Enzy turns your sales activity into a leaderboard. Curbsight does that too — but on top of scored property leads, so reps compete on the doors that actually convert, not just the ones they knocked fastest.
Enzy is a sales-performance platform: leaderboards, competitions, incentives, onboarding, and team comms that make any sales floor more motivating. What it doesn't have is a lead source — it gamifies whatever activity you feed it (knocks, sets, closes) without knowing which doors were ever worth knocking. Curbsight scores every property in your territory 0-100 first, then gamifies the knocks against that data: streaks, achievements, and leaderboards tied to high-value, claim-eligible doors. For a roofing or storm-restoration D2D team, Curbsight replaces Enzy and brings the lead intelligence Enzy structurally can't.
| Curbsight | Enzy | |
|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Scored leads + gamified canvassing | Gamifies the activity you already do |
| Lead intelligence | 0–100 score per property (roof age × hail × value) | None — no property data or lead source |
| What gets gamified | Outcomes on scored doors (high-value, claim-eligible) | Raw activity (knocks, dials, sets) |
| Leaderboards + competitions | Built-in (streaks, achievements, weekly reports) | Core strength |
| Insurance claim eligibility | Surfaced per property (storm date + countdown) | Not provided |
| Door tracking + dispositions | Built-in (knock log, geo-stamps, follow-ups) | Yes (activity logging) |
| Pipeline / CRM after the sale | Built-in kanban + customer records | Not a CRM |
| Pricing model | $500/$1,500/$5,000 flat monthly | Per-seat (not publicly listed) |
Enzy is genuinely good at the performance and culture layer. Customizable leaderboards, head-to-head competitions, incentive and prize management, onboarding and training content, recruiting, and a social profile feed that reps actually engage with. For a large, multi-vertical sales org that wants to inject competition and accountability across teams that already have their lead flow handled, Enzy is purpose-built for exactly that.
Enzy gamifies activity — but it has no idea whether that activity is pointed at the right doors. It will happily crown the rep who knocked 120 low-probability houses. It isn't a lead source, a property database, or a territory-scoring engine, so the 'which doors' problem is left entirely to you. Bolt Enzy onto a blind canvass and you've gamified the wrong thing: volume over value. The reps grind harder, not smarter.
Curbsight scores every property in your territory 0-100 before the rep leaves the truck — using public county records, NOAA storm data, and satellite imagery — then gamifies the knocks against that data. The leaderboard rewards closing the 80s: the storm-hit, claim-eligible, high-value roofs, not whoever burned the most shoe leather. Same competitive energy Enzy is known for, pointed at the doors that actually pay.
Enzy doesn't publish pricing — it's quote-based and typically per-seat, which scales up with headcount. Curbsight is flat monthly ($500/$1,500/$5,000). The bigger difference is what you're paying for: Enzy is a performance layer you add on top of a lead source you're already paying for separately; Curbsight is the lead source, the canvassing tracker, the gamification, and the pipeline in one flat fee.