Comparing Cresta and Talkdesk? Both are Contact Center & CCaaS and Voice & Phone AI tools in the directory, which is why buyers put them on the same shortlist. Below is a side-by-side look at how they price, what they integrate with, and when each is the better fit, so you can pick on the facts rather than either vendor's own sales page.
| Attribute | Cresta | Talkdesk |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing | Paid · Custom | Paid · $85/user/mo |
| Founded | 2017 | 2011 |
| Categories | Agent Assist & Copilots Contact Center & CCaaS QA & Conversation Analytics Voice & Phone AI | Contact Center & CCaaS Enterprise Voice & Phone AI |
| Integrations | Salesforce Five9 Genesys Amazon Connect NICE Avaya | Salesforce Zendesk ServiceNow Microsoft Teams Microsoft Dynamics 365 Slack Zoom Epic |
Cresta started from a simple observation: in every contact center, a handful of agents dramatically outperform the rest, and everything they do differently is sitting in the call recordings. Founded in 2017 by Zayd Enam, Tim Shi, and Sebastian Thrun, the Stanford professor behind Google X and Udacity, Cresta mines those conversations to learn what the best performers do, then coaches every agent in real time: suggested responses, knowledge, and guidance appearing on screen during live calls and chats.
That real-time layer is still the heart of the product, but the platform now spans the full loop. Conversation intelligence gives leaders visibility into every interaction, automated quality management replaces sampled QA scorecards, a training simulator lets agents rehearse against AI customers, and autonomous virtual agents take the high-volume calls that never needed a human. It plugs into the major contact-center stacks, including Five9, Genesys, Amazon Connect, NICE, and Avaya, so it layers onto what you run rather than replacing it.
Cresta sells to serious operations: United Airlines, Alaska Airlines, Cox Communications, Marriott, and Brinks Home are named customers, and investors including Andreessen Horowitz, Sequoia, and Greylock have backed it to the tune of roughly $276 million, most recently a $125 million Series D in late 2024 that valued the company around $1.6 billion. Pricing is enterprise and quote-based, with no public numbers.
Cresta is the pick when your strategy is making human agents better rather than replacing them, especially in revenue-bearing conversations like sales and retention where a slightly better sentence is worth real money. If you want humans out of the loop entirely, look at the autonomous-agent specialists; if you want your hundred agents performing like your best ten, Cresta was built for exactly that.
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Talkdesk is a cloud contact center platform (CCaaS) with AI built into nearly every layer. Its Ascend AI platform powers Autopilot, a virtual agent that resolves voice and digital conversations on its own, Copilot, which feeds live human agents answers and next best actions, Navigator for AI-driven routing, and analytics that transcribe and score every interaction. Since late 2024 Talkdesk has been threading agentic AI through the whole portfolio, with Autopilot Agentic going GA in July 2025 and an agentic Copilot following in 2026.
The origin story is genuinely good. In 2011 two Portuguese engineers, Tiago Paiva and Cristina Fonseca, built the first version at a Twilio hackathon, initially chasing a MacBook Air prize. The demo won, 500 Startups wrote a seed check, and Paiva moved to San Francisco. A decade later Talkdesk raised a $230 million Series D at a $10 billion valuation, bringing total funding to roughly $498 million. Customers named on its site and in press coverage include BankUnited, Farfetch, Canon, IBM, Trivago, and Fujitsu.
Pricing is unusually public for enterprise CCaaS. Talkdesk lists Digital Essentials at $85 per user per month, Voice Essentials at $105, Elite at $165, and Industry Experience Clouds, tuned for healthcare, financial services, retail, insurance, and more, at $225. Government pricing is custom, add-ons go through sales, and the pricing page does not spell out whether Autopilot and Copilot are included or cost extra. A free Talkdesk Express trial exists for US and Canadian companies under 50 employees.
Choose Talkdesk if you run a real phone-heavy contact center, want AI from one vendor rather than bolted-on point tools, and like industry packs with compliance workflows baked in. It is a full platform, not a widget. If you only need a helpdesk with a chatbot, or you want per-resolution AI pricing on top of Zendesk or Intercom, lighter options will cost less and deploy faster. Small teams should start with Express.
Read the full Talkdesk listing → · See Talkdesk alternatives →
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