Gong launches ‘Mission Andromeda’ with AI sales coaching, chatbot and open MCP connections to rivals

Gong, the revenue intelligence company that has spent a decade turning recorded sales calls into data, today launched what it calls Mission Andromeda — its most ambitious platform release to date, bundling a new AI-powered coaching product, a sales-focused chatbot, unified account management tools, and open interoperability with rival AI systems through the Model Context Protocol.

The release arrives at a pivotal moment. The revenue technology market is consolidating at a pace that would have been unthinkable two years ago, and Gong — still a private company with roughly $300 million in annual recurring revenue — finds itself at the center of a category that Gartner only formally defined three months ago. Mission Andromeda is Gong’s answer to a basic question facing every enterprise AI vendor in 2026: Can you move beyond surfacing insights and actually change how people work?

“The whole show, Andromeda, is basically a collection of very significant capabilities that take us a huge step forward,” Eilon Reshef, Gong’s co-founder and chief product officer, told VentureBeat in an interview ahead of the launch. He described it as an effort to make revenue teams “more productive as individuals” and to give leaders “better decisions” — positioning the release not as a feature dump, but as an operating system upgrade.

The new products target every layer of the sales workflow, from coaching to account management

Mission Andromeda contains four main components, each targeting a different layer of the sales workflow.

The headliner is Gong Enable, a brand-new product with its own pricing tier — Reshef described it as “in the tens of dollars per seat per month” — that attacks what the company sees as a gaping hole in most sales organizations: the disconnect between training and performance. Highspot and Seismic announced their intent to merge in February 2026, creating a combined enablement giant, and Gong is now moving directly onto their turf.

Gong Enable has three pieces. The first, AI Call Reviewer, analyzes completed customer calls and grades reps based on their organization’s own methodology. When asked whether this operates in real time, Reshef was direct: “For that particular agent, it’s post-call, because obviously you want to grade the whole call as a whole — maybe you didn’t do anything in minute one, minute 30.” The second piece, AI Trainer, lets reps practice high-stakes conversations — pricing objections, renewal risk scenarios — against AI-generated simulations built from the company’s own winning call patterns. The third, Initiative Tracking, links coaching programs to revenue metrics so leaders can see whether new behaviors actually show up in live deals.

Beyond Enable, the launch includes Gong Assistant, a conversational AI chatbot purpose-built for revenue teams that lets users ask questions about customer calls inside the platform. The release also introduces Account Console and Account Boards, which unify customer activity, risk signals, and next steps into a single view for sales and post-sales teams. And rounding out the package is built-in support for the Model Context Protocol, the open standard originally developed by Anthropic, enabling Gong to exchange data with AI systems from Microsoft, Salesforce, HubSpot, and others.

Gong uses four different LLM providers and says the real moat is the data, not the models

In a market where every company wants to claim proprietary AI supremacy, Reshef described a notably pragmatic approach to the models powering the new features. Gong uses both internal models and foundation models from external providers, he said, noting that “four out of the five leading AI companies, LLM, are basically Gong customers.”

The company picks models task by task. “Based on the product or task at hand, we pick the right model,” he said. “We would sometimes swap in and out a model if we feel it’s best for our customers and they get more and more power.” Reshef drew a clear line between what needs a large language model and what does not: “Our revenue prediction models are not using LLMs, but kind of the core interaction chatbots — of course, you’re going to use the foundation model.”

This approach contrasts with competitors that have hitched their wagon to a single AI provider. It also reflects a philosophical choice: Gong’s real moat, Reshef suggested, is not the models themselves but the data underneath — what the company calls the Revenue Graph, its proprietary layer that captures phone calls, Zoom meetings, emails, text messages, WhatsApp conversations, and more, stitching them together into a connected intelligence layer.

Recording every sales conversation raises obvious privacy questions, and Gong says it has spent a decade answering them

Storing and analyzing every customer conversation a sales team has raises obvious questions about privacy and data governance. Reshef was eager to address them head-on.

“We’ve been around the block for a long while — a little bit over a decade — with AI first,” he said. “Over the years, we’ve developed exactly those capabilities that are the most boring pieces of AI, which is: how do you collect the right data? How do you manage it? How do you manage permissions about it, retention policies, right to be forgotten?”

On the sensitive question of whether Gong trains its AI on customer data across accounts, Reshef drew a firm boundary. Training, he explained, happens per customer: “The majority of the training happens based on each customer’s data.” He pointed to large accounts like Cisco, which he said has 20,000 Gong users — enough data to train the AI Trainer from within their own environment. “AI Trainer can go mine what’s working in their environment. It might not work in their competitor’s environment — maybe their benefits are different, their objections are different.”

Cross-customer training, he said, happens “only in very, very rare cases, very safe based — like transcription. But we don’t do it for business-specific processes.”

MCP gives Gong an open door to rival platforms, but security remains an unsolved problem across the industry

Gong’s support for Model Context Protocol is perhaps the most strategically significant piece of the launch. The company now offers built-in client and server support for MCP, enabling organizations to connect Gong with other AI systems while maintaining clear controls over data access, usage, and provenance. Gong first announced MCP support in October 2025 at its Celebrate conference, where it revealed initial integrations with Microsoft Dynamics 365, Microsoft 365 Copilot, Salesforce Agentforce, and HubSpot CRM. Today’s launch builds on that foundation.

But Reshef did not sugarcoat MCP’s limitations. “MCP is very immature when it comes to security,” he told VentureBeat. The protocol lets enterprise AI systems share data and context, but trust remains the enterprise’s responsibility. He explained a two-sided model: Gong can pull data from partners like Zendesk through certified integrations, and simultaneously makes its own MCP server available so that tools like Microsoft Copilot can query Gong’s data. “It’s up to the company which connections they actually feel are secure enough,” he said. “The safest ones are the ones that we’ve kind of like certified in a way. But MCP is an open protocol. They can connect it to their own systems. We have no control over this.”

That candor matters. As MCP adoption accelerates across the enterprise software stack, security teams are scrambling to understand what happens when agentic AI systems start talking to each other without humans in the loop. Gong appears to be betting that transparency about the protocol’s immaturity will build more trust than marketing bravado.

Early customers report faster ramp times and higher win rates, but the newest features are still days old

When asked for hard numbers, Reshef offered a mix of platform-wide results and measured candor about the newest features. Existing Gong customers report roughly a 50 percent reduction in sales rep ramp time and 10 to 15 percent improvements in win rates, he said.

But on Gong Enable specifically, he acknowledged the product is still brand new. “The trainer has been in the market for literally, you know, days, a week,” he said. “I would probably lie to you if I said, ‘Hey, we’re already seeing people crushing it after taking three or four courses.'” For the earlier version of Enable that includes the AI Call Reviewer, however, he said customers are “definitely seeing a very high kind of skill improvement” and are attributing increases in win rates and quota attainment to those gains — though he conceded that “it’s always hard to do 100 percent attribution.”

Morningstar, one of Gong’s early adopters, offered a pre-launch endorsement. Rae Cheney, Director of Sales Enablement Technology at Morningstar, said in a statement that Gong Enable helped the firm “spend less time on status updates and more time on the work that actually moves deals.”

Reshef insists AI still needs a human operator, putting Gong at odds with the autonomous agent hype

One of the more interesting threads in Reshef’s remarks concerned his view of AI autonomy — or rather, its limits. He pushed back on what he called a “common misperception about AI” — that it operates completely autonomously.

“There has to be a person in the middle, which I call operator,” he said. “It could be RevOps. It could be enablement. In the case of training, it could be analysts. Sometimes it could be even business leaders.” Those operators, he argued, are responsible for a “repeatable process of AI doing something, measuring the AI” and adjusting over time.

This philosophy extends to the AI Call Reviewer’s feedback. Gong does not dictate what the system trains on — enablement leaders choose. “We don’t decide what they want to train on. We let them choose,” Reshef said. “You iterate, you optimize, you see how it goes, and there has to be somebody in the organization who’s responsible for making sure this aligns with the business needs.”

That stance puts Gong at odds with the more aggressive “autonomous agent” rhetoric emerging from some competitors, and it may resonate with enterprise buyers who remain cautious about letting AI run unsupervised in revenue-critical workflows.

A wave of mega-mergers is reshaping the revenue AI market, and Gong is racing to stay ahead of the combined giants

Mission Andromeda does not exist in a vacuum. The revenue AI landscape has been reshaped by a remarkable wave of consolidation over the past six months.

In a category-defining move, Clari and Salesloft merged in December 2025 to form what they called a “Revenue AI powerhouse,” combining roughly $450 million in ARR under new CEO Steve Cox. Just two weeks ago, Highspot and Seismic signed a definitive agreement to merge, creating a combined entity worth more than $6 billion focused on AI-powered sales enablement — the very same territory Gong is now invading with Enable.

Meanwhile, Gong was named a Leader in the inaugural 2025 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Revenue Action Orchestration, published in December. The company placed highest among the 12 vendors evaluated on both the “Ability to Execute” and “Completeness of Vision” axes and ranked first in all four evaluated use cases in Gartner’s companion Critical Capabilities report.

In his interview, Reshef did not name competitors directly, but he drew a clear contrast. “We’ve built a product from the ground up. It’s all organic,” he said. “All of the other players in the field have sort of stitched together tools. And obviously you can’t just get it to be a coherent product if you just stitch together tools. Some of them even have multiple logins.” That is a thinly veiled shot at the merged Clari-Salesloft entity, which Forrester has described as presenting a “bifurcated approach” — Salesloft serving frontline users while Clari supports management insights.

Reshef also pointed to growth as a competitive weapon. “We’re growing at the top deck side in terms of SaaS companies,” he said, adding that Gong hired roughly 200 R&D employees this year and plans to hire another 200. “It’s kind of a flywheel where we can invest more in R&D, we make the product better, we get more capabilities, more flexibility, more enterprise customers.”

Gong declines to discuss IPO timing, but its structured launch cadence tells a story of its own

Any discussion of Gong’s trajectory inevitably raises the question of a public offering. When asked directly, Reshef declined to comment: “I wouldn’t comment on IPO at this stage. No.”

The company has been on a clear growth arc. Gong has raised approximately $584 million to date, with its last official funding round valuing it at $7.25 billion — the culmination of a series of rapid jumps from $750 million in 2019 to $2.2 billion in 2020. The company reached an annual sales run rate of approximately $300 million in January 2025, driven largely by the adoption of AI, according to Calcalist.

But that valuation has since slipped. As Calcalist reported in November 2025, Gong is conducting a secondary round for company employees and investors at a valuation of roughly $4.5 billion — well below its 2021 peak. The offering is being conducted through Nasdaq’s private market platform and was in advanced stages at the time of the report. It is not yet clear whether the company has repriced employee options, some of which were issued at significantly higher valuations than the current secondary round. Gong told Calcalist that it “regularly receives inquiries from potential investors” but as a private company does not “engage in speculation.”

The structured quarterly launch cadence that Mission Andromeda inaugurates — complete with galactic naming conventions and coordinated product narratives — certainly resembles the kind of predictable, story-driven approach that public market investors reward. Reshef framed it differently: “We felt like having quarterly launches with a name, a mission, and a story around it makes it easier to work… It’s a good way to educate the market on a regular basis.”

Gong’s 50 percent productivity target reveals where it thinks the future of sales is heading

Reshef’s most revealing comment came when he laid out the company’s long-term thesis: Gong aims to increase productivity for revenue professionals by 50 percent. “We’re not there yet,” he admitted. “I think we’re like at 20 to 30 — whatever, hard to measure.”

He broke the productivity gain into two categories. The first is making high-complexity human tasks — like conducting a live Zoom sales call — better, through coaching, training, and review. “I think there’s going to be a long while, if ever, that Zoom conversations are going to get replaced by bots,” he said. The second is automating the manual drudgery: call preparation, post-meeting summaries, follow-up emails, account research briefs.

The distinction matters because it frames Gong’s ambition not as replacing salespeople but as making them dramatically more effective — a message calibrated to appeal to the thousands of revenue leaders who control Gong’s buying decisions. Whether that thesis holds will depend on whether Gong Enable, the AI Trainer, and the rest of Mission Andromeda can deliver measurable gains in a market that has been burned before by tools that promise insight but struggle to change behavior.

Gong currently serves more than 5,000 companies worldwide. The Clari-Salesloft merger has produced a rival with deeper combined resources. The Highspot-Seismic combination is assembling a sales enablement colossus. And a new Gartner category means every enterprise buyer now has a framework for comparison shopping. The next twelve months will test whether Mission Andromeda is the release that cements Gong’s position at the center of the revenue AI category — or the last big swing before the consolidated giants close in.

“Our mission is to be at the forefront,” Reshef said. “If everybody else is doing 20 percent, we’re going to do 50. If everybody is going to do 50, we’re going to do 80.”

In the revenue AI wars, that kind of confidence is easy to project. Delivering on it, with brand-new products still days old and a market being remade around you in real time, is something else entirely.


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