Salesforce Didn't Buy Fin. It Bought Intercom.
What the $3.6B acquisition reveals about brand equity, AI positioning, and the moats that still matter.
Every marketer dreams about building brand equity. Intercom spent 15 years doing exactly that, then walked away from the name.
The Intercom rebrand to Fin is a peculiar but not uncommon one in SaaS. Most companies layer new positioning onto existing equity. Yet, Intercom chose a different path. Why? And was it the right one?
Salesforce recently acquired them for $3.6B, but Salesforce didn’t acquire Fin. They acquired Intercom. Salesforce acquired 15 years of brand equity, customer relationships, distribution, product adoption, and revenue.
In a recent article I argued that moats aren't dead. They've simply shifted. The Intercom acquisition may be one of the clearest examples. Brand, customer relationships, and distribution remain some of the most valuable assets in software.
Why they rebranded
According to their CEO, Eoghan McCabe, “Intercom has baggage as a legacy software company; Fin represents the AI future.” But for me, the narrative on the why was still missing.
The best argument for the rebrand is that Intercom no longer wanted to be known as a chat company.
The challenge with successful brands is they become synonymous with the thing that made them famous. Intercom became synonymous with live chat and customer messaging. Fin represents a future where AI agents replace traditional support software altogether.
Whether you agree with that vision or not, the strategic rationale becomes easier to understand.
Pros and Cons for moving to Fin
Pros
Intercom was strongly associated with live chat and support software, categories many believe will be transformed by AI agents.
AI companies are trying to become products first, companies second. Just look at ChatGPT, Cursor, Lovable, Claude.
They believe they are optimizing for the next decade, not the past one. That AI agents will replace most traditional support software. So in this case, the legacy positioning does become baggage.
Cons
Massive brand equity loss
Category confusion
Fin sounds fintech-adjacent
Existing customers don’t immediately connect the dots
You spend years teaching the market your name and then voluntarily start over
Most founders dramatically underestimate how much money it takes to build brand awareness. They spent hundreds of millions of dollars in marketing over 15 years teaching the market that Intercom = customer communication software.
That awareness is an asset and assets are usually easier to reposition than replace. It’s the reason why Salesforce didn’t rename itself Agentforce or why HubSpot didn’t rename itself Breeze, or why Gong didn’t become Revenue AI.
Instead, those companies layered AI onto existing equity. However, Intercom chose to burn some of that equity in order to accelerate a new narrative.
The Salesforce acquisition highlights a question every AI company should be asking: How much brand equity are you willing to throw away in pursuit of an AI narrative?
The acquisition changes the lens
When Intercom announced its move to Fin, the conversation was about AI positioning. Now that Salesforce has acquired the company, the conversation is about value creation.
Acquisitions don’t happen in a vacuum. Their revenue and customer relationships were not built by Fin, nor was their category awareness. Those assets were built over 15 years under the Intercom name.
That’s what makes the rebrand so fascinating. It wasn’t a startup changing its name before anyone knew who they were. It was an established company voluntarily walking away from one of SaaS’s strongest brands while simultaneously trying to convince the market that brand matters less in the AI era.
The rollout of the rebrand
The purpose of a rebrand isn’t simply changing the logo and domain. It’s to change what’s inside people’s heads. I don’t have an issue with them rebranding, although the name kind of screams “financial services.” My issue is more that the market didn't seem to get the memo.
You don’t just announce a rebrand. You teach your prospects and customers through a series of activities, including PR, analyst briefings, customer communications, paid media, events, partners, billboards, etc. In other words, a lot of repetition through various distribution channels.
A blog post and a LinkedIn announcement isn’t a rebrand strategy. It’s an announcement. Even if they sent the blog to their customers, it’s still just an amplified announcement.
And why Fin? I searched for an explanation behind the name itself and couldn't find much beyond its association with the AI product they had launched. Maybe there's a deeper story. If there is, it wasn't obvious to me.
Ironically, the confusion surrounding the rebrand may be evidence of how valuable the Intercom brand actually was. If the old brand no longer mattered, people would have immediately adopted the new one. Instead, many people still say Intercom. That's what brand equity looks like.
Takeaway
AI has convinced a lot of companies that brand matters less. I think the opposite is happening. Products are becoming easier to copy and distribution is becoming noisier. Features have shorter shelf lives, which leaves brand, trust, and customer relationships as some of the few durable assets left.
Ironically, the Salesforce acquisition may be the strongest argument for the value of the Intercom brand, not the Fin brand.
Maybe moats didn’t disappear, they just shifted.
What do you think?


Good read! I would argue they brought the underlying model intercom built for customer service that’s been besting benchmarks. We’ll see more “vertical” LLMs built for specific applications vs using generic LLM models.
Agree though - intercom has built a massive brand in the space. They just bought qualified and likely they’re building the horizontal agent force with vertical applications on top