The playbook for marketers and RevOps leaders ready to find one partner who does it all.
You’ve been seeing a few vendors. Some are great in specific regions. Others fill certain gaps. A couple just… kind of showed up one day and never left.
But now? The spark’s gone, the bills are piling up, and it’s starting to feel like a situationship.
It’s time to define the relationship. This playbook is here to help you figure out which data provider deserves your long-term commitment - and which ones you need to politely ghost.
Managing multiple data vendors often leads to:
Consolidating can bring:
But only if you choose the right vendor to consolidate into.
Ask yourself:
Maybe. The only way to figure that out is by auditing how many vendors you’re currently using, where each is strongest, and how much overlap exists.
If multiple teams are using different tools for similar outcomes - or you’re seeing inconsistent data quality - it’s time to evaluate consolidation.
Look for signs like duplicate contacts, rising costs, or inconsistent CRM enrichment.
This is common - one provider might be strong in North America, another in EMEA, and a third might be best at enrichment.
In this case, consider whether one vendor can realistically replace the others without compromising key segments.
If not, a structured multi-vendor strategy may still be your best option - but it should be intentional, not accidental.
Not necessarily. The right vendor should be able to cover your most important regions, personas, and workflows at scale.
Ask for sample data across all your core segments and validate their ability to meet your needs before making the switch.
You can also negotiate flexible terms or tiered access for different teams if needed.
Cost reduction is a valid reason, but it shouldn’t be the only one. The best consolidation moves also simplify workflows, reduce admin effort, and improve data trust across teams.
Focus on total cost of ownership - not just vendor pricing, but also the time and headcount you spend maintaining and validating data across platforms.
Feature/Focus |
Regional Specialist Vendor |
Enrichment-Only Vendor |
Consolidation-Ready Vendor |
Regional Coverage |
✅ Strong in one market |
⚠️ Limited |
✅ Multi-region depth |
Persona Depth |
⚠️ Narrow focus |
✅ Deep by function |
✅ Broad + deep |
Data Quality |
✅ High in region |
✅ Very high |
✅ Consistently strong |
Volume Scalability |
⚠️ Limited outside region |
⚠️ Often N/A |
✅ Delivers at scale |
CRM & Tool Integration |
⚠️ Basic |
✅ Batch enrichment |
✅ Real-time + batch |
Support Model |
⚠️ Localised or minimal |
⚠️ Reactive only |
✅ Dedicated & centralised |
Pricing Flexibility |
⚠️ Rigid |
⚠️ Per enrichment/credit |
✅ Scalable & flexible |
Best For |
Deep localisation |
CRM enrichment/hygiene |
Full-scale GTM consolidation |
In a consolidation scenario, you’re looking to:
Core metrics to evaluate:
If you’re consolidating vendors, your evaluation must be broader and more strategic.
You’re not just comparing products - you’re assessing coverage, consistency, and consolidation readiness across all the regions, personas, and use cases your teams rely on.
Before you can consolidate, you need to understand what you’re working with.
Start by building a clear internal picture of:
📊 Pro tip:
Create a vendor matrix that maps each provider’s strengths and weaknesses by ICP dimension - region, persona, seniority, industry. This lets you visualise overlaps and blind spots at a glance.
To evaluate which vendor deserves to be your “source of truth,” you need objective, side-by-side testing. This is your reality check.
Run the same two tests with all current vendors:
Compare vendors on:
🧠 Bonus insight:
Get sales and marketing to sanity-check 25–50 records from each vendor. Their gut check often reveals problems no spreadsheet will.
Not every vendor is built to handle all use cases.
Your chosen vendor needs to do more than win the test - they need to be a viable long-term partner across multiple teams and territories.
Key areas to score:
Jeff Ignacio, Head of GTM Operations at Keystone AI, said:
"Consolidation only works if the winning vendor can meet everyone’s needs, not just one team’s. It’s not just about the best match rate - it’s about being the best fit for the business."
Let’s say you’re the Global RevOps Lead at a mid-to-enterprise SaaS company, supporting sales and marketing teams across multiple geographies.
Right now, your data stack looks like this:
This patchwork setup worked when your team was smaller. But now, you’re under pressure to:
You need to find out if one provider can cover your entire ICP without sacrificing either quality or scale.
Here’s what your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) looks like:
Your data provider needs to be able to reach these personas and deliver accurate, up-to-date contact info consistently across these territories.
Start by pulling a list of 750 known-good contacts from your CRM. These should include:
Why this matters:
This is your trust baseline. It allows you to test how well each vendor can enrich records that you already know are accurate.
Send the same test brief to each vendor, including the same known contact list and a request for net-new data.
Ask for:
Ensure each vendor tags the records by:
Why this matters:
You’re testing both sides of the equation - accuracy on known data, and coverage across your full ICP.
Build a side-by-side scorecard to compare performance across vendors.
Key metrics to track:
Metric |
What to Measure |
Why It Matters |
Known match rate |
% of CRM records that could be enriched |
Tests enrichment capacity |
Field fill rate |
% of contacts with complete email, phone, title, company data |
Tests usability |
Email bounce rate |
% of bounces in a test email send to net-new sample |
Tests deliverability and recency |
Mobile coverage |
% of net-new records with mobile/direct dial, especially for SDR-use personas |
Tests outreach potential |
Last verified/updated |
Presence and recency of this field |
Indicates data freshness |
Persona/region breakdown |
% of net-new records per geo and persona |
Reveals strength and blind spots |
Bonus tip:
Ask SDRs or marketing to sanity-check 50 contacts from each vendor.
Are job titles accurate? Would they reach out?
Are they your forever match – or just regionally compatible?
Now, take the test results and overlay them onto your existing ICP heatmap:
This heatmap view helps you quickly identify:
From here, you can make a data-backed decision on consolidation:
Adam Thompson, CPO at Cognism, said:
"You can’t consolidate based on gut. Test vendors side-by-side using the segments that matter. That’s the only way to avoid trading one blind spot for another."
When you’re exploring vendor consolidation, you’re not just buying data - you’re betting on one provider to replace the strengths of several.
That means your questions need to go beyond surface-level capabilities. You need to test breadth, consistency, and reliability across your entire go-to-market motion.
Use these questions to pressure-test whether a vendor can truly become your primary or sole data provider.
Most vendors are strong in certain territories or roles, but weak elsewhere.
If you’re consolidating, the replacement vendor must cover everything your business needs across personas, job levels, geographies, and industries.
Consolidation only works if your new vendor can sustain the flow of data you previously sourced from multiple places.
This question helps you understand delivery consistency, not just one-off volume.
Replacing multiple vendors often means you're consolidating spend as well as data.
A strong vendor will offer pricing that reflects the value of being your single source - and flexibility to scale with you.
When multiple teams rely on the same vendor, consistency matters.
Sales need mobile numbers, marketing needs clean titles and segmentation, and operations need CRM enrichment and deduplication.
Your vendor must deliver uniform, reliable data across all functions.
Antoine Cornet, Head of RevOps at Cognism, said:
"Don't just ask what they can do - ask what they'll replace. The best vendor wins more than just the deal - they earn the right to be your single source of truth."
When vendor consolidation is successful, it doesn’t just reduce cost - it improves how your GTM engine operates across sales, marketing, and RevOps.
The key outcomes?
Clean data, consistent processes, fewer tools to manage, and a confident, aligned team.
Here’s how to know if your consolidation strategy is working - and how to prove it.
KPI |
Why It Matters |
Target Benchmark |
Match rate (known data) |
Validates the new vendor’s enrichment quality using trusted CRM records. |
> 90% |
Fill rate (key fields) |
Measures completeness across enriched and net-new contacts (email, phone, title). |
> 85% |
Bounce rate (net-new) |
Critical for assessing the health and deliverability of the vendor’s database. |
< 3% |
Coverage (persona + geo) |
Tests whether the vendor can truly replace others in each of your target segments. |
✅ Full ICP coverage |
TCO reduction |
Consolidation should reduce overall spend and vendor management overhead. |
> 15–30% annual savings |
Admin effort |
Fewer vendors = less time spent cleaning, enriching, or troubleshooting data issues. |
Significant reduction in hours |
Rep/Marketing feedback |
If users trust and use the data, it’s a strong indicator of success. |
Positive sentiment + adoption |
If you want to go deeper and build a longer-term success narrative, include these additional metrics in your post-consolidation review:
Evaluate whether the vendor delivers consistent performance across all covered regions.
This is especially important if you previously relied on region-specific providers.
Consolidation should streamline lead handoff between marketing and sales, not create new friction.
With one vendor enriching your records, you should see cleaner, more consistent data across functions.
Antoine Cornet, Head of RevOps at Cognism, said:
"Consolidation success isn’t just cheaper - it’s smoother. Your CRM feels lighter. Sales asks fewer questions. Marketing launches faster. That’s when you know it worked."
If you’re consolidating providers:
With the right approach, consolidation isn’t just about saving money. It’s about strengthening your entire GTM engine.