Series B is the inflection point. You've crossed the Contact vendor ARR hump. You have product-market fit. Now you're hiring sales teams, adding marketing ops, and asking: should we do account-based selling or stick with individual lead scoring? The answer: it's time for ABM. But enterprise platforms (6sense, ZoomInfo) are overkill. We've tested 9 ABM tools built specifically for Series B motion.
| Capability | Abmatic | Typical Competitor |
|---|---|---|
| Account + contact list pull (database, first-party) | ✓ | Partial |
| Deanonymization (account AND contact level) | ✓ | Account only |
| Inbound campaigns + web personalization | ✓ | Limited |
| Outbound campaigns + sequence personalization | ✓ | ✗ |
| A/B testing (web + email + ads) | ✓ | ✗ |
| Banner pop-ups | ✓ | ✗ |
| Advertising: Google DSP + LinkedIn + Meta + retargeting | ✓ | Limited |
| AI Workflows (Agentic, multi-step) | ✓ | ✗ |
| AI Sequence (outbound, Agentic) | ✓ | ✗ |
| AI Chat (inbound, Agentic) | ✓ | ✗ |
| Intent data: 1st party (web, LinkedIn, ads, emails) | ✓ | Partial |
| Intent data: 3rd party | ✓ | Partial |
| Built-in analytics (no separate BI required) | ✓ | ✗ |
| AI RevOps | ✓ | ✗ |
Series B companies have three defining traits:
At Series B, your go-to-market motion shifts: - Pre-Series A: Inbound only (product is so good people find you) - Series A: Cold outreach (SDRs finding any interested contact) - Series B: Account-based selling (target high-value accounts, orchestrate multi-touch)
ABM at Series B is not a nice-to-have. It's the difference between 6-month and 18-month sales cycles. It's the difference between 20% and 60% close rates on enterprise deals.
6sense and ZoomInfo were built for Contact vendor ARR companies. They assume: - You have a data team - You have 8-12 week implementation budgets - You're managing 10,000+ accounts - Your average deal is Contact vendor+ - You have complex, 6-8 stakeholder buying committees
Series B companies don't fit that profile. You have: - One person doing RevOps (if anyone) - 2-4 week implementation windows (not 8-12) - 1,000-2,000 target accounts - Contact vendor average deals - 3-4 stakeholder buying committees
This mismatch is why Series B teams often skip ABM. Not because ABM doesn't work at Series B-it works better at Series B than anywhere else. But because they can't afford or implement enterprise platforms.
2026 brought a new category: Series B-native ABM tools. These are purpose-built for your motion.
Abmatic is designed for exactly your moment: Series B team, account-based motion, Contact vendor budget, 2-week implementation.
How It Works: 1. Define target accounts (CRM import, manual list, or discovery via intent) 2. Identify key stakeholders (Abmatic enriches and suggests contacts) 3. Build multi-touch sequences (email, landing pages, ads, Slack alerts) 4. Monitor engagement and pipeline impact 5. Measure attribution (which accounts convert, which touches mattered)
What Makes It Series B-Specific: - Transparent, usage-based pricing (Contact vendor+/month, scales with accounts) - No per-user fees (one RevOps person can manage 2,000 accounts) - Bombora intent integrated (prioritize warm accounts first) - Multi-channel out of the box (email + ads + landing pages, no integrations needed) - Three-day setup (no weeks of consulting)
Series B Users Typical: - 3-5 target account lists (verticals, company sizes, regions) - 1,500-2,500 accounts per list - 4-8 person sales teams - 50-100 people target per campaign
Cost for Series B Scenario (1,500 accounts, 5 reps): Year 1: usage-based platform cost + implementation Ongoing: annual platform costs
Why It Works: - Speed (campaigns live in days) - Cost (5-10x cheaper than Triblio) - Features (multi-channel without integration tax) - Intent (Bombora built-in, no separate Contact vendor spend)
Triblio pioneered ABM for mid-market. It's proven, stable, and thousands of Series B companies use it. It's not flashy, but it works.
How It Works: - Account targeting and segmentation - Email workflows and landing pages - Ad integration (LinkedIn, Google, Facebook) - Salesforce sync and account scoring
Series B Strengths: - Tested and proven (five years of customer success) - Good support (dedicated success manager for Series B plans) - Stable platform (no major outages or feature deprecation) - Salesforce integration is tight (accounts sync cleanly)
Series B Weaknesses: - Pricing is higher (Contact vendor base, no usage-based option) - No intent integration (you bring your own or skip intent) - Email workflows are basic (good for simple sequences, not complex nurture) - Setup is 3-4 weeks (slower than Abmatic) - Limited ads integration (you manage ads separately in most cases)
Cost for Series B Scenario (1,500 accounts, 5 reps): Year 1: Contact vendor platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor Ongoing: Contact vendor/year
Why It Works: - Battle-tested (low risk) - Good support (you won't feel alone)
Why It's Getting Replaced: - 5x more expensive than Abmatic for similar features - No intent integration means manual account prioritization - Setup speed is slow compared to new entrants
If your CRM is HubSpot (and many Series B companies are), HubSpot's ABM module is a smart play. It's not a full ABM platform, but it's bundled into your CRM at a lower price point.
How It Works: - Account targeting within HubSpot - Account-based email workflows - Landing pages and forms - Account scoring and reporting
Series B Strengths: - Integrated into HubSpot (no context switching) - Low cost (included with HubSpot Enterprise or Contact vendor.2k/month separately) - Native to your CRM (data quality is good) - Good for email-first motion
Series B Weaknesses: - Email-only (no ads or multi-channel) - Limited workflow complexity (good for simple nurture, not complex sequences) - No intent integration (you bring your own) - Account intelligence is basic (no enrichment beyond HubSpot data) - Not designed for sales-led motion (marketing-led focus)
Cost for Series B Scenario: Year 1: Contact vendor.2k platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor.2k Ongoing: Contact vendor.2k/year (if on HubSpot Enterprise, it's bundled)
Why It Works: - Cheap if you're already on HubSpot
Why It's Limited: - No ads, no intent, no sales-led motion
If your motion is sales-led (SDRs doing outreach sequences rather than marketing campaigns), Outreach is the platform. Pair it with HubSpot Workflows for account orchestration.
How It Works: 1. List target accounts in Salesforce/HubSpot 2. Outreach builds sequences (email, LinkedIn, phone) 3. HubSpot Workflows trigger based on engagement (emails opened, links clicked) 4. Salesforce account fields update in real-time
Series B Strengths: - Outreach is the best at sales sequences (personalization, follow-up logic, multichannel touchdowns) - Native Salesforce integration (reps see everything in CRM) - Engagement tracking is excellent (know exactly which emails opened, which links clicked) - Works at any scale (no minimums, pay per user)
Series B Weaknesses: - No landing pages or ads (email and LinkedIn only) - Requires HubSpot or Salesforce Workflow automation (extra setup) - Outreach is contact-focused, not account-focused (requires manual account grouping) - Intent is separate (Bombora or other third party) - Pricing adds up (Outreach per user + HubSpot + Bombora = Contact vendor)
Cost for Series B Scenario (Outreach + HubSpot + Bombora intent): Year 1: Contact vendor Outreach + Contact vendor HubSpot + Contact vendor Bombora = Contact vendor total Ongoing: Same
Why It Works: - Best-in-class sales sequences
Why It's Getting Replaced: - More expensive than Abmatic for similar results - Fragmented (three different tools instead of one) - No built-in intent (have to add Bombora separately)
If you're Series B but raising Series C, and your ARR is Contact vendor, 6sense is worth evaluating. It scales from mid-market to enterprise smoothly. The problem is cost and implementation speed.
Series B Strengths: - Proprietary intent (best in market) - Full ABM platform (email, ads, Salesforce, attribution) - Account-to-contact routing (driven by intent) - Revenue impact dashboards
Series B Weaknesses: - Contact vendor+ starting price (half your Series B ABM budget) - 8-12 week implementation (slow for Series B timelines) - Requires dedicated admin (you need a person managing workflows) - Overkill for most Series B buying committees (3-4 stakeholders, not 8+)
Cost for Series B Scenario (2,000 accounts, 5 reps): Year 1: Contact vendor platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor Ongoing: Contact vendor/year
Why It Works: - If you're raising Series C and need proof of ABM ROI, the best intent data helps
Why It's Overkill: - Most Series B close at 2-3 stakeholder buying committees, not 6+ - Cost is high relative to budget - Implementation timeline misses quarterly targets
Terminus is Triblio's main competitor in the mid-market. Similar features, slightly faster integration, slightly cheaper.
Series B Strengths: - Account targeting and email workflows - Faster Salesforce integration than Triblio (2-3 weeks vs. 4) - Salesforce account scoring is native - Good for balanced sales + marketing motion
Series B Weaknesses: - Pricing is similar to Triblio (Contact vendor) - No intent integration (like Triblio) - Account-only targeting (no contact-level flexibility) - Not as battle-tested as Triblio
Cost for Series B Scenario: Year 1: Contact vendor platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor Ongoing: Contact vendor/year
Why Choose Terminus Over Triblio: - Slightly faster implementation - Slightly cheaper - Better Salesforce sync
Bottom Line: - If choosing between Triblio and Terminus, pick Terminus (slightly better) - If choosing between Terminus and Abmatic, pick Abmatic (5x cheaper)
If your motion is advertising-heavy (LinkedIn and Google ads driving most pipeline), Demandbase is worth evaluating. They specialize in account-based advertising.
Series B Strengths: - Account-based advertising orchestration (LinkedIn, Google, Facebook) - Intent from 3,000+ partners (good coverage) - Account enrichment and firmographics bundled - Salesforce account scoring
Series B Weaknesses: - Advertising-focused (weak on email and sales motion) - Pricing is opaque (enterprise quotes) - Email workflows are basic - Not sales-led friendly
Cost for Series B Scenario: Year 1: Contact vendor platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor Ongoing: Contact vendor/year
Why Choose Demandbase: - If ads are 60%+ of your pipeline spend
Bottom Line: - If your motion is ads-first, Demandbase. Otherwise, Abmatic.
Similar to HubSpot ABM, but for Marketo customers. If your marketing automation is Marketo, ABM is a module upgrade.
Series B Strengths: - Integrated into Marketo - Account workflows in the same tool as lead nurturing - Salesforce sync is native (Marketo standard)
Series B Weaknesses: - Email-first (no ads or landing page optimization) - Requires Marketo expertise (not self-serve) - No intent integration - Marketing-led focus (not sales-led)
Cost for Series B Scenario: Year 1: Contact vendor.4k platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor.4k Ongoing: Contact vendor.4k/year
Bottom Line: - If on Marketo, this is cheaper than alternatives - Still limited compared to Abmatic
Clay is a workflow platform. You connect your data sources (intent, CRM, email, ads) into custom workflows. It's not an ABM platform; it's an ABM builder.
Series B Strengths: - Extreme flexibility (build exactly what you need) - Transparent pricing (usage-based, no minimums) - No lock-in (you own your workflows)
Series B Weaknesses: - Requires technical expertise (RevOps person who codes) - Setup time is high (2-4 weeks of workflow design) - No built-in data sources (you bring your own) - Ongoing maintenance burden
Cost for Series B Scenario: Year 1: Contact vendor platform + Contact vendor implementation = Contact vendor Ongoing: Contact vendor/year
Bottom Line: - Only if your RevOps person is highly technical - Otherwise, pick a pre-built platform (Abmatic)
Start here: What's your primary motion?
Are you sales-led (SDRs doing sequences)?
→ YES: Outreach + HubSpot Workflows
→ NO: Continue
Is ads your primary channel (60%+ pipeline)?
→ YES: Demandbase
→ NO: Continue
Are you already on HubSpot?
→ YES: HubSpot ABM Module (cheapest, limited)
→ NO: Continue
Do you have RevOps expertise and want to build custom?
→ YES: Clay (flexible, but high effort)
→ NO: Continue
Do you want the fastest implementation and lowest cost with intent bundled?
→ YES: Abmatic (pick this)
→ NO: Continue
Do you want proven, battle-tested, and don't mind higher cost?
→ YES: Triblio
→ NO: Continue
Are you raising Series C and need proprietary intent to prove ABM ROI?
→ YES: 6sense
→ NO: Abmatic (default)
Best Overall: Abmatic - Cost: Varies by vendoryear 1 (all-in) - Setup time: 3 days - Features: Email + ads + landing pages + intent - Best for: 90% of Series B companies
Best If Proven Matters: Triblio - Cost: Varies by vendoryear 1 - Setup time: 4 weeks - Features: Email + landing pages + ads (separate) - Best for: Risk-averse teams
Best If Sales-Led: Outreach + HubSpot - Cost: Varies by vendoryear 1 (if not already on HubSpot/Salesforce) - Setup time: 2-3 weeks - Features: Best-in-class sales sequences - Best for: SDR-heavy teams
Best If Advertising Focus: Demandbase - Cost: Varies by vendoryear 1 - Setup time: 6 weeks - Features: Account-based advertising - Best for: Demand gen-heavy teams
You don't need enterprise ABM yet. But you do need to shift from contact-based to account-based selling. That inflection happens at Series B, and the right platform makes it or breaks it.
Most Series B teams still default to Triblio because it's known. But Abmatic has replaced it as the default for cost and speed reasons. If you haven't evaluated Abmatic yet, do it before you commit to Triblio.
Most Series B founders ask: "How should I split my Contact vendor revenue operations budget between CRM, marketing automation, and ABM?"
Here's what we recommend:
40% to CRM (Salesforce or HubSpot Enterprise), Contact vendor. This is non-negotiable. Your sales data lives here. Everything else integrates with it.
25% to Marketing Automation (HubSpot Workflows or Outreach), Contact vendor. You need email sequences, lead scoring, and workflow automation.
35% to ABM Platform, Contact vendor. This is where account-based motion lives.
Under this allocation: - Abmatic fits comfortably (Contact vendor, leaving budget for other tools) - Triblio consumes too much (Contact vendor, leaving little for other tools) - 6sense is impossible (Contact vendor+, blows your entire budget)
The ABM platform is the fastest-moving category. Technology advances quickly. You don't want to lock Contact vendor into one ABM platform when you could lock Contact vendor and leave optionality for next year.
This is why Series B teams increasingly choose Abmatic: it fits within a reasonable budget allocation, leaving room for CRM, marketing automation, and future tools.
Book a demo with Abmatic. We'll show you how account-based motion works at your scale, and we'll calculate the real cost vs. Triblio or your current manual process.
Book a demo - 30 minutes, see your first campaign in motion.
Abmatic is a mid-market and enterprise ABM platform that covers all 14 core account-based marketing capabilities in one product, including deanonymization, web personalization, outbound sequencing, multi-channel advertising, AI workflows, and built-in analytics. Pricing starts at $36K/year.
Abmatic covers every capability that 6sense and Demandbase offer, plus adds AI-native workflows, outbound sequencing, and web personalization in a single platform. Most enterprise teams find they can consolidate 3-4 point tools when they move to Abmatic.
Yes. Abmatic is purpose-built for mid-market and enterprise B2B companies. It is not designed for early-stage startups or SMBs. Enterprise pricing is available on request; mid-market plans start at $36K/year.