Ashley Stallings at Salsify made a call most CS leaders won't: when their Gainsight renewal came up, they didn't shop for a replacement. They built one.
In two months, her team migrated off Gainsight and into an internal platform called VIP (Value Intelligence Platform), built on Replit. It runs a Salsify-built LLM that pulls product usage, industry data, case studies, and pitch context into a single account view for every CSM.
This is what a well-governed, engineering-backed AI build actually looks like in production -- including the parts that didn't go smoothly.
Topics covered:
Why Salsify replaced Gainsight in two months and what forced the decision
How VIP was built on Replit and what it actually does for CSMs
The internal governance model: how AI projects get submitted, reviewed, and prioritized
Build vs. buy: the real argument CSP vendors make and why it's a false choice
What "handing it to a qualified team" actually means -- CICD, VPNs, data access controls
Health score problems: why they rebuilt from scratch and moved to segment and industry-specific scoring
Variance data as the new leading indicator -- top movers, not static red/yellow/green
The CSM cockpit vision: telling reps where to focus instead of letting them default to whoever's loudest
What they lost during the migration and how they're getting it back
The hackathon that produced a cohort-based outreach tool -- built by CSMs, not engineers
customer success, AI customer success, Gainsight alternative, build vs buy, CSP replacement, Salsify, post-sales AI, customer success platform, CS operations, AI in SaaS, HubSpot customer success, health score, CSM tools, post-sales operations, Infinite Renewals
Jeff Kushmerek is the founder of Infinite Renewals and the author of Retention Starts in Implementation.
๐๏ธ AI Customer Success Brief is sponsored by Infinite Renewals.
๐ฉ Find Jeff on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/jeffkushmerek
๐ infiniterenewals.com