Actionable predicts customer satisfaction without surveys, reading behavioral signals across 130+ integrated tools to surface who's quietly churning.
ENTRY ANGLES
Platform measuring customer happiness through indirect signals to predict churn · Combined solution surfacing pain points (like Syncly) with upsell identification (like Overstand) · Audience segmentation and personalization for retention (e.g., delivery frequency preferences)
VERTICALS
CAPABILITIES
Customer behavior analysis and indirect signal measurement, Automatic audience segmentation and personalization, Churn prediction and retention optimization
Actionable claims to offer companies "a new way to make their customers happy." What it actually does is tell companies which of their customers are happy and which aren't – predicting satisfaction levels without running a single survey.
To give the AI something to work with, companies connect all their customer-facing tools: CRM, customer service platforms, analytics systems, messaging apps, and similar. The platform integrates with more than 130 such tools.
From there, the AI analyzes customer communications alongside contract renewals and cancellations to identify and continuously update a list of satisfaction drivers specific to that company. These might include: product usage frequency, whether a customer has push notifications enabled, meeting cadence, average response time to support tickets, and much more.
Each identified driver gets assigned to an owner in the relevant department – someone accountable for improving that specific metric, not just "doing their job." After all, you can't manage what you can't measure.
Once the general drivers are mapped, the platform assesses each driver for every individual customer – making it possible to predict overall satisfaction and flag the specific factors pulling it up or down.
This tells the company exactly where to focus to improve a given customer relationship. And when a relationship is already strong, that becomes the signal to move on upselling.
Actionable was founded in New York earlier this year and its platform is currently in beta with just 7 customers, according to one report. Despite that, the startup has already closed €2M in its first funding round.
The critical point here is that customer "happiness" is a far broader signal than product usage, which is typically where technically-minded founders obsess. In practice, people often stick with a service simply because they like the person they're dealing with. And conversely, a communication breakdown can drive someone away from an otherwise solid product.
This isn't a new idea. The founder of Zappos literally titled his book "Delivering Happiness" and built his entire business around the insight that Zappos was fundamentally a great customer service company that also happened to sell shoes.
But why can't satisfaction be measured through surveys – NPS or something more specific?
As Actionable's founder rightly points out, surveys tend to get responses from two types of customers: the very satisfied and the very unhappy. The other 80% – those somewhere in the middle – either don't respond or give answers you can't extract anything meaningful from. It's like asking a teenager "how's it going?" and getting "fine"
On top of that, you have to know what to ask. Customer happiness depends on dozens of factors, with information scattered across different employees and departments – each knowing some piece of the puzzle, but no one seeing the whole picture.
The value of Actionable is that it analyzes all communications with all customers across the entire organization – trying to surface what genuinely and materially drives satisfaction.
Startup Syncly ([related review](/review/prodat-takoe-v-2-raza-proshhe)), which graduated from Y Combinator last spring and raised another $3.3M that fall, does something similar – analyzing all customer communications to surface the main pain points in a company's products.
Startup Overstand ([related review](/review/kak-sdelat-starogo-klienta-bolee-vygodnym)), currently in Y Combinator, analyzes customer communications to identify satisfied customers – the ones a company can upsell or upgrade for additional revenue.
Startup TheyDo ([related review](/review/prosto-ustrani-to-chto-im-meshaet)) takes the most systematic approach. Its platform helps companies build, analyze, and improve customer journeys for both digital and physical products (including medical clinics, for example). TheyDo has raised €45.1M, including €31M in its latest round in March.
Revenue is driven not by product quality but by customer happiness. Product quality is part of that, but only part. And most customers are silent about the gap – they don't volunteer feedback, don't answer questions. The first sign they were dissatisfied with your product is usually when they stop paying for it.
Platforms that can measure customer happiness through indirect signals are genuinely useful in business – and a real opportunity worth pursuing.
And these platforms need to work in both directions. Unhappy customers need to be moved toward satisfaction; happy customers need to be sold something more. The ideal product combines something like Syncly – surfacing pain points – with something like Overstand – identifying upsell opportunities. Or it looks like today's Actionable, if the team continues building in the right direction.
That said, it's important not to over-generalize: different customers have very different ideas of what good service looks like. A simple example – some customers love appointment reminders from their dentist or salon; others find them deeply annoying.
Here's a sharper example. Y Combinator graduate Subsets ([related review](/review/privychka-vazhnee-chem-polza)) built a platform for improving subscriber retention at online publications, and raised an additional $1.7M after that review.
The platform's key capability is automatic audience segmentation – some readers prefer daily content every morning; others want a weekly digest. For each segment, the platform recommends different activation strategies rather than treating everyone the same.
That kind of segmentation is another essential capability any serious customer happiness platform needs to have.