Signal-based selling replaced the static list. Instead of working accounts on a fixed cadence, teams now trigger outreach off buying signals: an intent surge, a job change, a funding round, a website visit. The method is sound. The problem is that most of the signals everyone runs on are weak, and a weak signal produces the same generic outreach that signal-based selling was supposed to fix.
Signal-based selling: which signals actually convert
Signal-based selling is only as good as the signal under it. Most signals are awareness-stage and inferred. The one that converts is evaluation-stage and verified: a named buyer engaging a named competitor.
What is signal-based selling?
Signal-based selling is prioritizing outreach around observable buying signals rather than a fixed account list. A signal is any event that suggests a buyer is in market. The discipline is real and it works, but its entire value depends on the quality of the signal: a great motion on a weak signal still reaches the wrong account at the wrong time with a generic message.
What are buying signals?
A buying signal is an observable action or event that suggests a person or company is moving toward a purchase. In B2B sales they range from light interest, like a website visit or a content download, to a clear in-market move, like requesting pricing or evaluating a vendor. The stronger the signal, the closer the buyer is to a decision, and the more a timely, specific reachout is worth.
Buying signals come in two grains. Company buying signals point at an account: hiring for a relevant role, funding, a leadership change, a new technology in the stack. Buyer-level, or customer, buying signals point at a person: a contact engaging your content, a champion changing jobs, or the strongest one, a named buyer engaging a competitor in an active evaluation.
B2B buying signal examples
The common buying signals, weakest to strongest:
- Topic intent surge: anonymous, account-level research on a theme. Early and noisy.
- Job change or new hire: a confirmed event, but weak intent on its own.
- Funding or expansion: budget exists, timing is a guess.
- Website visit or content download: interest, often anonymous.
- Pricing-page visit or demo request: strong, but only on accounts that already found you.
- Verified competitor evaluation: a named buyer accepted a reachout from a named competitor. A vendor decision is forming now. The latest, highest-intent signal before the deal.
How to identify buying signals
You identify buying signals by instrumenting the surfaces where buyers act and routing each event to the rep who owns the account. Most teams cover the easy ones: web analytics for visits, an intent vendor for topic surges, a job-change tracker for movers, the CRM for engagement. The gap is the signal that happens off your property, what your buyers do with your competitors. That one is invisible to your own stack, which is exactly why it is the most valuable to add and the hardest to fake.
How to respond to buying signals
Respond with speed and specificity, matched to the signal's strength. A weak, awareness-stage signal earns a light, relevant touch. A strong, evaluation-stage signal earns an immediate, named, multi-threaded play, because a decision is actively forming. The rule: the more verified and specific the signal, the more direct the response. A verified competitor evaluation tells you exactly who to reach and why, so the message is true about the buyer's real situation instead of a generic "saw you might be exploring solutions."
The signal hierarchy: two axes that decide quality
Rank any buying signal on two axes, and the good ones separate fast:
- Funnel stage: awareness (might care someday) vs evaluation (choosing a vendor now). Later is better.
- Certainty: inferred and probabilistic vs verified and confirmed. Confirmed is better.
| Signal | Stage | Certainty | Names the competitor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Intent topic surge | Awareness | Inferred | No |
| Job change | Awareness | Confirmed event, weak intent | No |
| Funding / hiring / news | Awareness | Inferred | No |
| Website visit | Interest | Partial | No |
| Verified competitor evaluation | Evaluation | Verified | Yes |
Almost every signal the market sells sits in the top rows: awareness-stage, inferred, and silent about the competitor. One signal sits in the bottom row alone.
The highest-intent signal: a verified competitor evaluation
The strongest signal-based play runs on a confirmed event: a named buyer at one of your accounts accepted a reachout from a named competitor. That is evaluation-stage, because a vendor decision is actively forming. It is verified, because it is an event, not a probability. And it names the rival, which no intent feed does. A rep working that signal knows exactly who to reach and what is actually happening, so the message is specific and true instead of a generic "noticed you might be exploring solutions."
This is what Deal Intelligence supplies: verified competitor activity, the evaluation-stage signal, delivered into Clay, Claude, your CRM, and Slack. For how it compares to inferred intent, see intent data vs verified competitor activity and how Deal Intelligence compares.
How to act on the signal
An evaluation-stage signal maps cleanly to a play, because you know the deal stage from the signal itself:
- No open deal yet: a buyer evaluating a competitor you are not in. Reach them before the shortlist closes.
- Open deal: a competitor is now in it. Change the plan while you still can.
- Closed-lost: the competitor that won re-engages. A real reason to reopen.
- Renewal: a competitor is working your customer. Protect it before it slips.
That is the difference between a signal you score and a signal you can act on: the verified competitor evaluation tells you the play, not just the account.