From Data Science to Data Strategy

InsideView CEO Umberto Milletti offered three marketing themes for 2016.  The first two, Sales and Marketing Alignment and Data Driven Messaging and Targeting, have been well discussed over the past few years.  It has long been clear that sales and marketing need to work together and that data should be driving the marketing function.  The new idea for 2016 is the elevation of the data scientist into a strategic position in the company.  According to Milletti:

If 2015 was the year of the data scientist, then 2016 will be the year of the data strategist.

We’re in an explosion of sales and marketing technology, and every system relies on data. The more data you have, the more important your ability to update and sync that data becomes. Companies are consolidating systems and that is driving the need to implement a strategy for customer data that resides in multiple places. Otherwise, you get silos of customer information.

Good data strategy considers the flow of information, the accuracy of the data, and the consistency of the data. To do that well requires someone focused full-time on a company’s strategy for their data.

This is why the title “Chief Data Officer” seems to be more popular with search frequency trebling over the past three years on Google Trends:

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Google Trend for the search term “Chief Data Officer”

Data quality, an element of broader data strategy, is becoming increasingly important.  While the statement “garbage in garbage out” goes back decades, marketers long allowed their databases to go stale.  Many marketing databases are rife with out of date contacts, incomplete or inaccurate firmographics, and undeliverable addresses.  With predictive analytics and big data, the ability of these systems to provide insights is dependent upon the underlying data quality.  Data quality is also required for tying together historical data silos which have employed different standardization rules and identifiers.  Pulling together all these elements requires an enterprise owner of data strategy.

If your company isn’t ready for a broad data strategy, you should at least consider implementing data quality practices in your CRM and Marketing Automation platforms.  Several vendors including ReachForce and NetProspex are developing ongoing data quality solutions that synchronize data across multiple platforms.  These systems verify and standardize global address, validate emails and phones, manage duplicates, and enrich platforms with company firmographics.

Another important feature is web form verification which matches prospect records against their database and performs real-time validation of entered fields.  Not only is data validated at time of entry, but the number of required input fields can be reduced, resulting in a lower web form abandonment rate and higher ROI for your digital marketing investments.

NetProspex Workbench also offers Dun & Bradstreet linkage, D-U-N-S Numbers, emails, direct dials, and tech platform variables (products and vendors).

Although InsideView doesn’t offer lead verification tools (e.g. phone, address, email), it supports match and enrichment for a broader set of CRM and marketing automation platforms.

Keep in mind that data quality not only benefits your marketing though better targeting, segmentation, and lead scoring, but it also provides value to your sales function.  By infusing leads with broad firmographics and linkage, you are more likely to be passing actionable leads to your sales team and routing them to the correct sales reps.  Furthermore, when leads are mapped to sales intelligence platforms, reps can quickly qualify them and begin planning account messaging.

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The NetProspex Workbench Data HealthScan report provides a free PDF detailing pre and post enrichment field population rates, data error rates, and segmentation reports.

InsideView, NetProspex, and ReachForce are all cloud based solutions with low barriers to adoption.  They also include data health analyses, segmentation reports, and integrated prospecting as part of their feature set.  So even if you cannot implement a global data strategy across your enterprise, sales and marketing can begin by focusing on a solution which improves the quality of their leads, contacts, and accounts.

Quora Query: How is Insideview different from Unomy?

I was asked to answer a query on Quora about the differences between InsideView and Unomy.  I posted my response here as well.

Both services are going after the sales and marketing intelligence space, but InsideView has been around a lot longer and is better funded.  This means that the InsideView service provides a broader feature functionality set and has a higher revenue stream.  Unomy is the scrappy upstart looking to redefine the market.

I attached the company profiles for Nuance (US public company) to provide a perspective on how the systems differ (note: the InsideView UI has a pending refresh).  You will notice that InsideView is profile-centric while Unomy is list-centric and displays profile information in both tabular format for structured data and via a right sidebar for unstructured company intelligence:

InsideView Company Profile for Nuance.
InsideView Company Profile for Nuance.
Unomy Profile for Nuance
Unomy Company Profile for Nuance

Off the top of my head, here are the differences:

  1. InsideView is an aggregator of company content while Unomy is a data miner.  Aggregation provides deeper information on large public companies and major privates but often has little or no information on small companies.
  2. InsideView covers nearly twice as many companies (12M vs. 7M) as Unomy but a lot fewer execs (16M vs. 95M).  However, InsideView provides biographies and People Alerts (news mentions and Tweets).
  3. InsideView is focused on traditional sales company lookups and prospecting while Unomy has a spreadsheet-like orientation designed for flexible list building and team sharing.  Users can work through a list with the right sidebar providing greater detail.  Thus, they can view the same information sets about different companies (e.g. finance or social views) or research a single company at a time.
  4. InsideView offers a broad set of connectors for CRM and Marketing Automation platforms (SFDC, SAP, Oracle on Demand, NetSuite, Sugar, Marketo, Eloqua, etc.) while Unomy offers a Chrome connector.  InsideView also has a strategic partnership with Microsoft to natively embed their content and functionality within MS Dynamics.
  5. InsideView offers 18 sales triggers which are high precision email news alerts targeting specific topics at target companies.  They also have an online Activity Stream that allows users to filter the recent sales triggers by topic and Company.
  6. InsideView offers a relationship (six degrees tool) Tool.
  7. InsideView offers a Buzz Feed which consolidates company blogs, tweets, and Facebook posts into a single searchable view.  Unomy has a similar feature which includes more social statistics (e.g. Alexa and Comcast scores) but is not searchable.
  8. Unomy supports light SFA tools including comments, tags, status, key contacts, and comments.
  9. Both companies provide executives and firmographics.  InsideView also includes access to SEC filings, competitors, family trees, recent news, income statements, Simply Hired Jobs, and industry overviews.  Unomy includes website statistics, funding data, and Similar Companies.  Similar Companies include competitors and firms frequently mentioned alongside the original company.  This provides a broader set of peers than a competitors list and is available for more companies.  Unomy has legal and news content in development.
  10. Both companies provide list building.  InsideView is stronger on traditional firmographic and biographic screening.  They also leverage their sales triggers and Relationship Finder tools for screening.  Unomy has an advantage on less traditional screening variables such as social media, funding data, and website metrics.
  11. While both are freemium services, a single seat of InsideView costs $99 / month while a single seat of Unomy costs $199 / month.

In short, there are probably more differences than similarities.  The data models differ in both collection and presentation method.  Unomy is probably best suited for reps focused on smaller companies or VC/PE funded companies.  They probably also would have an edge for Martech and social marketing firms due to social media and website metrics. InsideView is better suited for reps with named accounts or territories where they target established companies (e.g. Rev>$5M).  InsideView would also have an advantage at firms looking to embed sales intelligence into their CRM and MAP workflows.


InsideView is one of the companies profiles in my 2015 Field Guide to Sales Intelligence Vendors.  Unomy is a candidate for the 2016 edition.

InsideView: Social Selling with a Refreshed UI

InsideView Profile of InsideView (old UI)
InsideView Profile of InsideView (old UI)

I have been holding off on writing my mini-profile of InsideView for a few weeks now.  They posted some teaser screenshots on their blog a few weeks ago, but the UI has yet to launch so you’ll get a mix of old and new UI shots in this overview.

InsideView was the first sales intelligence vendor to use the term “social selling” and created the Social Selling University site for training and promoting the use of social media in sales and marketing.

InsideView has been around since 2005 so offers a mature set of sales intelligence features in their InsideView for Sales product offering.  What distinguishes InsideView for Sales is their sales trigger functionality, relationship finder tool, and social media viewing tools.  They also support a broader set of partners than their competitors.  Not only do they offer connectors for the top CRMs, but they also support NetSuite and SugarCRM.  Last September, they launched a full service OpenAPI service and began to OEM their content in other sales and marketing services.  Finally, they have built marketing enrichment and update connectors for Marketo and Eloqua which help marketers match company and contact data from InsideView into their Marketing Automation platforms.

For a few years, their move into APIs and marketing services required them to put less emphasis on InsideView for Sales Intelligence development.  The good news is they are once again investing in their sales product.  Recent enhancements include an expansion of companies and contacts and a new UI for InsideView for Salesforce.

A refreshed InsideView for Sales UI is pending, but they have provided teaser screenshots and a video.

The Company Overview tab shifts from content and feature lists to an emphasis upon key workflows: Research & Qualify, Connect to Key Contacts, and Find the Right Message.

InsideView for Sales Company Profile (New UI)
InsideView for Sales Company Profile (New UI)

The new layout moves from a traditional tab driven design for company profiles to a mobile layout with icons placed on a left-hand toolbar.  The new design also provides a stacked report approach which allows for quick scrolling on touch enabled devices.

The stacked flow format raises in prominence some reports which were buried in the Other Tab of the old design: news, jobs, financials, and industry profile.

The People profile provides a biographic overview, executive news and tweets, and connections between the user and the executive.  Users can also link to the person’s social media profile, email him or her, synch the profile with CRM, and follow the person.  Following adds a company or person to InsideView’s email alerts.

InsideView for Sales People Profile (New UI)
InsideView for Sales People Profile (New UI)

A longstanding strength of InsideView is its social media tools.  A Buzz Tab provides a feed of company Twitter, blogs, and Facebook.  Users may even keyword search the feed.  Other social media tools include People Alerts which alert on Twitter posts; a who knows who relationship finder that imports relationships from LinkedIn and email; and social sharing of news and sales triggers.

The Build a List feature supports a broad set of variables including sales triggers, email presence, and social media link presence.  Both company and contact lists are supported.  Users may download records to Excel or upload them to their CRM.

While the service offers a set of eighteen high precision sales triggers (called Agents by InsideView), they are only available for thirty days.  The agents are displayed within company profiles, daily email alerts, and a filterable Activity Stream report.

InsideView Active Stream (Old UI)
InsideView Active Stream (Old UI)

InsideView aggregates its news and contacts from multiple vendors including Equifax, S&P Capital IQ, and Reuters.  Coverage spans 12 million global companies and 16 million people.  While these counts are below those of their competitors, they have doubled coverage this year and intend to add additional international profiles in 2016.

InsideView for Sales is reasonably priced at $99 per user per month or $999 per user per year.  Volume discounts are available for larger purchasers.  This price includes CRM connectors and mobile apps.  There are additional charges for their marketing data hygiene services.