Nabbed vs Skene
Side-by-side comparison to help you choose the right AI tool.
Track jobs & contacts. Get AI intel. Autofill ATS.
Stop pasting black box snippets and start shipping growth straight from your code.
Last updated: February 28, 2026
Visual Comparison
Nabbed

Skene

Overview
About Nabbed
Nabbed is the first CRM built specifically for sales and revenue professionals managing their career. Track job applications in a visual pipeline, build a contact CRM with warm path mapping, get AI-powered company intelligence (funding, headcount, Glassdoor ratings), and autofill applications on 60+ ATS platforms with our Chrome extension. Features include Gmail auto-sync that detects interviews and rejections, hiring signal alerts when target companies are growing, interview prep with AI coaching, salary benchmarking with offer analysis, and a Job Fit Score that matches your profile to listings. Search 11 job sources at once including Google Jobs, Indeed, LinkedIn, and Glassdoor. Free tier available, Core at $19/mo.
About Skene
Alright, let's break it down. Skene is your product-led growth (PLG) wingman, but like, one that's actually useful and doesn't just nod along. It's built for the indie hackers, the scrappy startup squads, and the devs who are tired of the growth grind. You know the vibe: you ship an amazing product, but then you're supposed to also become a data scientist and a UX wizard to get people to actually use it? Nah. Skene automagically handles that whole circus. It's like a self-learning growth engine that plugs directly into your codebase. Instead of you pasting in janky third-party scripts that tank your performance and hide your data in some siloed dashboard you never check, Skene reads your actual code. It figures out where users are getting stuck, where they're bouncing, and then it just... fixes it. It creates better user flows, A/B tests them in the wild, and deploys the winner. So you can stop worrying about building a "growth stack" and get back to building your actual product. Growth becomes just another part of your code, something you own and can prompt, not a black-box SaaS you fight with.