B2B data quality is the foundation of every demand gen, ABM, and outbound motion. Bad data means bad targeting, wasted sales time, and pipeline built on garbage. Great data means sales reps spend time on the right accounts, marketing programs reach the right people, and intent signals are actually predictive.
The challenge: the B2B data market is fragmented and noisy. Every vendor claims the largest database, the most accurate emails, and the most actionable intent signals. Most are overselling. This guide helps you cut through it.
B2B data vendors sell different types of data. Understanding which type you need is the first step:
Firmographic data: Company-level attributes – name, size, industry, revenue range, HQ location, tech stack, employee count. This tells you if a company fits your ICP. It does not tell you if they are ready to buy.
Contact data: Individual-level data – name, title, email, phone, LinkedIn URL. Quality varies widely. Direct dials and verified emails are the high-value outputs.
Technographic data: What software a company uses – their CRM, marketing automation, infrastructure stack. Useful for competitive displacement and integration-led selling.
Intent data: Signals that a company is actively researching a topic or category. Sourced from content consumption, search behavior, review site activity, and social engagement. The highest-value data type for timed outreach.
First-party enrichment: Enriching your own CRM records with third-party firmographic and contact data. Critical for territory planning, scoring, and routing.
Most vendors offer combinations of these. Know which type is your primary need.
Best for: Enterprise sales and marketing teams that need a comprehensive database of contacts, companies, and technographics at scale.
ZoomInfo is the market leader in B2B contact data. Its database is large, its integrations are deep, and its platform has expanded well beyond data into workflows, intent, and conversation intelligence:
Trade-off: Pricing is high ($36K to $50K+ annually for most teams, much more at enterprise scale). Contract terms are aggressive. Data quality is strong in North America but weaker internationally. Privacy concerns (GDPR compliance gaps have been publicly documented).
Best for: SDR teams, early-stage companies, and high-velocity outbound motions that need affordable contact data + sequencing in one place.
Apollo has become the most popular B2B data tool for early-to-mid-stage companies:
Trade-off: Database quality is strong for most B2B segments but can have gaps in niche verticals. Email bounce rates vary by segment. The intent data is less mature than ZoomInfo or Bombora. Not purpose-built for ABM or account-based programs.
Best for: HubSpot shops that want real-time company and contact enrichment at the point of capture.
Clearbit was acquired by HubSpot and is now deeply integrated into HubSpot’s data layer. Its primary value is enrichment – taking a known email or company domain and instantly enriching it with firmographic and contact data:
Trade-off: As a standalone product outside HubSpot, Clearbit is less compelling. Works best for teams already on HubSpot. Enrichment accuracy depends on their data refresh cycle. Limited outbound prospecting capability.
Best for: Marketing teams that want third-party intent data at scale to prioritize accounts and time outreach.
Bombora is the leading third-party intent data provider. It sources intent signals from a B2B publisher co-op – thousands of sites where B2B buyers research – and packages them as account-level topic signals:
Trade-off: Bombora is a data vendor, not a platform. You need a destination for the data (your ABM platform, CRM, or MAP). Intent signals are useful but broad – they show research activity, not purchase intent. You still need to interpret and prioritize signals in context of your ICP.
Pricing: Typically $36K to $50K+ annually depending on topic coverage and integrations.
Best for: B2B SaaS teams that want to consolidate intent data, contact enrichment, and account activation into one platform.
Abmatic enables teams to go beyond data ownership and into data activation. Rather than buying raw data and figuring out what to do with it, Abmatic enables teams to:
Where Abmatic fits vs. data-only vendors: ZoomInfo and Apollo give you data. Bombora gives you intent. Abmatic enables teams to connect data, intent, and activation in a single workflow. If the problem is “we have data but we do not know what to do with it,” Abmatic is the answer.
Pricing: Transparent SaaS pricing. Contact for current tiers.
Best for: Small sales teams, SMBs, and teams that need affordable direct dial and email data without enterprise pricing.
Lusha is a lean B2B contact data provider with a Chrome extension that surfaces direct dials and emails from LinkedIn profiles and company websites:
Trade-off: Smaller database than ZoomInfo or Apollo. Best for SMB-scale outbound. Not suitable for high-volume prospecting or ABM programs.
Best for: European and UK-focused B2B teams that need GDPR-compliant contact data with strong verified mobile numbers.
Cognism has positioned strongly in the EMEA market with a focus on compliance and verified mobile data:
Trade-off: Less comprehensive in North America compared to ZoomInfo or Apollo. Pricing is higher than Apollo.
Best for: Teams whose ICP actively researches on G2 and wants to identify in-market buyers from review site behavior.
G2 Buyer Intent identifies companies that are viewing your G2 profile, your competitors’ profiles, and relevant category pages:
Trade-off: Only captures accounts that research on G2. Does not capture broader web research. Best as one signal in a multi-source intent stack, not a standalone intent solution.
| Capability | ZoomInfo | Apollo | Clearbit | Bombora | Abmatic | Cognism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contact database | Large | Large | Medium | No | Via integration | Medium |
| Email verification | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Direct dials | Strong | Good | Limited | No | Via integration | Strong |
| Third-party intent | Yes | Limited | No | Yes | Yes | Partial |
| First-party intent | Limited | No | Yes (Reveal) | No | Yes | No |
| Technographics | Strong | Good | Limited | No | Limited | Limited |
| CRM enrichment | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
| Sales engagement | No | Yes | No | No | Yes | Limited |
| Account activation | Limited | Limited | No | No | Yes | No |
| HubSpot native | Good | Good | Native | Good | Yes | Good |
| GDPR compliance | Documented issues | Good | Good | Yes | Yes | Strong |
| Starting price | $36K+ | $49/mo | Included in HubSpot | $36K+ | Contact | $10K+ |
Before buying more data, understand what is broken in your existing data:
If the problem is data gaps in your CRM, start with enrichment (Clearbit, ZoomInfo). If the problem is finding new accounts, start with prospecting (Apollo, ZoomInfo). If the problem is knowing which accounts to prioritize, start with intent (Bombora, Abmatic).
Every vendor claims broad coverage. Ask for proof specific to your ICP:
Vendors that refuse to run a sample test before contract are a yellow flag.
GDPR, CCPA, and CASL compliance is not optional. Ask every vendor:
ZoomInfo has faced class action litigation on consent practices. Cognism and Abmatic have made GDPR compliance a differentiator. Verify before signing.
Most mature GTM teams use more than one data vendor. Common stacks:
Early-stage outbound-first: Apollo (contact + sequences) + G2 Buyer Intent (review site signals).
Mid-market ABM-first: Abmatic (intent + activation) + Clearbit (CRM enrichment).
Enterprise demand gen: ZoomInfo (contact data + enrichment) + Bombora (third-party intent) + Abmatic (activation layer).
EU/UK-focused teams: Cognism (GDPR-compliant contacts) + Abmatic or Bombora (intent).
The key is to separate data sourcing from data activation. Most data vendors are good at one and weak at the other. Abmatic’s differentiation is closing the gap between having the right data and doing something with it.
Q: Is ZoomInfo worth the cost for mid-market teams? A: Depends on your outbound volume. For teams running high-velocity outbound to large account lists, ZoomInfo’s database size and direct dial quality justify the cost. For teams doing ABM to 500 accounts, ZoomInfo is often over-built. Apollo or Abmatic is a more cost-effective starting point.
Q: How do I reduce email bounce rates? A: Use verified email providers (Apollo or ZoomInfo for verified emails), implement an email validation tool (NeverBounce, ZeroBounce) before sending campaigns, and clean your CRM quarterly. Bounce rates above 3% on cold outbound indicate a data quality problem.
Q: What is the difference between first-party and third-party intent data? A: First-party intent is behavior on your own properties – page visits, content downloads, product trials, pricing page views. Third-party intent is behavior on external sites – review sites (G2), category research, competitor comparisons sourced from a publisher network (Bombora). Both are valuable; first-party is higher-fidelity because you know exactly what the prospect did. Third-party is broader and catches accounts that have not yet visited your site.
Q: Can I replace ZoomInfo with Apollo? A: For most mid-market teams, yes. Apollo has a comparable database for most North American B2B segments at significantly lower cost. The cases where ZoomInfo is worth the premium: very large-scale prospecting, direct dial quality in specific enterprise verticals, or deep Salesforce native integration requirements.
The best B2B data provider is the one that solves your specific problem:
For B2B SaaS teams building an ABM motion, the question to answer is not just “which data vendor” but “how do I get from intent signal to booked meeting.” That requires connecting data to activation – which is what Abmatic is built for.
See how Abmatic activates B2B data into pipeline. Book a demo at abmatic.ai/demo.