Martech vendors face a competitive dynamic that most B2B companies do not. Your buyer is evaluating 15 to 20 platforms simultaneously, and a meaningful number of those platforms are directly competing for the same GTM budget as yours. The buying decision is often not “should we buy this category of tool” but “which of these five tools in this category should we buy.”
That means intent data for martech is specifically about competitive displacement detection, not just category awareness. You need to know when a CMO or marketing ops team is evaluating or planning to migrate away from a competitor, not just when they are vaguely researching marketing technology.
This guide compares 6sense, Demandbase, and Clay for martech-specific ABM, with attention to where each platform adds the most value in the competitive context martech vendors actually face.
Four buying triggers drive most martech purchasing decisions:
Platform consolidation: The marketing technology landscape has expanded dramatically, and many organizations are actively trying to reduce tool sprawl. An evaluation of “what can we consolidate” is a buying trigger for all-in-one platforms and a threat signal for point solutions.
Feature parity events: When a competitor adds a key capability (SMS for an email platform, native analytics for a CRM), it triggers re-evaluation of existing tools. These events are time-sensitive.
Pricing escalation: As organizations grow, seat-based or usage-based pricing from incumbent vendors becomes a budget issue. This is a displacement trigger.
Integration failures: When the current platform cannot connect reliably to the data warehouse, CRM, or analytics stack, migrations follow.
Unlike healthcare or fintech, where buying is driven by compliance or threat events, martech buying is driven by competitive dynamics. Your intent data strategy needs to detect those dynamics.
Most martech purchasing involves four to five personas:
Unlike SaaS products with a single technical or business buyer, martech requires alignment across marketing, operations, and finance. This extends cycles and creates multiple intent signal types, since each persona researches from a different angle.
6sense is the most capable platform for detecting competitive displacement signals in martech, because its intent model looks at behavioral patterns across the entire web, not just research topics.
Signals 6sense tracks that are relevant for martech vendors:
Custom model training advantage:
For martech vendors, the most valuable 6sense feature is often the custom model trained on your own won deals. If you can identify patterns in the behavioral data of accounts that converted from a specific competitor, 6sense can surface accounts showing the same patterns.
This is most actionable when you have a clear competitor displacement motion. If you know that accounts switching from Platform X have a specific research pattern before requesting a demo, you can teach 6sense to flag similar patterns in your target account list.
Re-engagement signals:
6sense can also detect re-engagement after a lost opportunity. An account that evaluated your platform 8 months ago and went elsewhere may resurface with new research signals indicating the original decision did not stick. That is a high-value outreach window.
Pricing context: Typically $80K to $140K per year for martech-configured deployments. Custom model training adds cost.
Demandbase’s primary value for martech vendors is ICP segmentation by technology stack and platform type.
How it works for martech:
Demandbase can segment target accounts by the martech platform they currently use or are likely using, based on firmographic data and intent signals. This allows you to build targeted campaigns for specific displacement scenarios rather than running generic campaigns to all prospects.
Examples of segments a martech vendor might configure:
Account play templates:
Demandbase ships pre-built account play templates that can be adapted for martech vertical scenarios. Rather than building a multi-touch campaign sequence from scratch, you start from a template and configure it for your specific displacement scenario.
Pricing context: Typically $70K to $110K per year with martech vertical configuration.
Clay operates differently from 6sense or Demandbase. It is a data enrichment and workflow tool rather than a traditional ABM platform. For martech vendors, it is particularly useful for competitive intelligence because it can enrich contact and account data with signals you cannot get from standard intent platforms.
What Clay adds for martech:
Real workflow example:
A demand gen platform targets HubSpot customers. Clay enriches a list of target accounts with:
The result is outreach that can be specific: “Your team uses HubSpot for demand gen and just posted a role for a marketing ops specialist. At the scale you are growing, here is where teams like yours typically run into [specific limitation]. Let’s talk.”
That specificity requires Clay enrichment, not just intent detection.
Pricing context: Clay operates on a credit-based model. Costs typically range from $500 to $2K per month depending on volume.
| Feature | 6sense | Demandbase | Clay |
|---|---|---|---|
| Competitive Displacement Intent | Strong (research tracking, web behavior) | Limited | Yes (via enrichment and job posting analysis) |
| Martech Vertical Segmentation | Yes (custom models available) | Yes (5+ predefined segments) | Partial (via enrichment) |
| Platform Switching Signals | Strong (before/after research patterns) | Limited | Yes (job posting and tech stack analysis) |
| Current Tool Detection | Limited | Yes (firmographic proxy) | Strong (direct enrichment) |
| Re-engagement Detection | Yes | Limited | No |
| Integration: Salesforce and CRM | Native | Native | Via Zapier |
| Custom Models | Yes | No | No |
| Typical Annual Cost | $110K | $90K | $12K to $24K |
Scenario: Challenger email platform targeting HubSpot customers
Clay enriches a target list with confirmed HubSpot users, identifies those at a volume or growth stage where seat pricing becomes an issue, and surfaces job postings indicating frustration. 6sense confirms with research patterns around “HubSpot alternatives.” SDR outreach references the specific friction point.
Scenario: CDP vendor targeting companies considering a separate data layer
Demandbase flags accounts with a data science team growth signal and analytics infrastructure research intent. 6sense confirms with “CDP evaluation” research patterns. Outreach leads with the integration story: “When your analytics stack grows past a certain size, native platform analytics start to limit you. Here is how teams like yours approach the data layer.”
Scenario: Demand gen platform competing with 6sense and Demandbase
6sense and Demandbase both flag accounts researching “intent data platform comparison.” Clay enriches with current tool detection (which intent platform are they already using, if any). If the account uses a competitor, outreach benchmarks on cost and feature fit. If they do not have an intent platform yet, outreach is category education.
Series A ($500K to $2M ARR):
Clay only, at $12K to $24K per year. Use it for competitive intelligence: enrich target accounts with current tool detection and build personalized sequences. Intent data platforms are expensive for early-stage ACV.
Series B ($2M to $10M ARR):
Add 6sense ($80K per year) for competitive displacement detection. Keep Clay for enrichment and personalization. Combined cost around $92K to $100K per year. Focus the 6sense configuration on detecting platform switching intent in your target competitor’s customer base.
Series C and beyond ($10M+ ARR):
Full stack: 6sense for displacement detection, Demandbase for vertical segmentation and multi-touch orchestration, Clay for enrichment. Total cost $200K or more. This is the right investment when deal volume and ACV justify multi-channel campaign infrastructure.
The most common mistake martech vendors make with intent data is treating it as category awareness instead of competitive displacement intelligence.
A generic “companies researching marketing technology” intent signal is too broad to be useful. Martech vendors should be looking for signals that are specific to their displacement scenario: which competitor platform are they on, what research patterns precede migration decisions, and what organizational signals correlate with stack audits.
That specificity requires configuration work. Out-of-the-box intent topics rarely align precisely with the nuanced competitive scenarios a martech vendor needs to detect. Budget time for that configuration work before expecting the platform to deliver high-quality signals.
6sense is the strongest choice for detecting when martech buyers are actively comparing platforms or researching migration options. The custom model capability matters here if you have a clear competitor displacement pattern.
Demandbase is the right addition when campaign orchestration across multiple channels and vertical segmentation (which type of martech customer are you targeting) becomes a priority.
Clay is the most cost-effective way to add competitive intelligence to any outreach sequence. For early-stage martech vendors, it often delivers more useful signals than a full intent platform at a fraction of the cost.
For most martech vendors, the starting combination is 6sense plus Clay. Total cost around $92K to $100K per year. That covers competitive displacement detection and personalized enrichment, which are the two highest-leverage investments for a martech ABM motion.