharing of video. Required for premium OTT, broadcast, and many enterprise use cases. Brightcove, JW Player, Kaltura have the most mature DRM support.
      CRM signal capture
      The flow of per-prospect or per-account watch behavior (open, watch percentage, completion, replay) back into Salesforce, HubSpot, or other CRM. Vidyard leads here; Loom and Sendspark are next; Wistia is marketing-led rather than sales-led.
      Bandwidth overage
      Charges incurred when video delivery exceeds the bandwidth cap in a subscription tier. Wistia, Vimeo, and others price in bandwidth bands; surprise overages are a real and frequently-cited reviewer complaint.
      AI Avatar / AI personalization
      Generative AI features that produce personalized video variants from a base recording, including dynamic backgrounds, name-stitching, and AI-generated intros. Vidyard AI Avatar and Sendspark personalization lead this slice.
      Multi-CDN delivery
      Use of multiple content delivery networks for video distribution, improving reliability and global performance. Brightcove, JW Player, Kaltura all support multi-CDN; modern marketing video hosts (Wistia, Vimeo) abstract this away.
      Lecture capture
      Higher-education-specific workflow for recording lectures, indexing by speaker and slide, and surfacing in an LMS (Canvas, Blackboard, Moodle, D2L). Kaltura is the category reference here.
      Branded video landing page
      A standalone page hosting a single video with brand styling, CTAs, and lead capture. Wistia Channels and Vidyard branded pages are the marketing-led references; Vimeo Showcases are adjacent.
      SSAI / CSAI
      Server-Side Ad Insertion and Client-Side Ad Insertion, two approaches to inserting ads into OTT video. SSAI is preferred for ad-block resilience and is supported by JW Player, Brightcove, Kaltura.
      Async messaging culture
      A working practice where teams substitute meetings with recorded video and written documentation. Loom shaped this category; Tella is the modern design-led entrant; in regulated industries video adoption is slower.
      SPAC merger
      Special Purpose Acquisition Company merger, a path to public listing that surged in 2020 to 2021. Vimeo went public via SPAC in May 2021; many SPAC-listed companies have since experienced significant stock declines.

      Final word

      See the full intelligence profile for any product on this page, including verified pricing, vendor trust scores, and review patterns. Browse the Video Marketing and Hosting Software category page →

      Last updated 2026-05-10. Pricing data is reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.