Aircall Acquires Piper AI to Automate CRM Updates, Sales Follow-Ups

Aircall Acquires Piper AI to Automate CRM Updates, Sales Follow-Ups

Aircall Acquires Piper AI to Automate CRM Updates, Sales Follow-Ups

Source: Aircall

Aircall acquired Piper AI to add revenue intelligence, CRM automation, and sales workflow tools to its customer communications platform.

Written By
Liz Ticong
Liz Ticong
Jun 4, 2026

Aircall has acquired Piper AI, adding revenue intelligence and sales workflow automation to its customer communications platform.

The deal moves the company further into sales-related customer conversations. Sales teams often juggle separate tools for calls, CRM records, follow-ups, and deal management, and Aircall is betting more of that work can happen in one connected system.

What Piper brings to the platform

Piper AI is a revenue intelligence and workflow orchestration company that collects sales activity from multiple channels and organizes it for sales teams.

Customer interactions can be captured across calls, video meetings, email, messaging, WhatsApp, and field activity. From there, the system can organize those interactions into CRM updates, deal scoring, pipeline risk signals, and automated workflows.

Past customer interactions can also become searchable, allowing teams to query pipeline information drawn from real sales conversations. Sales qualification frameworks such as MEDDIC, BANT, and SPICED are supported across customer touchpoints, giving teams a more consistent way to evaluate deal status beyond individual calls.

Piper’s Spain-based team will join Aircall as part of the deal.

How the tools work together

Aircall’s platform already gives sales and support teams a place to manage customer calls, texts, and WhatsApp messages, along with call summaries, logging, in-call AI guidance, and AI virtual agents for high-volume interactions.

Adding Piper extends that setup from communication management into the follow-up and revenue operations work attached to each account. For users, the intended result is a closer link between the customer-facing activity handled in Aircall and the records, tasks, and pipeline data sales teams rely on after a conversation ends.

A bigger role in sales software

Many sales teams still rely on separate tools for calls, CRM updates, coaching, forecasting, and pipeline reviews. Aircall’s acquisition puts the company closer to several of those workflows at once.

Aircall’s platform is used by more than 23,000 businesses across more than 100 countries, giving Piper’s sales automation tools a broader base of potential users.

Customers using Piper have reported cutting CRM data entry time by more than 50% within the first month and improving forecast accuracy by 50%.

A tighter link between communications and revenue data could help Aircall compete with revenue intelligence vendors that analyze sales activity without controlling the channels where many customer interactions begin.

The acquisition gives Aircall more room to sell itself as a system for managing sales activity before, during, and after customer conversations, rather than just the communication channel where those conversations happen.

Read our guide to learn which revenue intelligence platform features can help teams forecast better and spot pipeline risk earlier.

Liz Ticong

Liz Ticong is a technology writer specializing in artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, software reviews, and emerging business technologies. With more than a decade of professional writing experience and over five years contributing technology content for TechnologyAdvice, she helps readers understand complex technologies and evaluate the tools that best fit their needs. Liz has extensive experience researching, testing, and analyzing software platforms, AI tools, and technology solutions. Her work includes in-depth software reviews, buyer’s guides, product comparisons, and technology news coverage designed to help businesses make informed purchasing and implementation decisions. She regularly evaluates AI applications, automation tools, cybersecurity solutions, and business software, providing practical insights based on hands-on testing and research. In addition to her work with TechnologyAdvice, Liz has contributed technology content to leading industry publications, including eWeek and TechRepublic. Her background in technical writing and software analysis enables her to translate complex technical concepts into clear, actionable guidance for both business and technology audiences. Liz holds a bachelor's degree in Broadcast Communication from the Polytechnic University of the Philippines and continues to expand her expertise through ongoing education in artificial intelligence and emerging technologies. Through her writing, she helps readers navigate a rapidly evolving technology landscape with practical, research-driven insights and real-world product analysis.