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B2B Prospecting Reference

skills/prospecting/references/b2b-prospecting.md

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B2B Prospecting Reference

For when the user sells to non-SaaS B2B — services, agencies, manufacturers, mid-market and enterprise companies, professional services firms.


ICP Signals That Matter (B2B branch)

Firmographic signals

  • Industry / vertical — NAICS or SIC codes if precision matters
  • Company size — headcount band, revenue band, location count
  • Geography — relevant for time zones, regulations, on-site requirements
  • Business model — service vs product vs distribution; B2B vs B2B2C
  • Ownership — independent, PE-backed, public, family-owned — affects buying motion

Buying signals

  • Trigger events: new C-level hire, recent acquisition or divestiture, IPO/funding, opening a new location, recent rebrand, expansion announcement
  • Vendor signals: posting RFPs publicly, switching costs in last quarterly report, contract renewal windows
  • Operational signals: recent layoffs (cost pressure) or rapid hiring (capacity pressure)
  • News mentions: launching new initiative, entering new market, regulatory change forcing action
  • PR / press: anything that signals "this company is changing right now"

Decay signals

  • Multiple bankruptcies or PE-stripped operations
  • Negative growth + cost-cutting headlines
  • Ownership stagnation (small family-owned, no growth incentive)
  • Buyer turnover (3+ Marketing Directors in 2 years)

Discovery Sources (B2B branch)

Tier 1 — primary discovery

  • Apollo: best general B2B firmographic + contact discovery
  • ZoomInfo: enterprise B2B + intent signals (mid-market+)
  • LinkedIn Sales Navigator: industry + role + signal search; the gold standard for decision-maker mapping (manual)
  • Clay: when you need custom waterfall lookups (e.g., enrich Apollo records with Hunter + Clearbit)

Tier 2 — industry-specific directories

  • Crunchbase / Pitchbook: funded businesses
  • D&B Hoovers: large traditional B2B firmographics
  • State / national business registries: for verified incorporation data
  • Industry association membership rosters: trade groups often publish member lists
  • Trade show exhibitor lists: signals active participation in a vertical
  • Procurement databases (Procore for construction, e.g.): vertical-specific signals

Tier 3 — trigger event monitoring

  • Google Alerts / Feedly: trigger keywords ("acquired," "hires," "expansion," "raises," "announces")
  • PR Newswire / Business Wire: company-controlled announcements
  • SEC filings (public companies): material change disclosures
  • State filings: new entity formation, dissolution

Qualification Checklist (B2B branch)

  • Industry / vertical matches ICP (use a recognized classification if possible)
  • Company size within range (employees or revenue)
  • Geography fits
  • At least one trigger event in last 90–180 days
  • Decision-maker role exists (CEO, COO, VP Operations, Director of X — match buyer profile)
  • Email contact verifiable (named role > info@ catchall)
  • Source URLs captured for firmographic claims
  • No disqualifiers (closed, acquired-paused, multi-bankrupt, off-ICP)

Output Columns (B2B branch)

Recommended CSV columns:

csv
score,company,domain,industry,naics_code,size_band,revenue_band,country,city,trigger_event,trigger_date,contact_name,contact_title,contact_email,email_status,linkedin_url,source_urls,why_prospect,confidence,verified_date,notes

For chat table, condense to: Score | Company | Industry | Size | Trigger | Contact | Email status | Confidence.


Top Outreach Targets Selection (B2B)

Prioritize for the top 3–5 hot leads:

  1. Trigger event recency — 30 days beats 6 months
  2. Trigger event specificity — new CMO hire in your buyer's role beats "company in the news"
  3. Decision-maker access — named contact with verified email + LinkedIn beats role-only
  4. Vertical fit precision — exact NAICS match beats "adjacent industry"

Each top target rationale names the trigger and decision-maker: "Hired new VP of Marketing 14 days ago; verified email; mid-market manufacturer matching ICP."


Common Mistakes (B2B)

  1. Treating B2B like SaaS — funding rounds matter less; PE ownership and acquisition activity matter more.
  2. Trying to verify private company revenue precisely — most public databases approximate. Use size bands, not point estimates.
  3. Ignoring procurement complexity at enterprise scale — your prospect contact list may not include the actual approver.
  4. Cold-emailing executive assistants — they're not the buyer and they will flag your outreach as spam.
  5. Source URL hygiene — without source lineage, you can't defend a contact under GDPR DSAR or CAN-SPAM challenge.
  6. Stopping at one source — Apollo can be 60% accurate on small businesses. Cross-verify with LinkedIn or the business website.