{

  "@context": "https://schema.org",

  "@type": "FAQPage",

  "mainEntity": [

    {

      "@type": "Question",

      "name": "What data do AI sales agents need to write better cold emails?",

      "acceptedAnswer": {

        "@type": "Answer",

        "text": "The most impactful input is second-party data — information about how the prospect relates to your partner ecosystem, specifically which integration tools they already use that connect to your network. As a sales leader, the quickest way to assess this is to look at your team's brief and ask: is any of this information exclusive to us, or could a competitor build the same brief from an enrichment vendor?"

      }

    },

    {

      "@type": "Question",

      "name": "What signals should an AI SDR use to personalize a cold email?",

      "acceptedAnswer": {

        "@type": "Answer",

        "text": "Prioritize in this order: second-party signals (integration network overlap — only you have this), first-party signals (prior engagement — confirms interest, warms the opener), third-party signals (growth, job changes, intent — useful context but shared with competitors). Most teams have the sequence backwards. Leading with commodity data and wondering why the emails feel generic is the predictable result."

      }

    },

    {

      "@type": "Question",

      "name": "What context does an AI agent need to send a relevant cold email?",

      "acceptedAnswer": {

        "@type": "Answer",

        "text": "The agent needs to know how the prospect relates to your ecosystem — not just who they are. For a sales leader evaluating this: does the brief tell the AI anything only your company knows? If everything in the brief could be assembled by a competitor from the same enrichment vendors, the email it produces will be indistinguishable from a competitor's."

      }

    },

    {

      "@type": "Question",

      "name": "How do I know if my team's AI outbound brief is good?",

      "acceptedAnswer": {

        "@type": "Answer",

        "text": "Ask one question for each field in the brief: could a competitor access this data from the same source? If the answer is yes across the board, the brief is built entirely from commodity data. A brief worth approving includes at least one input that is exclusive to your company — specifically, second-party data from your partner ecosystem that no enrichment vendor sells."

      }

    },

    {

      "@type": "Question",

      "name": "Why is AI outbound personalization stuck at surface level?",

      "acceptedAnswer": {

        "@type": "Answer",

        "text": "Because most teams have invested in making third-party data more comprehensive, rather than adding a different data category. This shows up as increasingly sophisticated emails that still feel generic to the recipient — because the argument is built from information every competitor also has. The fix is not a better tool. It is a different input: second-party data from your partner ecosystem."

      }

    }

  ]

}

The Nearbound Guide
The Nearbound Sales Blueprint
Drive Tech Partner Attribution through Productization
Nearbound Podcast #126: Having the Right Conversations with the Right People
Nearbound Marketing #29: 3 Ways to Market with Your Community Members
Howdy Partners #48: First 8 Months as a Channel Account Manager
Nearbound Daily #136: How to get intel from partners
Nearbound Podcast #125: How Partnerships Build Unshakable Brands
How to Talk to Your CEO About the Ecosystem
Nearbound Daily #133: The long way home
Nearbound Marketing #28: 4 Steps to Execute Survey Co-Marketing
Friends With Benefits #12: Leading with Empathy
EcoOps Framework–Understanding the Partner Operations Big Picture
Do You Know Your Public and Private Ecosystems?
Maureen Little: Building Influence to Drive Impact | Supernode 2023
Nearbound Marketing #27: Activating the Hidden Evangelists Within Your Company
Howdy Partners #47: How to Use Intel, Intro, and Influence to Grow Your Pipeline
Friends With Benefits #11: The Benefits of Community
Nearbound marketing: A trust-driven path in the Who Economy
Nearbound Daily #126: B2B SOS
Nearbound Podcast #123: TrustRadius CEO’s Shocking Take on “4.7 Star Syndrome” & Building Trust
Nearbound Daily #124: The 80/20 principle still stands
Mindmatrix: A Deeply Human Approach to an Increasingly Complex World
Howdy Partners #45: The Journey to Partnership Success
Friends With Benefits #10: Trust Isn’t One Dimensional
Nearbound Daily #119: Don't complicate partnerships
Expanding to a New Persona or Market? Your Partners Can Help You Dive in with Grace
Nearbound Marketing #25: Go Past the 1st Date with Marketing Partners
Nearbound Daily #117: Start tracking impact
Friends With Benefits #09: Building Trust and Adding Value in the B2B Landscape
Better together–Reveal and Reachdesk
Preparing for your nearbound pitch
Nearbound Daily #116: All games get gamed
Nearbound Podcast #121: It’s Math, Not Magic — Why Partner Attach is King
Airmeet Leads the Way on Event-Led Growth via Nearbound
Nearbound Daily #113: It's about more than money
Nearbound Marketing #24: How Partners Made This Event Series More Efficient
Nearbound Daily #112: What's the difference 🤨 channel, partnerships, nearbound
3 Nearbound Use Cases You’ve Never Thought Of
Howdy Partners #44: Setting Up Your Affiliate Program for Success
Friends With Benefits #07: Divorce Avoidance: Your Guide To Healthy Partnerships
Nearbound Daily #110: It isn't rocket science
Nearbound Podcast #120: WTF Is Happening In B2B Sales Right Now?!
Nearbound Daily #109: Authentic intention, the new AI
Nearbound Daily #108: 4 questions to WOW your partners
Nearbound Marketing #23: The 4 Missing Pieces of Your Employee Evangelism Program
Howdy Partners #43: Approaching Strategic Partnerships
Friends with Benefits #35 - Beyond the Microphone: Trust, Values & Engaging Listeners in Podcasting
Nearbound ABM strategy: Winning the attention of high-value accounts
Nearbound Daily #105: It's not about the funnel
How Pigment Increased Win Rates 5-10% with a Nearbound Overlay & Reveal
Nearbound Podcast #119: The Power of Nearbound
Nearbound Weekend 07/08: What is nearbound?
Howdy Partners #42: Success or Sales? Making Your First Partner Hire
Friends With Benefits #06: If Henry Ford Announced The Model-T Today
Nearbound Daily #099: Nearbound FTW
Nearbound Daily #097: Start giving to new partners
Nearbound Weekend 07/01: Where do you start with partnerships?
Nearbound Marketing #21: Going-To-Market Through Community
Nearbound Daily #095: Let's demystify nearbound
Howdy Partners #41: Key Tips for Leveraging Influencers
Friends With Benefits #04: Everybody Wins If The Customer Succeeds
Nearbound Daily #094: Gain intel, intros, and influence
Nearbound Daily #093: Don't underestimate the fun factor
Nearbound Podcast #117: Channel, Nearbound, and Platform
Nearbound Daily #092: Never go solo
Head of Ecosystems and Partnerships: Driving Business Transformation and Core Outcomes
Hit the Ground Running in Tech Partnerships (Plus: a 30-60-90 Template For New Hires)
Nearbound Daily #091: Try this partnerships hack
Nearbound Weekend 06/24: The early mover advantage
Nearbound Marketing #20: 3 Ways to Market with Creators in Your Niche
Nearbound Daily #090: A path to the promised land
Howdy Partners #40: Strengthening The Foundation
Prerequisites for Monetizing B2B SaaS Tech Partnerships
Nearbound Daily #088: Make partnerships stupid simple
How to Communicate Effectively With Your Sales Team About Partnerships
Nearbound Marketing #19: The Relationship Focus Most Marketers Are Missing
Friends With Benefits #03:Think Different
Howdy Partners #4: Partner Recruitment
Nearbound Daily #083: A bigger magnet won't cut it
Nearbound Podcast #115: From Go-To-Market To Go-To-Network
Nearbound Daily #081: The promise of partnership automation
Neabound Marketing #29: The 5 Phases of Nearbound Marketing (& Why You Need to Start Now)
Nearbound Daily #079: Steal this nearbound partner play
Forrester Predicts Ecosystem to Replace Channel and More
Nearbound Podcast #114: Increase Partner Engagement & Grow Partner Pipeline by 26%
Nearbound Daily #077: Buy-in guaranteed
How Gainsight Leverages Partner Ecosystems to Supercharge Customer Success
Nearbound Weekend 06/03: The promise of partnerships
Nearbound Marketing #17: Forget Employee Advocacy (Do This Instead)
Nearbound Daily #075: Trust is the only way
Best Practices for Sourcing Ecosystem Qualified Leads | Connector Summit 2022
The Partner Experience Weekly: Finding Balance as a Creator (Pivot!)
Co-Sell Orchestration: The Ultimate RevOps Solution
Nearbound Sales #17: Beat Your Company's Drum
Nearbound Podcast #113: The Four Lenses of Measuring Partner Impact
Nearbound Daily #072: It's all about trust
Nearbound Weekend 05/27: Make better decisions
Howdy Partners #34: Realistic Priority Setting
Nearbound Daily #069: Partnerships ecosystem > your GTM strategy
Ecosystem-Led Sales: Deals and Revenue

What Data Should I Feed My AI Outbound Agent?

by
Andrea Vallejo
SHARE THIS

A sales leader's guide to AI outbound: why flat reply rates trace back to the brief, not the tool — and the one data type that changes everything.

by
Andrea Vallejo
SHARE THIS

In this article

Join the movement

Subscribe to ELG Insider to get the latest content delivered to your inbox weekly.

Last updated: April 2026

This is a guide for sales leaders who are responsible for the results of an AI outbound program, not just the people running it. 

It covers the right question to ask your team when reply rates are flat, the three data types that determine whether a brief will produce generic or exclusive emails, and how to evaluate the difference between a brief worth approving and one worth sending back.

What is the question most sales leaders aren't asking?

When AI outbound underperforms, the conversation usually goes one of two ways. Either the team wants to switch platforms, or leadership pushes for more volume. Both miss the actual problem.

The question that cuts to it faster: what data is in the brief your team is giving the AI? Not what tool they're using. Not how many emails they're sending. What information, specifically, is the agent working from when it generates each email?

The answer tells you almost everything about why the results look the way they do.

What are the three data types, and what each one means for your team's results?

Every AI outbound brief is built from some combination of three data categories.

As a sales leader, the most useful thing you can know is which category dominates your team's brief, that determines the ceiling on what the AI can produce.

First-party data is information your company has collected directly: 

  • CRM history
  • Engagement with your content
  • Prior conversations
  • Product usage data 

Its limitation is coverage — it only exists for accounts that have already interacted with you. For cold outreach to accounts that haven't, your first-party data is empty.

Third-party data is what you license from enrichment and intent vendors: 

  • Firmographics
  • Funding signals
  • Job changes
  • Content consumption patterns
  • Tech stack 

Every competitor with the same vendor subscriptions has the same signals about the same accounts at the same time. Emails built purely on third-party data are structurally identical to your competitors' emails, because they're built from identical inputs.

Second-party data is what most teams are missing. It's information that exists in the relationship between your company and your partners — specifically which accounts in your pipeline already use tools integrated with yours, or sit inside a technology ecosystem connected to your partner network. 

This data isn't sold by any vendor. It's exclusive to your company because it's a product of your specific partnerships. An email built on second-party data contains a premise no competitor can replicate.

What signals should an AI SDR use to personalize a cold email?

Not all signals are equal — ranked by exclusivity, here is what to prioritize when deciding what goes into your team's brief:

Signal Source Data type What it means for your team
Ecosystem overlap — integration network Partner data platform Second-party — exclusive Only you can send this email. No competitor has this signal.
Prior engagement — content, demos, events Your CRM / marketing platform First-party — exclusive Warm opener. Use it, but it only covers accounts already in your funnel.
New executive hire (VP/CRO in seat) Professional networks / enrichment Third-party — shared Good timing signal. Expect competitors to use the same trigger.
Intent: content and review activity Intent data platforms Third-party — shared Useful context. Assume competitors are running the same playbook.
Recent funding or growth signals Funding databases / enrichment Third-party — shared Common hook. Overused. Sets no differentiated premise.
Firmographic fit (size, industry) All enrichment vendors Third-party — shared Baseline context only. Never the lead argument.

What would be the brief I'd send back vs. the brief I'd approve?

The fastest way to evaluate whether your team's AI outbound is set up to succeed is to look at the brief. Not the email it generates — the brief. Here's what that evaluation looks like in practice:

Imagine your SDR, Priya, is reaching out to David Kim, VP of Sales at Meridian Technologies. She submits this brief for review:

Brief one: The one I'd send back

Target: David Kim, VP Sales, Meridian Technologies

Context: Series B company, ~200 employees, B2B SaaS, Scaled sales team significantly in Q1 (30+ new hires), New VP of Sales, 60 days in seat, Showing intent on revenue operations content

Angle: team scaling fast, probably hitting coordination friction. We help with that.

This brief will generate a competent email. It will also generate an email structurally identical to what three of our competitors sent David this week — because every piece of context in it came from third-party enrichment sources they also have access to. David has seen this email. The VP of Sales hire is a known trigger. Everyone uses it.

Here's the brief I'd ask Priya to rewrite:

Brief two: The one I'd approve

Target: David Kim, VP Sales, Meridian Technologies

Context: Series B, ~200 employees, B2B SaaS — supporting context only

• Q1 sales team expansion — context for timing, not the hook• Meridian already runs [Tool A], [Tool B], and [Tool C] — all three connect to our partner network

• This means there is very likely account overlap in Meridian's pipeline that they can't currently see

Angle: lead with the integration connection. Offer to show David what the overlap looks like for Meridian specifically. This is information no competitor can offer, because it comes from our partner relationships — not from any enrichment vendor.

The email that comes out of Brief 2 is not just better, it's categorically different. The growth signals and firmographic context are still there as supporting color. But the argument is built on second-party data: the specific overlap between Meridian's integration ecosystem and our partner network. No competitor has that. Nobody can send that email except us.

How to coach your team to use second-party data?

Most teams don't use second-party data, not because they've evaluated it and chosen not to, but because they don't know it's available. Here's the practical path to changing that:

  1. Audit the current brief. Ask your team to pull up the brief template they're using. For each field, categorize it: first-party (from your CRM), third-party (from enrichment vendors), or second-party (from your partner relationships). Most teams find the brief is entirely first and third party.
  2. Identify which accounts have second-party data available. Pull the accounts in your pipeline that use tools integrated with your partner network. These are the accounts where ‘brief two’ is possible. Without Crossbeam or a similar Ecosystem Revenue platform, this is a manual exercise. With it, the list surfaces automatically.
  3. Build a separate workflow for those accounts. They get a different brief, a different email, and ideally a different follow-up sequence. Treat them as a separate segment — because the argument you're making is structurally different from everything else in the pipeline.
  4. Run a two-week test and measure. Compare reply rates between accounts worked with ‘brief one’ versus ‘brief two’. The gap is the number you use to make the case for investing in second-party signal infrastructure at scale.

The teams seeing meaningfully different results from AI outbound have done this work. They're not running better models. They're giving the same models a brief the competition can't replicate.

Find which accounts in your pipeline qualify for Brief 2

Crossbeam surfaces the ecosystem overlap between your accounts and your partner network — the second-party data that makes ‘brief two’ possible. Most teams find that a meaningful portion of their pipeline already has this signal available. They just couldn't see it.

Join Crossbeam for free and see which accounts in your pipeline already overlap with your partner network — before your next outbound campaign goes out.

FAQ

What data do AI sales agents need to write better cold emails?

The most impactful input is second-party data — information about how the prospect relates to your partner ecosystem, specifically which integration tools they already use that connect to your network. As a sales leader, the quickest way to assess this is to look at your team's brief and ask: Is any of this information exclusive to us, or could a competitor build the same brief from an enrichment vendor?

What signals should an AI SDR use to personalize a cold email?

Prioritize in this order: second-party signals (integration network overlap — only you have this), first-party signals (prior engagement — confirms interest, warms the opener), third-party signals (growth, job changes, intent — useful context, but shared with competitors). Most teams have the sequence backwards. Leading with commodity data and wondering why the emails feel generic is the predictable result.

What context does an AI agent need to send a relevant cold email?

The agent needs to know how the prospect relates to your ecosystem — not just who they are. For a sales leader evaluating this: does the brief tell the AI anything only your company knows? If everything in the brief could be assembled by a competitor from the same enrichment vendors, the email it produces will be indistinguishable from a competitor's.

How do I know if my team's AI outbound brief is good?

Ask one question for each field in the brief: could a competitor access this data from the same source? If the answer is yes across the board, the brief is built entirely from commodity data. A brief worth approving includes at least one input that's exclusive to your company — specifically, second-party data from your partner ecosystem that no enrichment vendor sells.

Why is AI outbound personalization stuck at surface level?

Because most teams have invested in making third-party data more comprehensive, rather than adding a different data category. As a sales leader, this shows up as increasingly sophisticated emails that still feel generic to the recipient — because the argument is built from information every competitor also has. 

You’ll also be interested in these

Why AI Outbound Feels Generic and What's Actually Missing
How to Personalize AI Outbound — The 2026 Complete Guide
Atlassian’s Playbook for Multi-Partner Selling in the AI Era