If you’re a marketer or CX leader who relies on Medallia, you’ve likely been asking yourself: Is Medallia going out of business? Should I be worried?
The short answer: no, Medallia is not going out of business. But something significant is happening, and the implications for users, evaluators, and anyone who buys enterprise software from a PE-backed vendor are worth understanding.
Here’s what you need to know.
What happened
Thoma Bravo, the private equity (PE) firm that bought Medallia for $6.4 billion in 2021, is handing the company over to its lenders. A consortium of creditors — Blackstone, KKR, Apollo Global, and Antares Capital — will take control in a debt-for-equity swap. Thoma Bravo’s equity is gone. Its co-investors’ equity is gone. The $5.1 billion wipeout is one of the largest in PE software history.
Last week, Brad Marshall, co-CEO of Blackstone Secured Lending, addressed the situation on his firm’s first-quarter 2026 earnings call. His message was clearer than anything Medallia has said publicly: lenders are not coming in to strip the company. They’re investing.
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“We, together with the other lenders, plan to invest new capital into the business and meaningfully de-lever the balance sheet,” Marshall said. “This will allow the company to better serve its customers and invest in new products and AI features.”
He also stated flatly: “Medallia is highly profitable today.”
Marshall’s explanation for the crisis: the problem was the capital structure, not the business. “Most of their challenges have been around their capital structure, and it’s prevented them from fully investing into the company for growth because their debt levels were higher than what their cash flow supported.”
A source familiar with the situation, speaking on background, reinforced that framing. The customer base remains strong with long-standing enterprise relationships intact, the source said. Customers are adopting Medallia’s AI solutions, with tens of thousands of employees across customer organizations now using the platform and seeing productivity gains.
Is Medallia going away?
No. But “not going away” and “business as usual” are not the same thing.
Medallia will emerge from restructuring with new owners, a reset capital structure, and — according to Marshall — less debt than its primary competitor. That last point matters: it suggests lenders believe a leaner Medallia can compete aggressively, not that they’re preparing a fire sale.
The platform’s core functions — feedback collection, text analytics, journey mapping, and contact center intelligence — aren’t at risk. Enterprise voice-of-the-customer (VoC) platforms are embedded in governance workflows, compliance reporting, and operational systems. They’re not the kind of software you rip out during a financial transition.
What is less certain, at least until the restructuring closes “in the next few months,” is the fate of the edges. In 2024 alone, the company released more than 100 new features, including seven AI-powered capabilities — among them prescriptive digital experience insights, coaching intelligence, session summarization, and an agentic AI integration with Ada, announced separately. Some of those were bets on where the market is going. Lenders tend to narrow product bets, not expand them.
Bill Staikos, founder of Be Customer Led and an executive advisor to Medallia from 2021 to 2024, wrote in a LinkedIn post: “If you are a current Medallia customer, I would assume focus, not failure.”
The questions to ask your Medallia rep right now:
- Which product modules have confirmed development resources for the next 12 to 18 months?
- What service level commitments are written into your current contract?
- What are your data portability and exit rights if circumstances change?
- What does the new capital structure mean for your renewal pricing?
What role did AI play?
This is where it gets nuanced — and where the received wisdom deserves some scrutiny.
The popular narrative around Medallia’s troubles is that generative AI disrupted the VoC market, making Medallia’s survey-and-dashboard model obsolete. Marshall said the underperformance is “execution-driven,” not AI-related, and that he will commit lender resources to support Medallia’s AI investments.
That said, AI is not irrelevant to this story. It played a different role than the headlines suggested.
AI raised the stakes for every VoC platform — including Medallia — by tightening the margin for execution failure. When general-purpose AI makes basic sentiment analysis cheap and accessible, the premium pricing that enterprise VoC platforms command requires justification at a higher level.
Maria Marino, VP analyst at Gartner covering VoC platforms, told CMSWire: “Gartner does not see general-purpose AI as an immediate replacement for enterprise VoC platforms, especially in regulated, privacy-centric or operationally complex environments.” But AI is still a forcing function: platforms that can connect feedback to measurable business outcomes — retention rates, revenue generation, and cost reduction — justify their cost. Platforms that deliver dashboards do not.
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Medallia understood this pivot. Its 2025 marketing moved hard toward outcome measurement and real-time action. The question is whether lender-controlled Medallia has the runway to deliver on that trajectory. Marshall says it will. That commitment will be tested over the next 18 months.
“The old CX software model was built for a world where customer data was harder to collect, surveys carried more weight, and dashboards looked like strategic intelligence,” Richard Owen, co-founder of OCX Cognition and a 20-year veteran of CX software, wrote in a LinkedIn post. “That world is changing fast.”
That’s true regardless of who owns Medallia.
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PE owns a lot of your marketing stack
Medallia’s situation is striking in its scale, but the ownership model it represents — a PE firm buying enterprise software, loading it with debt, and betting on growth that doesn’t materialize — is not unusual in martech.
Thoma Bravo has been one of the most active acquirers in the sector. It owns or has owned Medallia, Verint, Sitecore, and a string of other software firms.
PE firms own a significant portion of the tools marketing teams use every day:
- Sitecore (digital experience platform) has been PE-owned for an extended period of product transition, during which it has restructured its stack from a legacy on-premises CMS to a cloud-native, composable platform. It has been eyeing an IPO or sale for several years.
- Optimizely (experimentation and DXP) has been owned by Insight Partners since the firm acquired Episerver for $1.16 billion in 2018 and merged it with Optimizely in 2020, continuing to integrate multiple acquisitions into a single platform.
- Acoustic (formerly IBM Watson Campaign Automation) has been PE-backed since IBM divested its marketing software business — navigating a difficult transition from a legacy brand platform to an independent company.
- Constant Contact was acquired by Clearlake Capital in 2021 and has been modernizing its platform and adding AI capabilities to compete with newer entrants in the email marketing space.
- Acquia (a Drupal-based DXP) is backed by Vista Equity Partners, one of the most aggressive buyers of enterprise software companies.
- Demandbase (an ABM platform) raised $175 million in new financing from Vista Credit Partners in early 2023 and has since made a series of acquisitions — InsideView, DemandMatrix, and Engagio — to build an integrated ABM platform.
These aren’t distressed companies. But they share something with Medallia: their strategic direction, product investment levels, and pricing decisions are shaped by investors whose primary obligation is return on capital, not customer outcomes.
Does PE ownership predict problems?
Not necessarily — but it does change the risk calculus for buyers.
PE firms typically run their portfolio companies with more financial discipline than venture-backed startups or publicly traded companies. That can mean leaner operations and a tighter focus. It can also mean product investment is calibrated to return timelines, not market leadership.
The Medallia case — specifically the 2021 vintage — reflects a particular problem: deals made at peak valuations with cheap debt, bet on SaaS growth rates that have since normalized. Ian Jacobs, VP and lead analyst at Opus Research, told CMSWire: “A $5.1 billion equity wipeout tied to a 2021 buyout is hard not to read as a broader warning about peak software valuations, cheap-debt assumptions and how little room those deals had for a slower-growth, AI-disrupted market.”
Qualtrics, the closest competitor to Medallia in the VoC space, is PE-backed and is currently navigating financing challenges. A planned $5.3 billion debt issuance for its $6.75 billion acquisition of data analytics firm Press Ganey Forsta was paused by the JPMorgan-led banks in March 2026 after investors balked at the software sector exposure; as of publication, the status of the financing and whether the deal has closed remain unclear.
That’s not a sign that Qualtrics is collapsing. It is a sign that the credit market is skeptical of the same capital structure assumptions that sank Medallia’s equity — and that the pressure is sector-wide, not company-specific.
For marketers evaluating or renewing enterprise software, PE ownership is a factor worth including in vendor assessment — not as a disqualifier, but as a lens.
What to ask when evaluating any PE-backed vendor:
- Who are the current owners, and when did they invest? (2021-era deals carry different risk than 2025-era deals.)
- What is the debt-to-revenue ratio? (This is not always public, but your procurement team or outside counsel can request it.)
- What is the current leadership team’s tenure? (Frequent exec turnover under PE ownership is a signal worth noting.)
- What does the product roadmap commitment look like in the contract? (Vague commitments are a risk; specificity protects you.)
- What are the exit rights and data portability terms if the company is sold, merged, or restructured?
The bottom line for Medallia users
Medallia is not going out of business. Its largest creditor is on the public record, committing new capital and calling the company highly profitable. That’s a different story than the one the headlines suggested two weeks ago.
However, the company is in transition. Its new owners are financial institutions with no background in software operations. The management team installed in January 2025 — CEO Mark Bishof and colleagues with roots in the CX software space — will be operating under a very different ownership structure than the one they signed up for.
For current users: stay informed, tighten your contract terms at renewal, and understand the alternatives. For prospective buyers evaluating VoC platforms: Medallia’s 20-plus years of enterprise deployment experience don’t evaporate due to an ownership change. But it’s a reasonable time to ask hard questions.
For anyone buying enterprise software from PE-backed vendors, Medallia’s story is a useful reminder that ownership structure is part of your technology risk assessment. It always was.