Oxilio’s website copy presents it as a “mobile-first, AI-guided” safety, training, and compliance platform for frontline employees. However, most of the main content is centered on CRM, including sales pipeline management, customer engagement, automation, reporting, and customer management. Based on the currently visible text, it looks more like a customizable CRM solution for businesses or agencies, emphasizing anytime access to data, connections with commonly used tools, and helping teams improve lead follow-up and customer operations efficiency.
In terms of features, Oxilio covers sales pipeline management, real-time data tracking, customer journey visualization, automated follow-ups, contact segmentation, personalized communication, dashboards, performance metrics, and custom reports. Its plans also mention modules such as lead and contact management, task tracking, email notifications, sales and marketing tools, email and campaign management, and advanced workflow automation. For collaboration, the page only provides user limits: up to 100 users on Standard, up to 300 on Enterprise, and up to 500 on Pro. It also mentions task tracking, but does not explain role permissions, approvals, data segregation, or team hierarchy management.
Pricing is subscription-based on a monthly basis: Enterprise CRM Suite is $199/month, Standard CRM Plan is $299/month, and Pro CRM Package is $399/month. Notably, Enterprise appears to offer stronger features and a higher user limit, yet is priced lower than Standard, so there may be a layout or naming error. This must be verified before purchasing. For integrations, the website says it can connect with commonly used tools, and the Pro plan lists Custom Integrations, but no specific third-party systems are named. There is no disclosed free plan, trial, payment method, API, developer documentation, data security compliance information, cloud deployment details, or self-hosting option.
The main advantages are that its basic CRM modules are relatively complete, covering common scenarios from leads, sales, and marketing to reporting, while emphasizing customization and mobile access. The user limits are also fairly high, which may suit growing teams. The drawbacks are that the website does not provide enough complete information, the product positioning wavers between frontline safety/compliance and CRM, and the pricing structure is questionable. It also lacks explanations of security, compliance, API access, and deployment, making evaluation less convenient for mid-sized and large enterprises. It is better suited as an initial candidate for teams that need basic CRM, sales follow-up, and marketing campaign management.
China accessibility cannot be determined from the website copy, and payment methods are not disclosed. If a team plans to use it in mainland China, they should test connectivity for the official website, backend, email services, and third-party integrations, and confirm whether domestic payment and invoices are supported. Comparable alternatives include Salesforce, HubSpot CRM, Zoho CRM, Pipedrive, as well as Chinese options such as 纷享销客 and 销售易.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on oxil.io official site.
oxil.io is an Australia SaaS Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 7.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach oxil.io directly.