

What’s the Most Effective Way to Get B2B Leads in 2026? Is Buying Leads Still Worth It?
Is Buying Leads Still Worth It in 2026?
As we wrap up another year of B2B sales and head into 2026, a lot of teams are asking the same question they asked last year. Is buying B2B leads still worth it? After watching hundreds of campaigns run this year, my honest opinion is that buying leads isn’t really the thing moving the needle anymore. But that doesn’t mean buying data is useless! It just means the way data creates value has changed.
Buying leads is easy, standing out is not
On paper, buying “verified” leads sounds pretty efficient.
In reality, the best prospects are already being contacted by 10 to 20 other vendors every week. By the time your message lands, you are just more noise in an inbox full of very similar offers.
The biggest problem with bought lists is not even data accuracy anymore, it’s lack of intent. You’re paying for overused contacts, people who are not actively buying, and names that come with zero context on where that company actually is in the market.
We actually see this play out all the time. A few of our own team members regularly get completely random sales emails to their work inboxes for tools that are not even remotely relevant to what they do. Every time it happens, the same reaction comes up internally.
Our contact details were clearly bought somewhere. There was no signal, no context, no reason to reach out other than the fact that an email address existed.
That is exactly what decision makers experience every day. When two companies run the same bought list, one might get a few replies and the other gets nothing at all. The difference is rarely the data itself. It is how intelligently the list is filtered, segmented, and tied to real buying intent before a single message is sent.
Cold outreach still works, but only if it’s human
Cold email is not dead. Lazy cold email is.
Generic messages like “We help companies grow” or “Hope you are well” get ignored in 2025.
What works now is:
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Clear relevance to the person’s role
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A problem they actively care about
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Signs of real research
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One simple outcome per message
This is exactly why tools like SaleSight exist. The difference between blasting emails and running a high performing campaign is knowing which companies are actually in a buying window, not just which ones exist in a database.
LinkedIn still converts when you create real conversations
LinkedIn remains one of the strongest B2B prospecting channels going into 2026, but only when it is used with intent.
The most effective outreach usually follows the same simple pattern. Someone shares a real problem they are dealing with. Someone else responds with a thoughtful, useful perspective. A conversation starts from there.
Cold connecting without context rarely leads anywhere.
Reaching out purely based on a job title or keyword match usually results in silence. But engaging with someone who is already talking about a problem you solve, and adding something relevant to that conversation, consistently performs better. The difference isn’t volume but actual relevance.
Deliverability is now part of every team’s growth strategy
One of the biggest reasons cold outreach struggles right now has nothing to do with messaging at all. It is technical. Domain setup, authentication, warm up, and sending volume now determine whether emails even reach real inboxes.
This is especially true for teams sending into Outlook and Microsoft 365 environments. Over the past year, Microsoft has tightened spam filtering aggressively. New sending domains get flagged faster. Sudden volume spikes get blocked faster. Even small misconfigurations in authentication can quietly destroy your deliverability without any obvious warning.
The most common issues we see are very basic but very expensive:
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SPF, DKIM, and DMARC not set up correctly
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Sending from a brand new domain with no warm up
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Ramping from zero to hundreds of emails per day in a few days
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Reusing the same inboxes across multiple campaigns
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High bounce rates from outdated or scraped data
When any one of those happens, Outlook starts filtering aggressively. Messages land in spam or quarantine, or do not get delivered at all. From the sender’s side, everything looks normal. Emails are “sent.” From the buyer’s side, nothing is ever seen.
What makes this worse is that most sales and marketing teams never realize this is the problem. They assume their copy is weak, their list is bad, or their offer is wrong. In reality, the campaign never had a chance to work because it was blocked at the infrastructure level.
As we move into 2026, deliverability is no longer optional setup work you do once and forget about. It is ongoing infrastructure that directly controls whether outreach even exists in the first place. Teams that treat it as a strategic layer consistently outperform teams that treat it as a technical afterthought.
If the email never reaches the inbox, nothing else in the campaign matters.
Targeting is still where most teams lose momentum.
Most targeting is still far too broad. “Marketing managers at SaaS companies” sounds specific, but in practice it groups together people with completely different responsibilities, buying power, budgets, and priorities.
A more useful target looks like this:
“Demand gen managers at 50 to 500 person B2B SaaS companies using HubSpot.” That level of detail immediately changes how you write, who you compete with, and what success looks like.
The narrower your targeting becomes, the easier everything else gets. Personalisation improves because you understand the context you are speaking into.
Competition drops because you are no longer competing with everyone at once. Conversion rates rise because messages feel relevant instead of generic. Less money is wasted on people who were never likely to buy in the first place.
The most consistent teams combine multiple channels.
The most reliable campaigns we see rarely rely on a single channel to do all the work. They typically blend cold email, LinkedIn, content, referrals, and events where relevant. Each channel plays a different role. Content builds trust over time. LinkedIn starts conversations. Cold email adds scale. Referrals accelerate deals. Events deepen relationships.
Single channel strategies tend to stall once saturation sets in or performance dips. Multi channel strategies compound because they meet buyers in different places, at different moments, with the same clear message. That is what makes momentum sustainable instead of fragile.
So, is buying valid leads still worth it as we move into 2026?
On its own, usually not.
As part of a tightly defined targeting strategy backed by real market intelligence, yes, for sure! The companies that will win in 2026 are not the ones sending the most messages. They are the ones who understand their market the best and speak to it with precision.

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