December 19, 2025
by Kamaljeet Kalsi / December 19, 2025
With the variety of touchpoints a company may have with B2B buyers, every buying journey is unique. Some move faster than others, some lean into self-serve research more, and some “one-shot” their shortlist — considering just one product versus a laundry list of options. Despite the uniqueness of every buying experience, notable trends emerge across geographies.
To better understand buyer expectations in EMEA (and how they vary from other regions), we analyzed approximately 2,500 G2 Reviews published globally in 2025 across five core sales technology categories, including AI agent builders, business operations agents, AI sales assistants, and sales intelligence. Despite AI usage being a major priority for software buyers worldwide, regional contrasts and trends emerged.
In the U.S., teams adopt AI broadly and iteratively, even when outputs require refinement. AI is present everywhere — from pre-call research and outbound sequencing to qualification and internal documentation. But scale doesn’t guarantee impact. As explored in our article, “Is Your Sales Team Guilty of AI-Washing?”, much of this adoption doesn’t meaningfully change outcomes unless tied to a specific customer journey step.
EMEA buyers clearly see this gap and avoid it. They adopt AI only when trust, explainability, and ROI are firmly established. And they apply rigorous scrutiny to data accuracy, onboarding, localization, and support responsiveness. That precision is now shaping 2026 go-to-market (GTM) strategies across the region.
Meanwhile, AI search is disrupting global buying behavior. Buyers arrive with curated shortlists and fully formed preferences long before engaging sales — a shift unpacked in another recent article about AI search’s impact on the old sales funnel.
In EMEA, this creates an even higher bar: if trust, clarity, and regional relevance aren’t immediately obvious, buyers simply move on. This article’s analysis examines what EMEA reviewers are actually saying, where pressure is mounting for marketing and sales leaders, and how vendors can win in an increasingly selective region.
Even with modest regional review volume, EMEA reviewers display highly consistent behaviors. EMEA is adopting AI differently and deliberately.
Global data shows that AI search is creating more self-directed buyers — a pattern echoed in EMEA but intensified by regional procurement rigor.
Across EMEA reviews, buyers repeatedly emphasize:
While EMEA shows the above themes consistently, those themes manifest differently across sub-regions:
Efficiency is prized but only when onboarding is fast, and workflows become immediately usable. Tools that reduce prep time or improve seller readiness see the strongest praise.
German-speaking buyers scrutinize data handling, auditability, and explainability far more than in North America.
Compliance is non-negotiable. Reviewers pay close attention to data handling, accuracy, and auditability. They demand clarity on how AI reaches its conclusions.
Budget scrutiny is high, and buyers ask directly whether automation scales without adding complexity.
Across AI agent builders, business ops agents, AI sales assistants, and sales intelligence, several themes surface in EMEA-specific reviews.
The combination of longer sales cycles, region-specific procurement, and growing AI expectations is reshaping what buyers value.
EMEA reviewers highlight the need for:
This mirrors global patterns from sales intelligence reviews, where buyers favor execution and signal activation over reporting dashboards.
In a region with longer, multi-layered qualification cycles and more stakeholder involvement, high-fidelity intent data is now a core revenue lever in EMEA.
Unlike U.S. buyers who often treat AI assistants as experimentation zones, EMEA reviewers emphasize:
This aligns with the “effectiveness over efficiency” lesson: Automation must be tied to a real customer-journey milestone — otherwise it becomes performance theater.
Reviewers consistently mention:
Global teams have often struggled when efficiency wasn’t tied to impact. In EMEA, this pressure is amplified because budgets are tighter and expectations for proof are higher.
Every week of onboarding delay equals a week of pipeline erosion and stagnation — a sharper pain in EMEA than in North America due to tighter budgets and more conservative purchase cycles.
EMEA software buyers expect instant clarity and tailored engagement.
EMEA review volume across AI SDRs, AI Agents, and Sales Intelligence software categories is low, but the shape of the signals is distinct and important.
Across categories, reviewers repeatedly highlight:
This indicates a desire to deploy automation without creating new forms of operational lift.
EMEA reviewers tolerate moderate setup complexity, but negative feedback frequently targets:
Vendors will need to tighten onboarding to meet EMEA expectations.
Across “Business Problems Solved,” reviewers cite:
These outcomes closely align with global expectations but are judged more critically by EMEA buyers.
“What do you dislike?” responses frequently mention:
This theme is sharpest in Sales Intelligence reviews, and it directly affects trust — a core EMEA buying factor.
Reviewers praise fast, human support. Negative experiences — even minor — weigh heavily on ratings. Across EMEA reviews, support feedback appears frequently and is often tied to broader concerns around reliability and trust, rather than isolated service issues.
They treat support quality as a proxy for long-term partnership and operational risk. When support falls short, EMEA buyers are quick to question vendor reliability, especially in tools that sit close to revenue workflows.
A few reviewers cite ROI timelines ranging from less than 6 months to 24–36 months. The volume is too small for category-level conclusions, but it signals that EMEA buyers evaluate ROI across longer time horizons.
This review data points to a number of trends among EMEA buyers. With these trends in mind, software companies looking to engage buyers in this region should:
When we zoom out, G2 Review data indicates that EMEA buyers aren’t slow to make a purchasing decision — they’re intentional. And that intentionality becomes the foundation for how the region will evolve in 2026 as AI becomes more embedded in revenue workflows.
This sets the stage for the shift ahead.
If these takeaways define what matters most to EMEA buyers, then the next question is clear: How do software vendors operationalize them? The path forward starts here.
Global review trends suggest that AI search, automation, and agentic workflows are redefining the earliest stages of buying. EMEA isn’t resisting this change — it’s refining it.
Where other regions reward innovation speed, EMEA rewards clarity, confident outputs, localized accuracy, and proof. At the end of the day, trust not only still matters — it matters more than ever, and AI cannot outrun trust.
As buyers grow more self-directed, brand credibility and product trustworthiness will become as important as feature sets.
The opportunity for vendors is clear: the region is ready to scale AI — but only with the right foundation in place.
EMEA isn’t a slow market; it’s a selective one. And in 2026, the vendors that prove value early, build trust continuously, and localize intelligently will turn that selectivity into their competitive edge.
Turn AI search visibility into pipeline. Watch the on-demand recording of G2’s latest quarterly innovation webinar to see how LLM-driven discoverability, real-time intent data, and precision targeting help sellers capture high-intent buyers earlier in their journey.
Kamaljeet Kalsi is Sr. Editorial Content Specialist at G2. She brings 9 years of content creation, publishing, and marketing expertise to G2’s TechSignals and Industry Insights columns. She loves a good conversation around digital marketing, leadership, strategy, analytics, humanity, and animals. As an avid tea drinker, she believes ‘Chai-tea-latte’ is not an actual beverage and advocates for the same. When she is not busy creating content, you will find her contemplating life and listening to John Mayer.
Circa 2019, I remember talking to C-suite leaders in the pre-AI era, and their biggest concern...
by Kamaljeet Kalsi
We’ve been tracking the rise of AI search and predicting its impact on the tech landscape...
by Kamaljeet Kalsi
The AI landscape is a lot like a New York minute — fast and relentless. Marketing and MarTech...
by Kamaljeet Kalsi
Circa 2019, I remember talking to C-suite leaders in the pre-AI era, and their biggest concern...
by Kamaljeet Kalsi
We’ve been tracking the rise of AI search and predicting its impact on the tech landscape...
by Kamaljeet Kalsi