New Business Agency, Telemarketing Agency, Lead Generation Company, New Business Development Agency, Lead Generation Agency
 
Home   About   Services   Examples   Contact   FAQ   Blog  
 
Friday, October 20, 2006


I've started playing around with Spoke recently which, since this summer, has now opened up access for free.

Last time I looked a while back I decided not to join as it appeared to be predominantly US focused and I couldn't justify the monthly fee (when compared to the access I was getting via LinkedIn).

[BTW, it's still very US focused as you can't search for contacts by country, although there are non-US contacts & companies on Spoke)

So, how is Spoke different?

At a first glance, it's obviously set-up more for sales & marketing people than LinkedIn. It allows you to search it's full database of 30 million contacts (which makes it nearly 4 times the size of LinkedIn) and you can save searches and set up alerts (which is something that would greatly improve LinkedIn).

The main difference, however, is how it generates it's data.

This article, "Spoke frees up its database", explains this in more detail.

Until now, Spoke has created its database by scouring the web, using third-party providers, as well as asking its members to share their address book contacts. You could think of it as a cross between LinkedIn & ZoomInfo, I guess.

But, as the article points out, "Any kind of database becomes practically worthless if you don’t know whether an entry is accurate or not. Even if 10 percent of it is wrong, you can’t trust it."

To me, this is always the main issue.

All these tools, LinkedIn, Spoke, etc are just the starting point of any names sourcing or business development research. When you're tracking people within companies, guess what, they move about. It's about finding an appropriate entry point.

Sure, if you're after anyone in the C-suite, then just pulling up the website will normally do it. But if you want specific role-holders then you need to get digging.

It's like I pointed out in my post "Drive-thru or counter?", sometimes it's easier just to pick up the phone.

This was illustrated the other day when a colleague emailed me and said he was trying to get hold of a senior budget holder within a major UK retailer. He said he'd searched everywhere and couldn't track down a name.

I just picked up the phone, called their Head Office, got through to the right department and asked. Sometime the simplest route really does work.

It would be nice to think that we can sit at our computers and do everything by searching & emailing (and sometimes that does work). But then you're just limiting your options.

Labels: ,

Posted by: David Regler @ 8:46 AM |   |  Links to this post  


0 Comments:

Post a Comment

Links to this post:

Create a Link

<< Home



If you are considering New Business Development Agencies, Lead Generation Companies & Telemarketing Agencies, download our free report - 7 Critical Success Factors for New Business Development: What every business should know before starting a lead generation campaign.

Subscribe to our blog

Why I'm not a "telemarketer" (part 2)
What shape is your sales network?
How much is a meeting worth anyway?
Could I be the next Dragon?
Hitting the Cold-Calling Wall
Why I'm not a "telemarketer"
Email vs Cold Calling (Part 2)
Quality vs Quantity: comparing telesales freelance...
Being the Go-to-Guy
Avoiding the Human SPAM Filter

November 2005
December 2005
January 2006
February 2006
March 2006
April 2006
May 2006
June 2006
July 2006
August 2006
September 2006
October 2006
November 2006
December 2006
January 2007
February 2007
March 2007
April 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
November 2007
December 2007
January 2008
February 2008
March 2008
April 2008
May 2008
June 2008
July 2008
September 2008
October 2008

Powered by Blogger





New Business Agency | Appointment Setting Services | New Business Development | Telemarketing Services |
Telemarketing Agency | Sales Lead Generation | Lead Generation Company | Lead Generation Agency |
Telemarketing Company | Sales Outsourcing | Business Development Outsourcing |

Site Map

Website design by ELATED© ELATED.com 2003.
All content © Maine Associates Ltd 2005 All rights reserved. Read our
privacy policy