Account scoring is one of the highest-leverage investments a B2B revenue team can make. When it works, sales reps spend time on the accounts most likely to convert, pipeline velocity increases, and marketing knows which accounts to accelerate. When it does not work, you build a scoring model nobody trusts, and reps ignore it within 90 days.
The difference between scoring that works and scoring that does not is usually the quality of the underlying signals – not the sophistication of the algorithm. This guide covers the best account scoring software in 2026 and helps you choose the right fit for your data, team, and GTM motion.
Account scoring assigns a priority ranking to companies in your target market. It answers: “Of these 5,000 accounts, which 50 should sales focus on right now?”
A good account score incorporates:
ICP fit (firmographic scoring): Does this company match your ideal customer profile? Industry, size, revenue, geography, tech stack, funding stage.
Engagement scoring: How actively has this account engaged with your marketing? Website visits, content downloads, email opens, webinar attendance, ad clicks.
Intent scoring: Is this account actively researching your category right now? Third-party intent signals (Bombora-style), review site activity (G2), competitor research.
Behavioral triggers: Specific high-value actions that indicate urgency – pricing page visit, demo page view, multiple stakeholders from the same account visiting within a short window.
Negative signals: Indicators that an account is not a good fit – too small, wrong industry, already a customer, churned previously.
Account scoring is not: - A lead score (which focuses on an individual contact, not the account) - A replacement for sales judgment - A guarantee that a high-scoring account will convert - A set-and-forget system (models need quarterly tuning)
Best for: B2B SaaS teams that want intent-enriched account scoring connected directly to sales engagement.
Abmatic enables teams to build configurable account scoring models that combine ICP firmographic criteria, real-time intent signals, and behavioral engagement data. The key differentiation: scoring does not stop at a dashboard – it connects to action.
When an account hits a defined score threshold, Abmatic enables teams to:
Score components Abmatic enables:
Trade-off: Abmatic is an ABM platform, not a pure scoring tool. If your only need is a standalone scoring engine without the activation layer, there are lighter options. Abmatic’s value is the connection between score and action.
Best for: Product-led and sales-assisted teams that want ML-powered scoring tied to product usage and behavioral data.
MadKudu is a dedicated lead and account scoring platform built on machine learning. Its differentiator is data model sophistication:
Trade-off: MadKudu requires sufficient historical data (at minimum 100 to 200 closed-won opportunities) to build a reliable ML model. Early-stage teams without this data history get less value. MadKudu is also a scoring tool only – it does not have an activation layer for triggering sequences or marketing campaigns.
Pricing: Generally $36K to $50K annually depending on data volume and features.
Best for: Enterprise teams that want predictive AI to predict which accounts are entering active buying stages, not just which ones are currently engaged.
6sense’s account scoring is not just a score – it is a buying stage prediction. The platform predicts whether an account is in Awareness, Consideration, Decision, or Purchase stage based on AI analysis of behavior, intent, and historical patterns:
Trade-off: 6sense’s predictive AI is most accurate at enterprise scale with large account lists. At smaller scales, the prediction model has less training data and less differentiation. Also expensive: $100K+ annually for full enterprise features.
Best for: Revenue operations teams that want precise lead-to-account matching and account-based lead routing alongside scoring.
LeanData is primarily a lead routing platform, but its account-based matching capabilities make it relevant to scoring workflows:
Trade-off: LeanData is an ops infrastructure tool. It handles routing and matching well but is not a primary scoring platform. Best combined with a dedicated scoring tool or ABM platform.
Best for: Salesforce Enterprise and Unlimited tier users that want native ML scoring without adding a new vendor.
Salesforce Einstein includes a built-in lead scoring feature that uses ML to score leads based on historical conversion patterns:
Trade-off: Einstein scoring is limited to Salesforce data. It does not incorporate third-party intent signals or external engagement data. Results vary significantly based on CRM data quality. Available only in Enterprise or Unlimited tiers.
Best for: HubSpot Professional and Enterprise users that want native ML scoring within HubSpot.
HubSpot includes predictive lead scoring in Professional+ tiers:
Trade-off: HubSpot’s predictive scoring is contact-level, not account-level natively. Account-level scoring requires custom property logic. Limited by the quality and volume of your HubSpot data. Does not incorporate third-party intent signals.
Best for: Teams that want to build their own account scoring model using high-quality third-party intent signals.
Some teams choose to use Bombora intent data as raw input into a custom account scoring model built in their CRM or MAP:
Trade-off: Requires revenue ops capacity to build and maintain the scoring model. No out-of-box UI for sales to consume scores. Best for teams with strong ops capability that want full control over the scoring logic.
| Feature | Abmatic | MadKudu | 6sense | LeanData | Salesforce Einstein | HubSpot Predictive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Account-level scoring | Yes | Yes | Yes | Partial | Limited | Limited |
| ICP firmographic scoring | Yes | Yes | Yes | Good | Limited | Good |
| Intent signals integrated | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No |
| ML/AI model | Good | Yes (best-in-class) | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Buying stage prediction | Good | Limited | Yes | No | No | No |
| Sales activation trigger | Yes | Via integration | Yes | Yes (routing) | Via workflows | Via workflows |
| Salesloft/Outreach native | Yes | Limited | Good | Limited | No | No |
| HubSpot native | Yes | Yes | Limited | Good | N/A | Native |
| Salesforce native | Good | Yes | Yes | Native | Native | N/A |
| Implementation time | 4 to 6 weeks | 4 to 8 weeks | 10 to 12 weeks | 4 to 6 weeks | 2 to 4 weeks | 1 to 2 weeks |
| Annual starting price | Contact | $36K+ | $100K+ | $36K+ | Included | Included |
The biggest failure mode in account scoring is building a model that sales ignores. Avoid it with these steps:
Do not let marketing ops build the scoring model in isolation. Run a 2-hour workshop with your top 3 to 5 enterprise AEs. Ask:
Their answers should directly shape your scoring criteria.
Before going live, run your scoring model backwards against the last 12 months of pipeline. What score would your best customers have had at the moment they first engaged? If your model does not score past closed-won accounts highly, the model is wrong.
A scoring model with 5 criteria that sales understands beats a 25-variable ML model they cannot explain. Launch with: ICP fit (industry + size), intent signal presence (yes/no), and engagement recency. Add complexity after you validate basic signal quality.
A score in a platform nobody checks is useless. Deliver scores via: - CRM account/contact fields (visible in every account view) - Slack alerts for threshold changes (score moved from Tier 2 to Tier 1) - Sales engagement tool enrichment (score + signal context in Salesloft or Outreach)
Account scoring degrades over time. ICP shifts, product positioning changes, and seasonality affects signal patterns. Run a quarterly scoring review:
Over-weighting engagement over intent. An account that visited your website 12 times last month is engaged but may not be in a buying process. An account that visited 4 times and viewed your pricing page once while also researching your category on Bombora is a higher-priority signal. Intent often beats raw engagement volume.
Not including negative scoring. If a company is too small, wrong industry, or already a customer, a high engagement score should not surface them as high-priority. Add negative scoring criteria explicitly.
Ignoring buying committee breadth. One contact visiting is weaker than three different stakeholders from the same company visiting within two weeks. Your scoring model should incorporate account-level breadth of engagement, not just individual contact activity.
Building a scoring model nobody can explain. If a sales rep asks “why is this account flagged as Tier 1?” and the only answer is “the ML model says so,” adoption suffers. Ensure your model has an interpretable summary: “Tier 1 = ICP match + active intent signal + pricing page visit in last 30 days.”
Q: Should I score leads or accounts? A: For sales-assisted B2B motions with deal values over $10K, account scoring is more useful than lead scoring. Multiple stakeholders from the same company need to be aggregated into one account view. Lead scoring alone misses the multi-stakeholder buying committee dynamic.
Q: How many tiers should my account scoring model have? A: Three tiers is the practical maximum for sales adoption: Tier 1 (high-priority, immediate follow-up), Tier 2 (in-nurture, watch-and-wait), Tier 3 (low-priority, do not actively pursue). More than three tiers creates decision fatigue.
Q: How often should account scores refresh? A: Ideally daily or real-time for behavioral signals (website visit just happened). Weekly is acceptable for intent signal aggregation. Monthly score refreshes are too slow for fast-moving accounts.
Q: Can I build account scoring in my CRM without a dedicated tool? A: Yes, with revenue ops effort. Salesforce and HubSpot both support custom scoring logic via formulas, workflows, and custom fields. The trade-off: you get full control but lack intent signal integration and the automated activation triggers that dedicated tools provide.
Account scoring works when it is built on quality signals, validated against historical data, delivered where sales works, and tuned regularly. The tool matters less than the process.
That said, the right tool makes the process dramatically easier:
For most B2B SaaS teams, the highest-leverage investment is not buying a more sophisticated scoring algorithm – it is connecting the score to an action. An account hits Tier 1; a sequence starts. That connection is where pipeline actually comes from.
See how Abmatic connects account scoring to sales action. Book a demo at abmatic.ai/demo.