Overview
Highspot and Walnut both support modern go-to-market teams—but they solve different parts of the problem.
- Highspot: Built for internal enablement—organizing content, training reps, and maintaining consistency
- Walnut: Built for enablement + engagement—turning product and content into interactive experiences
With Walnut, teams can build once and use everywhere:
- Train reps with demos and playlists
- Use those same assets in live demos, follow-ups, and Deal Rooms
- Measure engagement across the full journey with Walnut Insights
Bottom line: Highspot helps teams manage content. Walnut helps teams activate it—through product-led experiences that are measurable, repeatable, and built to move deals forward.
Highspot helps teams organize and govern content at scale.
Walnut helps teams turn that content—and their product—into interactive experiences that drive engagement across both internal enablement and external buyer journeys, with deeper cross-asset insights and analytics built in.
👉 Explore the Deal Rooms Resource Pack
Two Different Starting Points
Highspot: Start with Content
Highspot is designed to help teams manage and distribute content efficiently across large organizations.
It excels at creating a structured environment where reps can find approved materials, stay aligned with messaging, and operate within clear governance frameworks.
Buyer-facing experiences, like Digital Rooms, are an extension of this system—built on top of the content library.
Walnut: Start with the Experience
Walnut takes a different approach. Instead of starting with content, it starts with the experience you want to deliver.
From there, teams can layer in demos, videos, documents, and messaging to create a cohesive journey—whether that is a pre-sales walkthrough, a post-sales onboarding hub, an event follow-up experience, or a collaborative Deal Room tied to a live opportunity.
The result is not just a place to share assets, but a centralized engagement layer that connects every stage of the customer journey and makes that journey measurable.
Because these experiences are reusable and measurable, teams can use the same assets across internal enablement and external engagement—from rep training and onboarding to live demos, follow-ups, and Deal Rooms.
From Library to Showroom
One of the clearest ways to understand the difference is through the buyer experience.
Highspot delivers a well-organized library—structured, governed, and consistent. This is incredibly valuable for internal alignment and content distribution.
Walnut delivers a showroom—a place where buyers can explore the product, follow a guided path, engage with content in context, and collaborate directly within the same experience.
This shift—from sharing files to guiding experiences—is what enables teams to move from passive engagement to active discovery.
Enablement and Engagement—In One System
One of the biggest differences between Highspot and Walnut is not just how content is delivered—it is how the same content can be used across the entire go-to-market motion.
Highspot is primarily designed for internal enablement—helping teams organize materials, train reps, and maintain consistency.
Walnut supports that same enablement layer—but extends it into external engagement using the exact same assets.
- Use demos and playlists for rep training and onboarding
- Create interactive certification and enablement experiences
- Turn those same assets into live demos, website embeds, and follow-ups
- Extend them into Deal Rooms and stakeholder engagement hubs
- Measure both internal and external engagement through Walnut Insights
This creates a more efficient system where teams are not building separate assets for training and selling—they are building once and using everywhere.
Feature Comparison
At a high level, both platforms support go-to-market teams—but they are optimized for different kinds of work.
| Feature Area | Highspot | Walnut |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Orientation | Content management and enablement | Interactive engagement, product-led storytelling, and measurable buyer journeys |
| Internal Enablement | Strong library, training, governance, and rep readiness workflows | Supports internal enablement through interactive demos, playlists, advanced playlists, and reusable templates—powering training, onboarding, certification, and rep readiness |
| External Buyer Experience | Content sharing and digital rooms built around files and collateral | Interactive demos, playlists, advanced playlists, and Deal Rooms built around guided engagement |
| Product Storytelling | Primarily content-led | Product-led, demo-first storytelling with supporting content layered in context |
| Deal Rooms | Buyer-facing rooms extend the content library model | Collaborative deal hubs with demos, documents, MAPs, comments, CRM connection, automation, and in-room updates |
| Cross-Asset Experience Design | Organized content collections | Multi-asset journeys combining demos, PDFs, videos, docs, links, and embedded content in one experience |
| Interactivity | Primarily asset viewing and content consumption | Deep interactivity through clickable demos, guided paths, collaborative spaces, and product exploration |
| Collaboration in Buyer Rooms | Content sharing and follow-up across tools | In-room collaboration with contextual comments, threaded replies, @mentions, updates, and live MAP alignment—keeping engagement in one place |
| Insights & Analytics | Content engagement metrics like views, time spent, downloads, and content consumption signals | Walnut Insights surfaces cross-asset engagement across demos, playlists, Deal Rooms, sessions, stakeholders, MAP activity, and asset-level performance |
| CRM Integration | Supports go-to-market workflows and content distribution | Connects directly to Salesforce Opportunities and HubSpot Deals, including Deal Room creation flows and engagement visibility |
| Automation | Manual curation and distribution | CRM-driven personalization, rule-based Deal Room creation, and scalable automation workflows |
| Typical Best Fit | Teams focused on governance, internal alignment, and content operations at scale | Teams focused on interactive selling, buyer engagement, measurable follow-up, and product-led revenue motions |
Why Deal Rooms Change the Equation
Deal Rooms are one of the clearest examples of how Walnut extends beyond content management and into active deal execution.
Rather than acting as a static folder of buyer-facing assets, Walnut Deal Rooms are designed as flexible, powerful, and shareable product experience and deal management hubs that align sellers and buyers throughout every stage of the sales cycle.
They bring together interactive content, contextual comments, automation, and Mutual Action Plans (MAPs) in one collaborative workspace—creating a centralized hub for product-led selling from first touch to closed deal.
- Connect Deal Rooms directly to Salesforce Opportunities or HubSpot Deals
- Create Deal Rooms from reusable templates for faster, more consistent execution
- Build fully custom one-off Deal Rooms for unique opportunities or use cases
- Add personalized demos, PDFs, Google Docs, videos, links, and embedded content
- Keep communication in context with comments, threaded replies, and @mentions on assets, sections, PDF pages, and MAP tasks
- Track stakeholder engagement and deal momentum through Walnut Insights
- Automatically generate Deal Rooms at scale when CRM rules and conditions are met
In other words, Walnut Deal Rooms do not just help teams share information—they help teams run the deal.
👉 Learn more: Interactive Deal Rooms: Getting Started
Continuity, Not Email Chaos
One of the most meaningful advantages of Walnut Deal Rooms is continuity.
In many sales motions, valuable context gets scattered across email chains, forwarded threads, meeting notes, chat messages, and disconnected follow-ups. That makes it harder to understand the current status of the engagement, harder to bring in the right stakeholder, and harder to keep momentum moving.
Deal Rooms create a different model. Instead of searching for context across inboxes, teams can keep everything connected to the engagement itself.
- Comment directly on demos, documents, sections, and MAP tasks
- Keep questions and feedback tied to the exact asset or next step being discussed
- Use threaded replies and @mentions to bring the right people in at the right time
- Track visible updates in a shared space instead of relying on fragmented follow-up
- Maintain continuity across discovery, evaluation, follow-up, and handoff
The result is a more connected engagement experience where buyers and sellers stay aligned, decisions stay visible, and everything important happens in one place.
Before vs. After: Fragmented Follow-Up vs. One Shared Workspace
| Without a Deal Room | With a Walnut Deal Room |
|---|---|
| Demo link in one email, pricing doc in another, meeting notes somewhere else | Demos, documents, videos, MAPs, and resources live in one connected space |
| Questions get buried in long email threads | Comments stay attached to the exact asset, section, or task being discussed |
| Stakeholders are hard to loop in without forwarding context | @mentions and threaded replies bring the right people in without losing continuity |
| Progress is tracked across inboxes, spreadsheets, and memory | Updates, MAP progress, and engagement signals stay visible in one workspace |
| Follow-up is reactive and context-switch heavy | Follow-up is faster, more contextual, and easier to personalize |
Maximizing the Walnut Demo Ecosystem
Deal Rooms are most powerful when used as part of Walnut’s broader demo ecosystem.
In Walnut, demos are native assets—not external links, screenshots, or attachments. That matters because it allows teams to build fully connected experiences where demos, content, collaboration, and analytics all live in the same environment.
Because demos are native to Walnut, they can be reused seamlessly across internal enablement and external buyer experiences—bridging the gap between training and execution.
Instead of sending buyers to a separate content portal and then pointing them back to a demo link, teams can bring everything together in one place: interactive demos, playlists, documents, videos, MAPs, contextual comments, updates, and follow-up resources.
- Embed demos directly into Deal Rooms as part of the buyer journey
- Combine product storytelling with supporting assets like PDFs, videos, pricing docs, and onboarding resources
- Create a seamless path from first meeting to follow-up to stakeholder review
- Keep engagement centralized instead of fragmenting it across links, folders, and disconnected tools
- Measure how buyers engage across the full experience—not just one isolated asset
In practice, this means Walnut can support much more than a single demo. It can power a complete engagement motion where demos, content, collaboration, and analytics all work together.
That is especially powerful for teams that want to scale a repeatable demo ecosystem: using reusable demos as the foundation, then extending them into playlists, advanced playlists, Deal Rooms, embedded follow-up experiences, and tailored buyer journeys.
Why Walnut Insights and Analytics Matter
One of Walnut’s biggest advantages is not just that it helps teams create interactive experiences—it helps teams understand what happens inside them.
Rather than limiting visibility to whether someone opened a file or clicked a link, Walnut Insights helps teams understand how buyers actually move through demos, playlists, and Deal Rooms, where they spend time, what they engage with most, and how that engagement connects to deal momentum.
- Track how buyers move across demos, playlists, and Deal Rooms
- Understand which content and product areas drive the most engagement
- Identify patterns across sessions, stakeholders, and accounts
- Surface Deal Room engagement in Walnut Insights—and in Salesforce or HubSpot when connected
- Use asset-level and session-level analytics to qualify deals, tailor follow-up, and optimize strategy
- Connect engagement data to pipeline and ROI reporting
Instead of asking “Did they view the content?”, teams can start asking: “What did they engage with, how deeply did they engage, who was involved, and what should we do next?”
How Teams Use Them Together
In many organizations, Highspot and Walnut are not mutually exclusive—they serve different roles.
- Highspot supports internal structure: training, governance, and content management
- Walnut activates that content: delivering interactive, measurable, and collaborative experiences across both enablement and the customer journey
Together, they create a system where content is not just stored and shared—but experienced, personalized, optimized, and measured.
Summary
Highspot and Walnut reflect two different philosophies:
- Highspot: Organize, manage, and govern content for internal enablement
- Walnut: Deliver, personalize, measure, and collaborate across both enablement and engagement
For teams looking to move beyond content distribution and toward product-led engagement, Walnut provides a flexible layer that connects demos, content, enablement, automation, Insights and analytics, and deal collaboration into a single experience.