Best Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) Software for Zendesk

Find and compare the best Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) software for Zendesk in 2025

Use the comparison tool below to compare the top Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) software for Zendesk on the market. You can filter results by user reviews, pricing, features, platform, region, support options, integrations, and more.

  • 1
    Amazon EventBridge Reviews
    Amazon EventBridge serves as a serverless event bus that simplifies the integration of applications by utilizing data from your own systems, various Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) offerings, and AWS services. It provides a continuous flow of real-time data from event sources like Zendesk, Datadog, and PagerDuty, efficiently directing that information to targets such as AWS Lambda. By establishing routing rules, you can dictate the destination of your data, enabling the creation of application architectures that respond instantaneously to all incoming data sources. EventBridge facilitates the development of event-driven applications by managing essential aspects like event ingestion, delivery, security, authorization, and error handling on your behalf. As your applications grow increasingly interconnected through events, you may find that greater effort is required to discover and comprehend the structure of these events in order to effectively code responses to them. This can enhance the overall efficiency and responsiveness of your application ecosystem.
  • 2
    Sacumen Connector as a Service (CaaS) Reviews
    Companies that develop security products face a significant demand to create integrations with various third-party applications. This necessity arises from several factors, including customer expectations and the desire to enhance the functionality of their offerings. The target systems for these integrations can exist in diverse environments such as cloud, on-premise, or hybrid setups. The complexity increases due to the wide array of integration options provided by these target systems, including various interfaces like REST API, SOAP, SFTP, Message Queue, and SDKs. Additionally, the different data formats, such as JSON, XML, and Syslog, further complicate matters. Authentication and authorization methods also vary, with options including OAuth, API Tokens, and multi-factor authentication. Furthermore, challenges like rate limits, pagination options, latency issues, concurrency control, and data volume requirements must be addressed. As a result, security product companies frequently resort to developing customized, non-standard connectors for these target systems. This practice not only escalates development and support costs but also results in connectors that may underperform in terms of scalability, efficiency, and adaptability to future needs. Ultimately, the lack of standardization can hinder the overall integration process and impact customer satisfaction negatively.
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next