Strawberry vs Airtop for Crm Hygiene
Strawberry and Airtop for CRM hygiene: where each wins, what the output actually looks like, paste-ready prompts, and pricing in context.

Airtop and Strawberry both show up when teams shop for help with CRM hygiene. They do not solve the same problem. Airtop is a Browser infrastructure; Strawberry is an AI browser that lives in your real browser tabs and connected apps. This page is the head-to-head on CRM hygiene specifically - where each one wins, what the output actually looks like, and the price you pay either way.
The short answer
For CRM hygiene, pick Strawberry when the work needs to read logged-in pages and act across multiple apps in your real browser. Pick Airtop when you are an engineer building your own agent. If your workflow looks like "open three tabs, judge what matters, write something back into a CRM", Strawberry will close it faster. If it looks like "answer this clean question", Airtop is the cheaper tool.
What CRM hygiene actually requires
The job is to find duplicates, fill missing fields, retire stale records, and ensure pipeline data reflects reality. Success is measured as: duplicate rate below 1%, missing-required-field rate below 5%, pipeline-confidence score above 85%. To do it well, the workflow needs these signals: duplicate detection across name + email + domain; missing required fields (owner, stage, close date, next step); stale records (no activity in 60+ days); stage-time anomalies (deal in Proposal for 90+ days). Most of those signals live behind logins or scattered across the open web - which is exactly where the tool choice starts to matter.
How Strawberry handles CRM hygiene
Strawberry runs inside your real browser. It reads the tabs you have open, pulls context from your connected apps (CRM, email, sheets, Slack, Notion, calendar), researches missing signals via the open web, and synthesises a draft in the shape your team uses. A human reviews before any external write. Because the agent sees the same pages you do, you can ask follow-up questions referencing what's on screen and get answers grounded in that context.
Concrete workflow with Strawberry
- Open the CRM view of contacts with missing or stale fields.
- Ask Strawberry to enrich each row from LinkedIn and the company site - title, seniority, location, recent role change.
- Have it flag duplicate contacts with high-confidence matches and propose a merge.
- Review the proposed changes in a sheet before any write-back.
- Apply the approved updates in batches with the human keeping ownership of writes.
Use this exact prompt in Strawberry to start the workflow:
I have [tab/app] open. Help me clean up CRM data for [name/company]. Read what's on screen plus any connected CRM and email context. Return: A change list - what to merge, what to update, what to retire - with proposed actions and human approval gates. Anchor every claim to a real signal from duplicate detection across name + email + domain or missing required fields (owner, stage, close date, next step). Do not invent facts. Stop before any external action - I'll review.
How Airtop handles CRM hygiene
Airtop's strength is cloud browser sessions for agent developers with session management and observability. For CRM hygiene, that pays off when the inputs are already clean and the output is text - drafting messages, summarising notes, answering questions about pasted material. Where it slows down is exactly what CRM hygiene demands at scale: Airtop is infrastructure. Teams using Airtop for this end up copy-pasting screenshots, re-typing CRM fields, and switching context every few minutes.
Honest tradeoffs
Pick Strawberry when you want an out-of-the-box agent product.
Pick Airtop when you are an engineer building your own agent.
Use them together when Airtop owns the drafting step and Strawberry owns the browser-side gathering and CRM write-back. Many teams keep both in their stack.
What a real CRM hygiene output looks like
Specific, not generic:
- Found: 42 likely-duplicate contact pairs (name match + domain match within 7 days)
- Action proposed: keep newer record for 38, keep older for 4 (older has more notes)
- Found: 14 deals stuck in Proposal > 60 days, all assigned to former AE
- Action proposed: reassign to current owner + create follow-up task
- Found: 67 contacts with no Title - all from Apollo bulk pull
- Action proposed: re-enrich with LinkedIn lookup
Strawberry produces this by reading the relevant tabs and apps, then drafting. Airtop produces this only if the inputs are already pasted into the chat.
Pricing in context
Airtop: usage-based pricing. Strawberry: free tier, Intern $20/mo, Part-Time $100/mo, Full-Time $250/mo, with team plans available. The honest comparison is hours of work saved per seat per week against list price, not list price alone. Teams that lean on CRM hygiene weekly usually hit payback in the first month on either tool.
Three mistakes to avoid in CRM hygiene
These bite regardless of which tool you pick:
- Auto-merging duplicates without human review (loses history)
- Deleting stale records that were actually customer accounts
- Overwriting owner-edited fields with enrichment data
Caveats
Strawberry holds back on sending email, updating CRM records, or changing shared systems until a human approves the action. Treat the agent as a fast first-draft author, not an autopilot.
Strawberry vs Airtop for CRM hygiene
Strawberry
Real browser + connected apps + judgment. Wins when you want an out-of-the-box agent product.
Airtop
Cloud browser sessions for agent developers with session management and observability. Wins when you are an engineer building your own agent.
FAQ
Can I use Strawberry and Airtop together?
Yes - many teams do. Airtop handles drafting and Q&A on clean inputs; Strawberry handles the browser-side gathering and write-back into apps.
Which one is cheaper for CRM hygiene?
Per seat, Strawberry typically lands between Airtop's free and mid tiers. The right comparison is time saved per seat per week, not list price.
Will Strawberry send emails or update CRM without me?
No. Strawberry stops before external writes and asks for review. You stay in the loop on the irreversible step.
What's the biggest mistake to avoid in CRM hygiene?
Auto-merging duplicates without human review (loses history).