Disclosure: FishDog is a synthetic market research platform and may compete with Evidenza in some buyer evaluations. The analysis below draws on public sources and separates documented fact from FishDog's interpretation.
Evidenza does not publish public pricing.
That says nothing about whether the product is worth the money. It says Evidenza sells like an enterprise synthetic research platform, not a low-friction self-serve tool with a monthly plan you can read off a page.
So if you are evaluating Evidenza, the sharper question is not "what does it cost?" It is:
What research workflow, service layer, deliverables, and strategic support are included in that cost?
What is publicly clear
Evidenza's public materials emphasize full-service synthetic research, B2B marketing strategy, synthetic customer samples, and go-to-market planning.
The company says its platform generates synthetic customers, runs quant and qual research, and produces evidence-based plans. It describes full-service delivery today and a self-service option to come.
That points to pricing that varies with:
research scope,
audience complexity,
number of synthetic buyers or studies,
whether the work is full-service or self-serve,
deliverables,
strategy support,
enterprise requirements.
Why Evidenza pricing is hard to benchmark
Evidenza does not line up cleanly against a survey tool. It appears to combine:
synthetic respondent generation,
research design,
qualitative and quantitative workflows,
strategic interpretation,
go-to-market planning,
enterprise delivery.
That bundle is closer to a research-and-strategy engagement than a software seat, which is exactly why a per-respondent or per-seat comparison will mislead you.
What buyers should ask
Before you weigh the cost, ask:
Is pricing project-based, subscription-based, or both?
Is full-service research included?
How many studies are included?
Can teams run their own studies?
Is self-service available now?
What outputs are included: raw responses, analysis, slides, plans, workshops?
How are synthetic buyers created for our category?
What validation evidence applies to our use case?
Are revisions or follow-up questions included?
What happens after the first engagement?
When Evidenza pricing may be worth it
Evidenza pricing can make sense when:
traditional B2B research would be slow or expensive,
respondents are hard to reach,
the decision carries real strategic value,
the team needs help turning research into go-to-market action,
the buyer values marketing-science expertise,
an enterprise team wants a partner rather than a pure tool.
When to consider alternatives
Look elsewhere if:
you need transparent pricing before a sales call,
you need to run studies yourself immediately,
your use case is not B2B marketing,
you need repeated low-friction product or pricing tests,
you want an API-first workflow,
you do not need strategy services bundled with the research.
Evidenza compared with FishDog pricing logic
The practical difference is workflow.
Evidenza is priced around enterprise research value: replacing slow B2B research and strategy cycles.
FishDog is better judged on research volume: how often your team needs to test concepts, messaging, pricing, positioning, or audience reactions.
A full-service B2B engagement can justify Evidenza's higher-touch model. Many fast studies across different business questions usually run cheaper on a self-serve platform.
Bottom line
Evidenza keeps pricing off the website because it sells an engagement, not a software seat.
Ask for a proposal tied to a specific research workflow, then weigh it against the cost of traditional B2B research, your team's internal time, and self-serve synthetic alternatives.
What matters is knowing what you are buying: software access, full-service research, strategic planning, or all three.
Related reading
Figures here come from public sources and were accurate to the best of our knowledge in June 2026. Funding, pricing, and product details move fast, so if we got something wrong, [contact us](/contact) and we'll fix it.

