Marketing leaders evaluating their enterprise marketing technology stack rarely face a tougher head-to-head than Salesforce Marketing Cloud against Adobe Experience Cloud. Both are platform-grade ecosystems with multiple modules, opaque list pricing, professional services dependencies, and aggressive enterprise sales motions. Between them they capture the majority of large-enterprise marketing automation spend. And both are expensive enough that an informed comparison can change a five-year total cost of ownership figure by tens of millions of dollars.
This guide is written from a buyer-side, vendor-neutral perspective. We do not resell either platform. Across more than 500 Salesforce-anchored engagements and over $420 million in documented savings, we have repeatedly seen enterprises arrive at the wrong vendor decision because they compared sticker prices instead of contract anatomy. The objective here is to give you the framework, the comparable cost categories, and the negotiation levers that actually move price.
The platform comparison most buyers get wrong
The first mistake is treating Marketing Cloud and Adobe Experience Cloud as monolithic products. They aren't. Each is a suite of independently licensed modules with their own pricing logic, contract papers, and renewal cycles. A fair comparison only emerges when you map your use cases to specific modules on each side and then price those modules to your actual volume.
On the Salesforce side, the Marketing Cloud family today includes Marketing Cloud Engagement (the rebranded ExactTarget core), Marketing Cloud Account Engagement (formerly Pardot), Marketing Cloud Personalization (formerly Interaction Studio), Marketing Cloud Intelligence (formerly Datorama), Marketing Cloud Advertising, and the increasingly important Data Cloud for Marketing — which is now positioned as the underlying customer data layer that all of the above are expected to share.
On the Adobe side, the comparable bundle is Adobe Experience Cloud, anchored by Adobe Experience Platform (the equivalent customer data layer), Adobe Journey Optimizer, Adobe Campaign (which itself ships in Standard and v7/Classic flavors), Marketo Engage, Adobe Real-Time CDP, Adobe Target, Adobe Analytics, and Customer Journey Analytics. Workfront sits alongside as the work-management piece.
A like-for-like comparison only works when you pair the modules. For example, Marketing Cloud Engagement maps to Adobe Campaign and Journey Optimizer combined. Account Engagement maps to Marketo Engage. Data Cloud for Marketing maps to Real-Time CDP. Personalization maps to Adobe Target plus parts of Journey Optimizer. Intelligence maps to Customer Journey Analytics. Until you do this mapping, no quote you receive can be evaluated.
The list price illusion
Both vendors publish minimal list pricing, and the figures that do surface are misleading. Marketing Cloud Engagement is famously priced on contacts, sends, super messages, and edition tier — Basic, Pro, Corporate, Enterprise. Adobe Campaign and Journey Optimizer use profile volumes, message volumes, and tiered SKUs. A "comparable" Adobe quote will often look cheaper on first read because the included channel mix is narrower, while Salesforce often appears cheaper because the contact tier is set low.
Always model both quotes against the same volume scenarios. Use your real first-year volume, your projected year-three volume, and a worst-case spike year. The variance between vendors at the spike year is where the real cost decision lives.
Cost categories you must put side by side
To make a credible comparison, build a normalized cost table covering at minimum the following categories.
| Category | Marketing Cloud | Adobe Experience Cloud |
|---|---|---|
| Core engagement / journey platform | Marketing Cloud Engagement (Pro/Corp/Enterprise edition) | Adobe Campaign + Journey Optimizer |
| B2B nurture / lead scoring | Account Engagement (Growth/Plus/Advanced/Premium) | Marketo Engage (Select/Prime/Ultimate) |
| Customer data platform | Data Cloud for Marketing (credit-based) | Real-Time CDP (profile + B2B/B2C tiers) |
| Personalization / testing | Marketing Cloud Personalization | Adobe Target + Journey Optimizer |
| Cross-channel analytics | Marketing Cloud Intelligence (Datorama) | Customer Journey Analytics + Adobe Analytics |
| Advertising activation | Marketing Cloud Advertising | Adobe Real-Time CDP advertising destinations |
| SMS, MMS, push, WhatsApp | MobileConnect, MobilePush, super message units | Journey Optimizer, message volume add-on |
| Implementation / professional services | Typically 1.0×–1.8× year-one license | Typically 1.0×–2.0× year-one license |
| Premier support and TAM | ~20–30% of net annual fee | ~20–35% of net annual fee |
The table is the starting point, not the answer. Each row hides further variability. Marketing Cloud Engagement's edition tier alone can swing the per-contact rate by 35-50%. Adobe Campaign pricing changes meaningfully depending on whether the deployment is hosted Standard or v7 managed services. CDP pricing on both sides is gated by addressable profile counts that grow faster than buyers expect.
Where Marketing Cloud tends to be more expensive — and where it doesn't
Marketing Cloud Engagement in its Enterprise edition is one of the most expensive enterprise messaging platforms on the market, particularly for organizations with high send-to-contact ratios. The super message unit model — which dimensions complex multi-channel sends as multiples of a base email send — tends to penalize sophisticated journey designs. Buyers running event-driven, behaviorally triggered customer journeys can easily consume two to four times the super messages they originally forecast.
Account Engagement, by contrast, is often more cost-effective than Marketo Engage at small and mid-tier B2B contact volumes — particularly the Growth and Plus editions. The crossover point is typically somewhere between 50,000 and 150,000 marketable contacts, depending on edition mix and how many business units are required.
Data Cloud is harder to compare. Salesforce's credit-based consumption pricing introduces a layer of consumption forecasting risk that does not exist in Adobe's per-profile model. A like-for-like Real-Time CDP B2C profile quote may look 20-35% cheaper on year one, but Data Cloud's tighter integration with the Salesforce platform can eliminate downstream integration costs that would otherwise be paid to MuleSoft, custom development, or a systems integrator.
Negotiation leverage: how each vendor responds to competitive pressure
Both vendors are highly responsive to genuine competitive pressure — but they respond to different signals. Understanding the difference is the difference between a credible negotiation and a tour-of-duty discount.
Salesforce levers
Salesforce account teams are organized around the customer's overall account spend. Marketing Cloud sits within that broader account, so the Marketing Cloud price you pay is influenced by how much Sales Cloud, Service Cloud, Data Cloud, and Slack you already buy or are about to buy. The most effective leverage is a credible Adobe Experience Cloud proposal that arrives during the Salesforce account team's quarterly forecast window.
Specific levers we've used to reduce Marketing Cloud cost by 25-50%:
- Edition right-sizing — many Enterprise edition customers do not use the features that justify Enterprise; Corporate edition with a few targeted add-ons can be 30-45% cheaper.
- Super message reforecasting — challenging the inflated super message consumption forecast that the account team typically builds in.
- Multi-year ramp with price caps — explicit caps on year-over-year increase for both license and consumption units.
- Renewal price-lock clauses — locking the renewal at the year-three price rather than allowing the standard 7-10% uplift.
- Bundle leverage — using a co-terminous Sales Cloud or Service Cloud renewal as the anchor.
Adobe levers
Adobe's enterprise sales organization is structured differently. The Digital Experience business unit is a separate P&L from Adobe's Creative Cloud and Document Cloud businesses, and Experience Cloud account executives carry quotas that are heavily weighted toward new logo growth and Platform/Real-Time CDP attach. The most effective leverage is therefore a credible non-renewal threat combined with a serious Salesforce Marketing Cloud or Marketo Engage evaluation.
Effective Adobe levers include profile right-sizing in Real-Time CDP, careful Marketo Engage edition selection (Select vs. Prime vs. Ultimate), unbundling Adobe Analytics from Customer Journey Analytics where possible, and pushing back hard on the multi-year price escalators that Adobe typically defaults to 8-12% per year.
Hidden costs that distort the comparison
Many comparisons are wrecked by hidden cost categories that one vendor surfaces clearly and the other obscures. The most important to model:
Sandboxes and non-production environments
Marketing Cloud's sandbox model is famously thin — full Business Unit sandboxes are extra, and many enterprises end up paying for additional BUs purely to support development and QA. Adobe Campaign and Journey Optimizer include non-production instances differently depending on the SKU; Marketo Engage's sandbox is included only at higher editions.
Implementation and migration
Both platforms require significant professional services to deploy properly. A common pattern: implementation costs in year one run 100-180% of the license cost. The migration tax on switching from one platform to the other can be even higher — particularly for organizations with deep journey logic encoded in the incumbent platform.
Premier support and the TAM economics
Premier support, Signature support, and named technical account managers are all up-sold at significant cost. Salesforce Signature Success can run 20-30% of net spend; Adobe Elite Support and Ultimate Success sit in the same range. These should be negotiated as separate line items, with measurable SLAs.
The consumption uplift
Both vendors are migrating toward consumption pricing. Data Cloud credits and Real-Time CDP profile counts share a common risk pattern: usage grows faster than forecast. Year-three consumption true-ups can exceed the original license value if not capped.
Decision frameworks
When buyers ask us which platform to pick, we resist giving a categorical answer. The correct frame is not platform-vs-platform but use-case-vs-use-case. Some patterns repeat:
| Buyer profile | Often leans toward | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|
| Salesforce-anchored B2B with deep Sales/Service Cloud | Account Engagement + Data Cloud | Native data flow, lower integration cost, easier governance |
| Direct-to-consumer brand with high send volume | Either, with bias to Adobe Campaign on Europe-heavy footprints | Adobe's hosted Campaign offering remains strong for compliance-heavy DTC |
| Media / digital publisher with deep web analytics history | Adobe | Adobe Analytics ecosystem inertia is real |
| Multi-business-unit conglomerate | Marketing Cloud Engagement | BU model fits federated marketing organizations |
| Early-stage CDP investment | Either, but pricing exposure to volume must be modeled | Both vendors will quote aggressively on CDP year-one to win the wedge |
What a credible competitive negotiation looks like
The single highest-leverage move is to run a structured, time-boxed competitive evaluation — not just a paper RFP but a working evaluation in which both vendors believe they can win and lose. We typically structure this as a six- to twelve-week process with clearly defined milestones: requirements freeze, capability scoring, integration architecture review, total-cost-of-ownership modeling, and final commercial round.
The deliverables matter. Both vendors should know that you have a complete five-year TCO model on a single page that compares license, consumption, professional services, support, sandboxes, and integration cost. They should also know that you have a defensible no-go option — typically extending the incumbent contract on flat terms for one year while you continue the evaluation.
Across the engagements we run, the typical Marketing Cloud renewal opens at the published list, sees a 12-20% discount in the first round, and lands at a 30-45% net discount only when a credible Adobe proposal is on the table at the right time. The reverse is true for Adobe Experience Cloud against a credible Salesforce proposal.
Where this comparison breaks down — and what to do about it
No public comparison can substitute for an enterprise-specific model. The variables that matter most — your actual contact and profile counts, your real channel mix, your existing Salesforce and Adobe spend, your integration architecture — are private to your organization. The framework above is a starting point. The work is in filling it in with your numbers.
The most common mistake we see is letting either account team build the comparison model for you. Their incentive is to surface the modules that favor their product, and to dimension your volumes in ways that produce favorable totals. A credible comparison is built by the buyer, populated with the buyer's data, and then shared with both vendors only after the buyer has stress-tested it internally.
If you'd like an independent read on a Marketing Cloud or Adobe Experience Cloud proposal, our team has benchmarked more than 500 enterprise marketing technology contracts and delivers an unconflicted total cost of ownership view that neither vendor will produce for you.
Frequently asked buyer questions on Marketing Cloud vs Adobe
Which platform is generally cheaper?
Neither, in the abstract. Both vendors arrive at the table with similar list prices for comparable scope, and both discount aggressively under competitive pressure. The cheaper platform for your organization depends on your specific volume curve, channel mix, integration footprint, and existing vendor relationships. A like-for-like comparison built on your data, not the vendors' templates, is the only way to answer.
Can we run both platforms long-term?
Yes, and some large enterprises do — typically when different business units have different installed bases or when M&A activity has produced parallel investments. Running both is more expensive than running one, but the cost premium can be justified if it preserves business unit autonomy or if the migration cost of consolidation exceeds the ongoing dual-platform cost.
How long should a competitive evaluation take?
Six to twelve weeks is the right window. Shorter and the evaluation lacks substance; longer and both vendors lose engagement and the deal momentum dissipates. The structured cadence — requirements freeze, capability scoring, integration architecture review, TCO modeling, final commercial round — fits comfortably in that window.
The decision discipline that separates good outcomes from bad
The single most important discipline in this decision is staying buyer-led. Both Marketing Cloud and Adobe Experience Cloud are sophisticated, well-supported, and capable. The platforms compete on capability margins that, for most enterprises, are small relative to the structural cost differences a well-run negotiation can produce. The buyer who lets either vendor frame the comparison ends up with the vendor's preferred outcome. The buyer who frames the comparison themselves, with their own model and their own volume curves, ends up with the buyer's preferred outcome — usually at a materially lower price than the original quote.