A rep opens a lead, dials from Five9, closes the call, and waits. A second or two later, the activity shows up back in Salesforce. Most days that gap is invisible. On a bad day, it’s the difference between a clean pipeline report and a manager asking why three calls from Tuesday never made it into the system.
If you’re a Salesforce admin, Rev Ops lead, or sales ops manager working through the 360 CTI vs Five9 decision for a Salesforce-heavy team, you’ve probably already got Five9 on your shortlist. It’s a known name. But it’s also not the only Five9 Salesforce alternative worth a serious look, and for teams where Salesforce is the system of record for everything, that matters more than most vendor comparison pages let on.

This one’s for Salesforce admins and RevOps leaders evaluating CTI tools for a team that lives inside Salesforce, not one that happens to use it alongside four other systems.
This is your comparison if:
If your calling needs stretch well beyond Salesforce, some of this won’t apply to you. Keep reading anyway. The next section explains why.
| Feature | 360 CTI | Five9 |
| Salesforce integration method | Native, built directly on Salesforce (managed package) | Adapter-based (Five9 Plus Adapter for Salesforce, Open CTI) |
| Setup complexity | Install from AppExchange, configure inside Salesforce | Install adapter, configure Five9 platform separately, then connect to Salesforce |
| Call routing intelligence | Uses live Salesforce data (record ownership, agent status, field values) | Uses Five9’s own IVR and routing engine, then syncs outcomes to Salesforce |
| Automatic call logging | Logs directly to Salesforce Task/Activity objects | Logs to Salesforce via the adapter after the call completes |
| Compliance recording | Recording and disposition stored on the Salesforce record | Recording stored in Five9, linked to Salesforce record |
| AI features | AI Voice Agent, real-time transcription, sentiment analysis, call summaries | Five9 Intelligent Virtual Agent, AI-driven insights, agent assist |
| Mobile support | Softphone accessible from Salesforce mobile | Adapter-dependent mobile experience |
| Pricing model | Per-user monthly licensing, Salesforce-native | Per-seat licensing plus adapter fee, long-distance fee, and implementation fee |
| AppExchange availability | Listed and installable directly from AppExchange | Listed on AppExchange as an adapter add-on to the core Five9 platform |
| Support model | Salesforce-native support, no third-party platform dependency | Five9 platform support plus adapter-specific support |
Five9 connects to Salesforce through an adapter layer. 360 CTI is built as a native Salesforce package with no adapter in between. That one distinction shapes almost everything else in this comparison.

Five9’s approach: The Five9 Salesforce integration runs through the Five9 Plus Adapter, an Open CTI-based connector that sits in the Salesforce utility bar. The call itself happens on the Five9 platform. Once it’s done, the adapter writes the outcome, the recording link, and the disposition back into Salesforce. That’s a real integration, and it works. But there’s a layer between where the call happens and where the record lives, and that layer has to be configured, maintained, and occasionally troubleshot separately from your Salesforce setup.
360 CTI’s approach: 360 CTI skips that layer entirely. The dialer, call logic, recording, and logging all run inside Salesforce as a native managed package. When an agent gets an inbound call, the screen pop pulls the Salesforce record directly, not a record synced over from an external platform.
For admins, that difference shows up in three concrete places:
None of this makes Five9’s approach wrong. It’s a different architecture, and it matters more the deeper your team has invested in Salesforce as the single source of truth.
Short answer: Five9 routes through its own engine outside Salesforce. 360 CTI routes using the Salesforce data your team already maintains. Which one serves you better depends on how centralized your Salesforce data already is.
Where Five9 wins: Its routing engine is one of its stronger features, honestly. It sits outside Salesforce, which means it can route calls based on skills, queues, and IVR logic independent of anything happening inside your CRM. For a large contact center running complex, multi-skill routing across channels, that independence is a real advantage.
Where 360 CTI wins: Routing decisions pull straight from Salesforce data, record ownership, custom field values, agent availability status, business hours, all configured inside Salesforce. For a team that has already put work into clean Salesforce data (accurate ownership, correct territory fields, up-to-date queues), routing is only as good as your CRM, which in this case is a good thing. The engine isn’t guessing. It’s reading the same data your reports already trust.
Here’s a concrete example. Say a territory changes hands. In a Five9 setup, you’d typically update the routing rule inside the Five9 platform and then confirm it still maps correctly to the right Salesforce queue. In 360 CTI, updating the Salesforce record ownership is often the whole change, since routing already reads from that field.
Small difference on paper. Bigger difference the tenth time your team reorganizes territories mid-quarter.

Five9 publishes a starting price around $15 USD per seat per month for the Salesforce adapter itself, on top of the base Five9 Virtual Contact Center license. Add a monthly long-distance fee and a one-time implementation fee, and the real cost climbs beyond the adapter’s sticker price. Enterprise deployments with IVR builds, routing configuration, and agent training typically add more implementation cost on top of licensing.
360 CTI is priced as a Salesforce-native product: one per-user monthly license, no separate contact center platform to license alongside it. No adapter fee, because there’s no adapter.
Rather than compare specific dollar figures (Five9’s total pricing varies by contract, volume, and long-distance usage, so get current numbers from their sales team), here’s how the two stack up by cost category:
Five9’s total cost includes maintaining a separate platform. 360 CTI’s doesn’t.
Some teams genuinely need what Five9 offers, and it’s worth naming them plainly rather than glossing over it.
If Salesforce is the only CRM your team touches and every customer interaction needs to land there, the case is straightforward: no second platform to reconcile against.
There’s no single “best CTI for Salesforce 2026” answer, whatever a listicle might promise. Neither tool is the better product in some universal sense. That framing falls apart once you look at what each one was actually built to do.
Five9 was built to be a full contact center platform first, one that happens to connect to Salesforce alongside other CRMs and channels. That’s genuinely useful if your calling needs stretch beyond Salesforce, or you’re running a large, multi-skill operation that needs a routing engine independent of any one CRM.
360 CTI was built the opposite way around: starting from Salesforce, and staying there. For teams where every customer interaction already lives in Salesforce, where routing should follow the same ownership and queue data your reports already trust, and where admins would rather manage one system instead of two, that architecture tends to mean less setup time, fewer sync gaps, and one less platform to keep in sync when something changes.
If your calling data, routing logic, and reporting all need to trace back to Salesforce without a second system in the loop, that’s the gap 360 CTI is built to close. If your operation genuinely spans multiple CRMs or channels beyond Salesforce, Five9’s broader platform earns its complexity. The honest answer depends on how many systems you want to be responsible for a year from now.

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