Tool Comparison
CloudShare vs Walnut: VM Environments vs Captured Demos
CloudShare provisions VMs for complex enterprise software demos. Walnut captures product frontends for fast personalization. Completely different use cases.
At a Glance
| Dimension | CloudShare | Walnut |
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2007 | 2020 |
| Headquarters | Tel Aviv, Israel | Tel Aviv, Israel |
| Best For | Complex enterprise software demos and hands-on training environments | SEs who want quick, personalized demos via browser capture |
| Pricing | Custom enterprise pricing | Custom pricing, typically $10K‑$40K/yr |
| Rating | 4.3/5 | 4.5/5 |
| SE Job Mentions | 22 | 92 |
VM vs Capture
CloudShare and Walnut sit in opposite corners of the demo tool market. CloudShare provisions full virtual machines for complex enterprise software. Walnut captures product frontends through a Chrome extension. The two rarely compete because they serve different product categories.
CloudShare's Niche
CloudShare fits enterprise software with multi-tier architectures, on-premises installation patterns, or Windows-specific requirements. Products that cannot be demonstrated in a browser-based mockup need full VMs. CloudShare handles the infrastructure provisioning, snapshotting, and environment management so SEs can focus on the demo content.
Walnut's Niche
Walnut fits SaaS products that run in the browser. The Chrome extension captures the product frontend and SEs personalize per deal in 15 to 20 minutes. The output is a shareable interactive demo that prospects click through.
Pricing
CloudShare runs $40K to $150K per year. Walnut runs $10K to $40K per year. CloudShare is roughly four times the cost because VM infrastructure is heavier.
Best For Verdict
Pick CloudShare for enterprise software requiring real VM environments. Pick Walnut for SaaS demos that can be captured in the browser. The two rarely coexist because the products that need CloudShare cannot be served by Walnut, and vice versa.
Feature Breakdown: CloudShare vs Walnut
The headline rows in the at-a-glance table cover the basics. Use the breakdown below as the second-pass evaluation after the at-a-glance comparison.
| Capability | CloudShare | Walnut |
|---|---|---|
| Time to first usable output | SE-ready inside 1 week with the right onboarding | SE-ready inside 1 week with the right onboarding |
| Personalization depth per deal | Tuned for complex enterprise software demos and hands-on training environments | Tuned for ses who want quick, personalized demos via browser capture |
| Analytics surface | Account-level rollups, persona detection, conversion tracking | Account-level rollups, persona detection, conversion tracking |
| CRM integration | Native Salesforce and HubSpot connectors with field mapping | Native Salesforce and HubSpot connectors with field mapping |
| Admin overhead at 10-SE scale | Light: one champion SE plus part-time RevOps | Light: one champion SE plus part-time RevOps |
| Vendor maturity | Founded 2007, active product velocity | Founded 2020, active product velocity |
The honest read: these capability rows are close enough on paper that the choice comes down to personalization depth, the analytics surface that maps to your reporting needs, and the renewal terms.
Pricing Scenarios by Company Stage
Both tools price by seat or usage, and both negotiate. The list price is the starting point, not the endpoint.
| Stage | Typical Spend | What CloudShare Quotes | What Walnut Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seed / Series A | $0 to $15K/yr | Custom enterprise pricing | Custom pricing, typically $10K‑$40K/yr |
| Series B / Growth | $15K to $60K/yr | Custom enterprise pricing | Custom pricing, typically $10K‑$40K/yr |
| Series C+ / Enterprise | $60K to $200K/yr | Custom enterprise pricing | Custom pricing, typically $10K‑$40K/yr |
Three negotiation levers that work on both vendors: 15 to 25 percent discount on annual versus monthly, an additional 10 to 15 percent on multi-year contracts, and any quote above $60K per year is open to a negotiated POC with success criteria tied to the renewal decision.
ICP Fit by Company Stage
The right tool depends on where your SE team is in the maturity curve. Use the guidance below to short-circuit the long evaluation.
- Seed / Series A (1 to 5 SEs): Either tool works. Optimize for time-to-value and the lower contract floor. The implementation difference between the two is small at this scale. Pick the one that fits the dominant motion: CloudShare if it lines up with complex enterprise software demos and hands-on training environments, Walnut if ses who want quick, personalized demos via browser capture.
- Series B / Growth (6 to 15 SEs): The choice starts to matter. Workflow fit, CRM integration depth, and analytics granularity are the deciding factors at this stage. Run a 30 to 60-day pilot with two real deals end-to-end inside each tool before signing.
- Series C+ / Enterprise (15+ SEs): Procurement, governance, and SSO move to the front. Both tools support enterprise contracts but the negotiation cycle takes 90 to 180 days. Bring legal and security in early to avoid a renewal-cycle scramble.
- SE leader vs RevOps owner: SE leadership picks based on workflow. RevOps picks based on stack integration. Align ownership before the shortlist or expect rework after the demo cycle.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are CloudShare and Walnut direct competitors?
Rarely. CloudShare fits enterprise software needing VMs. Walnut fits SaaS that runs in the browser. Different product categories.
Which one is more expensive?
CloudShare. Annual spend runs $40K to $150K. Walnut runs $10K to $40K per year. CloudShare costs more because VM infrastructure is heavier.
Can browser SaaS products use CloudShare?
They can, but it is usually overkill. Walnut or another browser-based demo tool covers the use case at a fraction of the cost.
Can complex enterprise software use Walnut?
Sometimes for top-of-funnel content, but not for deep demos that require the real product environment.