
Paragon
Embedded integrations that let SaaS products and AI agents connect to customers’ CRMs, ticketing tools, and work apps.
What is Paragon?
Paragon is an embedded integration platform for SaaS teams that need reliable customer-facing integrations without building every connector from scratch. For AI products, it can provide the integration layer that lets agents read or write data across tools such as Salesforce, Slack, HubSpot, Zendesk, and Google Workspace under controlled permissions.
Tools for building, hosting, testing, observing, connecting, and giving memory or computer access to AI agents.
See the full Agent Infrastructure guide to compare more tools, buyer criteria, and related workflows.
Use cases to evaluate
Add OAuth-based customer integrations inside a SaaS product
Let AI workflows access approved CRM, support, and productivity-system data
Centralize integration monitoring, retries, and customer configuration
Shorten sales cycles when buyers require specific system connections
Fit to evaluate
SaaS companies adding native integrations to their product
AI agent builders that need customer-authorized app connections
Product teams replacing brittle one-off Zapier-style handoffs
Businesses where integration backlog slows enterprise deals
Business fit
Right for you if integration requests are slowing product sales or AI agent adoption. Paragon is developer infrastructure, so assign an engineering owner, define permission boundaries, and measure whether faster integration delivery unlocks revenue or reduces custom implementation work.
How to evaluate Paragon
Use this category when a business wants agents that do work across tools, APIs, browsers, and data sources.
Confirm the exact workflow
Map Paragon to one concrete workflow first, such as add oauth-based customer integrations inside a saas product. Avoid buying before the owner, trigger, output, and success metric are clear.
Check category fit
Compare tool-calling, memory, browser automation, evals, observability, and deployment controls.
Compare practical alternatives
Compare Paragon with other Agent Infrastructure vendors before committing to a contract or migration.
Validate cost and rollout effort
Paragon uses sales-led pricing. Compare the quote against the number of connectors, embedded integration usage, enterprise customer demand, engineering time saved, and the cost of maintaining integrations internally. Also confirm implementation time, support needs, and whether the technical setup matches your team.
Compare Paragon with alternatives
Use this quick comparison before booking demos or moving data into a new system.
| Primary workflow | Add OAuth-based customer integrations inside a SaaS product, Let AI workflows access approved CRM, support, and productivity-system data |
|---|---|
| Best-fit team | SaaS companies adding native integrations to their product, AI agent builders that need customer-authorized app connections |
| Implementation effort | Technical setup and maintenance profile |
| Pricing check | Contact sales |
| Closest alternatives | Other Agent Infrastructure tools |
Paragon pricing
| Model | Contact sales |
|---|---|
| Snapshot | Paragon uses sales-led pricing. Compare the quote against the number of connectors, embedded integration usage, enterprise customer demand, engineering time saved, and the cost of maintaining integrations internally. |
| Checked |
Common questions about Paragon
What is Paragon?
Paragon is an embedded integration platform for SaaS teams that need reliable customer-facing integrations without building every connector from scratch. For AI products, it can provide the integration layer that lets agents read or write data across tools such as Salesforce, Slack, HubSpot, Zendesk, and Google Workspace under controlled permissions.
What is Paragon used for?
Common use cases: Add OAuth-based customer integrations inside a SaaS product; Let AI workflows access approved CRM, support, and productivity-system data; Centralize integration monitoring, retries, and customer configuration; Shorten sales cycles when buyers require specific system connections.
How much does Paragon cost?
Paragon uses sales-led pricing. Compare the quote against the number of connectors, embedded integration usage, enterprise customer demand, engineering time saved, and the cost of maintaining integrations internally.
Who is Paragon best for?
Paragon fits SaaS companies adding native integrations to their product, AI agent builders that need customer-authorized app connections, Product teams replacing brittle one-off Zapier-style handoffs, Businesses where integration backlog slows enterprise deals. Right for you if integration requests are slowing product sales or AI agent adoption. Paragon is developer infrastructure, so assign an engineering owner, define permission boundaries, and measure whether faster integration delivery unlocks revenue or reduces custom implementation work.