DevRev The Future of Customer-Focused Companies
Use Cases and Deployment Scope
We use DevRev as our central system of record to manage customer support, technical issues, and product feedback across Support, Support Engineering, Risk, and Product. It solves key challenges around visibility, ownership, and cross-functional alignment by connecting tickets, issues, customer context, and engineering work in one platform. DevRev enables us to scale operations efficiently, reduce manual coordination, and ensure support insights directly inform product and engineering priorities.
Pros
- DevRev’s biggest strength in support is that tickets are first-class citizens in the product lifecycle, not just cases to close.
- Support teams can influence product without translation layers.
- AI that assists instead of hallucinating.
- In person events that enable cross-community collaboration and a variety of learning opportunities.
Cons
- The onboarding experience could be improved for teams that are not directly implementing DevRev, as they are often introduced to a powerful platform without enough guided context and can feel overwhelmed early on.
- Creating and managing objects, dashboards, and other configurations would benefit from more robust desktop-based creation tools, as current workflows can feel constrained or unintuitive at scale. Use industry standard language and report building.
- While regressions are rarely critical, the frequency of small UI issues, such as broken date selectors or text visibility problems caused by theming, creates unnecessary friction and frustration for users.
Likelihood to Recommend
DevRev is well suited for both multi-team and single-team environments, and teams can realize meaningful value even without having product, engineering, and support all onboarded at the same time. Its strength is clearest when used by customer-facing and delivery-adjacent teams that benefit from shared context and tighter feedback loops. However, DevRev is less appropriate out of the box for teams that sit outside those core functions, as the platform’s terminology and workflows are opinionated toward product, engineering, and support use cases. Without deeper custom object support and greater flexibility in redefining terms and processes, it has been challenging to demonstrate value to those teams and to help them move away from established tools and ways of working.