One of the most valuable insights in B2B marketing is knowing when a prospect is actually researching your solution. Are they actively looking right now? Are they in the early exploration phase or deep in evaluation? Are they comparing you to competitors?
For decades, B2B marketers had to guess. They'd run broad campaigns and wait to see who responded. Today, intent data has changed the game entirely. Intent data reveals which accounts and prospects are actively researching problems your solution solves, before they ever raise their hand or contact you.
This guide explains what intent data is, how it works, the different types available, and when and how to use it in your go-to-market strategy.
Intent data is information about the digital behaviors and research activities of prospects and accounts that indicate buying interest or problem awareness. It captures what people are searching for, what content they're consuming, what keywords they're using, and which solutions they're evaluating.
In simpler terms: intent data shows you when someone is in the market for a solution like yours, before they've contacted you or your competitors.
Intent signals include:
The power of intent data is timing. You reach out when someone is actually thinking about your problem, not when it's convenient for you to do outreach.
Intent data comes from three distinct sources, each with different characteristics and use cases.
First-party intent data is information you collect directly from prospects and customers on your own properties. It includes:
First-party intent data is the most reliable because it's directly attributed to known or identifiable users. If someone comes to your pricing page, downloads your ICP template, and watches a demo video, those are strong intent signals that they're actively considering your solution.
The limitation: first-party intent only captures behavior on your properties. You miss the research someone is doing on competitors' sites or independent review platforms.
Second-party intent data comes from partners and affiliated sources. Typically, this includes data shared through partnerships, integrations, or consortiums.
Examples:
Second-party data is useful because it comes from trusted sources and often covers relevant, high-intent audiences. However, it's typically limited in scale (only available from your specific partners) and availability (not every partner is willing or equipped to share data).
Third-party intent data comes from external data providers who track behavior across the broader internet. These providers use various methods to capture what accounts are researching:
Major third-party intent providers include Demandbase, 6sense, Bombora, and many others. Each has different data sources and methodologies, so coverage and accuracy can vary.
The advantage of third-party intent is scale and breadth. You can see research behavior across the entire internet, not just your properties. The limitation is accuracy. Not all signals are equally reliable, and data can be aggregated at the account level, not attributed to specific individuals.
Understanding how intent data is collected and aggregated helps you use it more effectively.
Intent providers collect raw signals through various means:
The raw signals themselves (a keyword search, a white paper download) aren't tied to a specific company. So intent providers use account identification technology to group signals by organization.
This typically works by matching IP addresses to companies, then aggregating all behavior from that company's IP range. Some providers also use email domain mapping, technographic data, and other identifiers to strengthen attribution.
This is why third-party intent data is often account-level rather than individual-level. You learn "TechCorp Inc. is researching demand generation platforms," but you might not know exactly which person at TechCorp searched for that term.
Not all intent signals are equally predictive of buying intent. Intent providers weight different signals based on historical data about which indicators actually correlate with purchases.
For example:
Providers typically don't publish their exact weighting algorithms, but good providers regularly validate their scoring against actual sales data.
Intent data is delivered to your systems through integrations with your CRM, marketing automation platform, or dedicated intent data hub. Some providers deliver signals in real-time (you're notified within minutes that an account has shown intent), while others batch and deliver daily or weekly.
Knowing intent data exists is one thing; using it effectively is another. Here's how to leverage it across your go-to-market:
Intent data helps you answer the fundamental question: "Who should my sales team call today?" Rather than a generic list of accounts sorted by company size or industry, you can prioritize accounts showing active intent.
This is particularly powerful for sales development representatives (SDRs) who historically spend time on cold outreach to accounts with no demonstrated interest. With intent data, they can focus on accounts that are already researching relevant solutions.
In account-based marketing, you need to decide which accounts to target with personalized campaigns. Intent data helps you validate those choices and discover new ones.
If you've identified your ideal customer profile but aren't sure which accounts fit, intent data can show you which companies matching that profile are actively researching problems you solve. This helps you move from a static ICP to dynamic, research-backed account selection.
Most B2B advertising platforms allow you to target accounts based on behavior and intent. LinkedIn, Google, and other platforms can layer in intent data to show your ads specifically to accounts showing active research interest.
This improves ad relevance and reduces wasted impressions on accounts with no current interest.
Intent data reveals what problems accounts are researching and what keywords and topics matter to them. Use this to:
When your sales team knows that an account they're targeting is actively researching a specific problem, they can reference that context in their outreach. Instead of a generic cold email, they can say: "I noticed you've been researching demand generation platforms. I thought you might find this perspective valuable..."
This dramatically improves response rates and conversation quality.
While third-party intent providers are useful, the most reliable intent data is first-party data you collect directly. Here's how to build a robust first-party intent data strategy:
Use analytics tools (GA4, Segment, etc.) and account-level tracking to monitor:
Whitepapers, templates, case studies, and guides behind forms give you both the intent signal (what they wanted to read) and the contact information (how to follow up).
Email opens, clicks, and the time lag between sends and opens tell you about engagement level. Someone who immediately opens every email from you shows stronger intent than someone who waits days or ignores them entirely.
If you have a freemium product or trial, product usage is one of the strongest intent signals. Feature usage, login frequency, and specific workflows activated all indicate engagement level.
For your key accounts, monitor news, earnings calls, press releases, and job postings. Personnel changes, acquisition announcements, and new initiatives all provide context that helps you understand their current priorities.
Intent data is powerful but imperfect. Understand its limitations:
Third-party intent is typically aggregated at the account or company level. You might not know which person at an account is doing the research, making personalization trickier. First-party intent, where you can track individual email addresses or account IDs, is more precise.
As browsers restrict third-party cookies and regulations like GDPR and CCPA limit data sharing, some intent data sources are becoming less reliable. First-party intent data is becoming increasingly valuable as a result.
An account researching your solution doesn't mean they're a good fit or have budget. Intent data shows research activity, not buying power. Layer it with firmographic data (company size, revenue, location) and first-party interactions to validate true opportunity.
Intent signals decay over time. An account researching your solution last week is more likely to be in market than one researching three months ago. Most intent providers provide recency information, but it's critical to act on intent signals quickly.
Most effective B2B marketing teams use a combination of intent data sources:
The goal is a 360-degree view of each account: what they're researching (intent), what they look like (firmographics), what they're using (technographics), and what they've done on your properties (first-party).
Intent data is most valuable for companies where:
Companies selling low-touch, high-volume SaaS products might find intent data less necessary. Companies selling enterprise software, consulting, or complex integrations almost always benefit from it.
If you're considering intent data, start here:
Intent data has fundamentally changed B2B selling. Rather than guessing who's interested, you can see who's actively researching solutions like yours. This enables more efficient sales processes, better targeting, and more relevant marketing.
The most successful B2B companies layer multiple intent sources (first-party, second-party, third-party) into a comprehensive account intelligence platform. They use intent to prioritize, personalize, and time their outreach perfectly.
If you're not using intent data in your go-to-market strategy today, your competitors likely are. It's become table stakes for B2B marketing in 2026.
See how Abmatic's intent-driven approach to ABM drives more demos and pipeline. Book a demo to learn how we integrate intent data across your entire go-to-market strategy.