Updated: 16 minutes ago

Ok – so something of a rant here. I’ve been in data “hell” for a few weeks – ever since we contracted with Adapt, purchased some new data from them and then found that despite their validation claims, their data polluted our marketing data to the point we got flagged by our email provider – fabulous. Having dived into this, what have I found? Nothing good. We appear to have systemic poor standards and corruption in (what I see) as the entire data market. This would explain the rise of multi-source tools like Clay? Got any opinions on this? Let me know and in the meantime , read on.
We live in an age where the tools for B2B marketing and sales have never been sharper—AI-powered enrichment, intent-data platforms, predictive scoring engines, slick CRMs. You’d think this combo of tech prowess and data ambition would deliver richer, more accurate company and contact datasets than ever. Instead… something broke. And it’s not the tech. It’s the data.
The paradox of progress
Marketers today roll out campaign stacks that would have been sci-fi five years ago. But when you actually dig into the lists feeding those tools, the fundamentals are crumbling. Job titles are outdated. Companies have inflated or deflated headcounts. Contacts bounce or never existed. And worst of all, the vendors promising “95% accuracy” are still basing segmentation on the same shaky foundations.
Here are the facts:
Nearly half of marketing data used for decision-making is incomplete, inaccurate or out-of-date.
Industry benchmarks suggest B2B contact data decays by around 2.1% per month, or roughly 25% a year in many cases.
A typical marketer believes 25% or more of their database is inaccurate; one survey found 60% don’t trust the health of their data.
So while the tools got smarter, the underlying records didn’t—and in many cases, they got worse.
Root cause #1: Self-reported firmographics (and the incentives to fib)
A lot of the trouble starts with the simplest assumptions: that the company size, industry, revenue and headcount numbers you use to filter accounts are actual facts. In reality, they’re often marketing narratives. Think of it:
A company rounding up its headcount to look more credible.
An executive maintaining a LinkedIn profile even after they’ve left.
A directory scraping numbers without checking if those figures still hold.
When you use filters like “200–1,000 employees, $50–250M revenue, North America”, you assume those numbers are accurate. But many are based on self-reported or loosely gathered data. That means you’re already segmenting on guesswork. Add hybrid/remote workforce changes and more frequent restructures, and the error margin grows.
Root cause #2: Cheap offshore enrichment (lazy at scale)
Data vendors have had their own cost-pressure problem. To deliver millions of records cheaply, many rely on low-cost offshore teams tasked with scraping, verifying and populating fields. Under time pressure and volume quota, the temptation to shortcut looms large: guessing seniority, copying job titles verbatim, catching phone numbers that aren’t checked, submitting email addresses with minimal verification.
At small volumes, you might catch the errors. But at enterprise scale? You're drowning in junk. Thousands of contacts get flushed into your campaigns. Many bounce, some were never relevant, and your sales team wastes hours chasing ghosts.
Root cause #3: Dirty data circulating in an echo chamber
Think of the B2B data ecosystem as a big muddy pond. Even if one vendor tried to clean it up, the neighbors just pump the same water back through a different filter. Many vendors and enrichment platforms buy from each other, license the same public registries, and apply AI models trained on their own imperfect data. That means a wrong title or bad phone number doesn’t disappear — it gets recycled, re-labelled as “verified,” and sold as “premium.” Many practitioners report that all the big vendors feel like they’re pitching the same contacts under different branding.
What’s worse: your AI scorecard might be brilliant, but it's scoring data that’s fundamentally flawed. So yes—“smarter AI” makes faster decisions, but it doesn’t make the data any better.
The acceleration factors: Why it feels worse now
Several trends have made the decay problem worse:
Job mobility is higher than ever. Emails and roles change frequently. Some analyses show business email bounce rates edging above 3.5% per month.
Remote/hybrid work blurs the line between full-time employee, contractor, affiliate; the definition of “company headcount” is fuzzy.
Budget and attention pressures mean companies invest in shiny campaign tech but leave cleaning and stewardship underfunded.
AI hype drives more automation, which amplifies scale rather than accuracy. The faster you operate, the faster you mis-operate when the base data is broken.
Everyone’s in denial, scared of losing their jobs, and pointing fingers at everyone and everything else for poor marketing yields.
Why this matters: Reach, relevance and reporting all take the hit
If you’re playing in the game of marketing-to-sales with bad data, the consequences ripple across everything:
Reach suffers. Invalid emails, incorrect domains, wrong LinkedIn handles—you’re chasing shadows.
Relevance suffers. You think you’re talking to an “IT Director at 500-employee SaaS firm,” but you’re actually reaching a consultant in a 50-person firm. Segmentation falls apart.
Reporting suffers. Since your funnel inputs are dubious, forecasts, ROI, attribution—all become unreliable.
In other words: your big tech stack might deliver the dashboards, but the numbers they display are built on mud. Your sales team loses faith, marketing looks like it’s under-performing, and you spend more to get less.
A better approach: Fix the foundation instead of buying more tech
Here’s what you can do—and by “you,” I mean you, the sales/marketing/RevOps professional who’s sick of junk data.
Build smaller, fresher target lists
Less is more. Focus on tighter, better-defined universes. Refresh them often. One small accurate list beats a million garbage records.
Treat third-party data as a hypothesis, not truth
Use it as a starting point. Then layer on your own verification—behavioural signals, direct contact, validation calls, sales feedback.
Invest in data hygiene as a discipline
Clean up bounce rates. De-duplicate records. Assign ownership—RevOps or a dedicated data steward.
Close the loop between sales and marketing
If a contact is wrong, make the “mark bad data” action one click for sales. Feed it back to your data provider. Negotiate a deal with the vendor where you get replacement data, money back being as you're acting as their QA resource! Make accountability real.
Ask better questions of your vendors
Don’t just ask “how many records do you have?” Ask “how do you source them?”, “how often do you verify?”, “how do you treat role changes, company dissolutions, remote shifts?” Maybe a waste of time - as we've said, the truth is in short supply generally these days, but specifically in this business it seems.
Avoid Offshore entanglements
Hard to do these days, maybe impossible in this business, but if the price looks "too good to be true" it probably is!
Conclusion – It’s not a tech problem. It’s an honesty problem
The root issue in B2B marketing data isn’t that the tools are broken. It’s that we scaled the wrong behaviors: we assumed self-reported numbers were correct, we rewarded volume over accuracy, we recycled bad records and slapped “verified” labels on them. We automated the propagation of mediocrity.
If you want real improvement, it’s not about buying a new platform. It’s about changing your attitude toward data. Treat it as an asset. Treat cleaning as a process. Treat verification as non-negotiable. Until then, “data-driven marketing” is just a sophisticated way of being confidently wrong.
If you like this, I can pull together a slide deck too (you know you’ll want one) and a condensed version for a LinkedIn post.



