The Verdict
## Bombora vs ZoomInfo: The Honest Verdict Bombora and ZoomInfo are frequently compared as if they're direct substitutes. They're not — and that misunderstanding costs GTM teams real pipeline. Understanding the distinction is the foundation of a sound purchasing decision. **Bombora** is a purpose-built intent data cooperative. Its sole job is to tell you *which companies* are researching specific topics right now, based on content consumption signals aggregated across a co-op of 5,000+ B2B publisher sites. It does not give you contact names, phone numbers, or email addresses. It gives you a signal — a ranked surge score — indicating elevated research activity at the *account* level. That's it. That's the product. **ZoomInfo** is a full B2B go-to-market platform. It offers contact and company data (emails, direct dials, org charts), its own proprietary intent data layer (ZoomInfo Intent, powered partly by Bombora data in legacy packages and partly by its own streaming intent), sales engagement sequences, conversation intelligence via Chorus, website visitor tracking via WebSights, and a growing suite of workflow automation tools. ZoomInfo is trying to be the operating system for your entire revenue team. **So who wins?** Neither — because the question is usually wrong. For most mid-market and enterprise B2B companies running account-based motions, the highest-ROI configuration is using *both* in a layered workflow: Bombora's third-party intent signals identify which target accounts are in an active research cycle, and ZoomInfo's contact data tells you exactly who to call at those accounts. The intent layer narrows the universe; the contact layer activates it. **When Bombora wins outright:** If you already have rich contact data (via ZoomInfo, Apollo, or a strong CRM), but your team is wasting cycles calling cold accounts, Bombora standalone is a high-value, lower-cost addition that dramatically improves prioritization. Demand gen teams running programmatic ABM through DSPs like The Trade Desk or DV360 also benefit enormously from Bombora's audience segments without needing ZoomInfo at all. **When ZoomInfo wins outright:** If you have zero contact data infrastructure and need to build pipeline from scratch — especially for outbound SDR motions — ZoomInfo is the more complete starting point. Its breadth of features, from prospecting to engagement tracking, means a single-vendor contract can cover more of your workflow. **When you should pause on both:** ZoomInfo carries meaningful legal and reputational baggage around data privacy — CCPA class-action lawsuits and FTC scrutiny are not trivial concerns for compliance-sensitive industries. Any buyer in healthcare, financial services, or regulated verticals should conduct legal due diligence before signing. Bombora's cooperative model is generally considered more privacy-compliant, but account-level-only signals mean it cannot replace contact enrichment under any circumstance. **Bottom line for budget-constrained mid-market teams:** Start with ZoomInfo for contact data and its native intent (imperfect but included in-platform), then add Bombora as a signal layer once your ABM motion matures and you can measure intent-to-pipeline attribution. Don't pay for both on day one if you lack the RevOps capacity to operationalize layered intent data.
Feature Comparison
Intent Data
Contact & Company Data
ABM & Account-Based Marketing
Sales Engagement & Workflow
Privacy, Compliance & Trust
Integrations & Tech Stack
Pricing Comparison
Bombora
Bombora Company Surge (Starter / SMB)
Estimated $2,000–$4,000/month (billed annually)- Access to Company Surge intent data
- Limited topic selection (typically 10–25 topics)
- Weekly surge score updates
- Basic CRM integration (HubSpot or Salesforce)
- Standard firmographic filtering
- No API access at entry tier
Bombora Company Surge (Mid-Market)
Estimated $4,000–$8,000/month (billed annually)- Expanded topic selection (50–150 topics)
- Full CRM and MAP integrations (Salesforce, HubSpot, Marketo, Eloqua)
- API access for custom data activation
- Audience activation for DSP/programmatic advertising
- Historical surge data access
- Dedicated customer success manager
Bombora Enterprise / Data Licensing
Custom pricing — typically $10,000–$30,000+/month- Full topic taxonomy access (4,000+ topics)
- Unlimited seat access for data consumers
- Full API and data feed access
- Custom taxonomy development for niche verticals
- Co-op data licensing for platform resellers
- Priority support and quarterly business reviews
- Integration into 6sense, Demandbase, or custom CDPs
ZoomInfo
ZoomInfo SalesOS (Professional)
Estimated $14,995/year for 3 seats (approximately $417/seat/month)- Contact and company search with filters
- Direct dials and verified email addresses
- Basic intent data (limited topics)
- Chrome extension for LinkedIn prospecting
- Salesforce and HubSpot CRM integration
- Basic reporting and export credits
ZoomInfo SalesOS (Advanced)
Estimated $24,995–$39,995/year for 3–5 seats- All Professional features
- Expanded intent data topics
- ZoomInfo Engage (email sequencing and calling)
- WebSights website visitor tracking
- Org chart and buyer committee mapping
- Increased export credit limits
- Advanced filtering (technographics, funding events)
ZoomInfo SalesOS (Elite)
Estimated $39,995–$60,000+/year for 5 seats- All Advanced features
- Full intent data suite with real-time streaming intent
- Chorus conversation intelligence (call recording, AI coaching)
- Advanced workflow automation and triggers
- API access for custom integrations
- Dedicated account management
- Custom data packages and enhanced match rates
ZoomInfo MarketingOS
Custom pricing — typically starts at $30,000+/year- Display advertising and LinkedIn audience activation
- Account-based advertising workflows
- WebSights visitor identification
- Form enrichment and progressive profiling
- Marketing attribution reporting
- MAP integrations (Marketo, Eloqua, HubSpot)
ZoomInfo OperationsOS
Custom pricing — typically starts at $25,000+/year- Data-as-a-Service (DaaS) for CRM enrichment
- Automated data hygiene and deduplication
- Bulk enrichment of existing contact/account records
- API-first data delivery
- Custom match logic and data governance workflows
Use Case Recommendations
Enterprise ABM team running a target account list (TAL) and needing to prioritize outreach timing
When an enterprise ABM team has already defined a TAL of 500–2,000 named accounts and has sufficient contact data in Salesforce, the primary challenge shifts from 'who to target' to 'when to engage.' This is precisely where Bombora Company Surge excels. By monitoring 15–30 intent topics relevant to your solution category (e.g., 'marketing automation,' 'CRM implementation,' 'sales enablement tools'), Bombora surfaces which accounts on your TAL are currently in active research mode. Sales reps can focus their week on the 40–60 accounts showing elevated surge scores rather than distributing effort evenly across 500. In practice, teams using Bombora for TAL prioritization report 20–40% improvement in meeting acceptance rates for intent-triggered outreach versus cold outreach to non-surging accounts. The key configuration: push Bombora surge scores into Salesforce as a custom field, then build a Salesforce dashboard filtered by accounts where surge score exceeds your threshold (typically 60+) and where an active opportunity does not already exist.
SDR team at a Series B SaaS company building outbound pipeline from scratch with no existing contact database
For an SDR team starting with an empty CRM and a mandate to build pipeline, ZoomInfo is the pragmatic choice. The team needs names, direct dials, verified emails, and basic company context before any intent-based prioritization is actionable. ZoomInfo's SalesOS Professional tier delivers all of this with a manageable learning curve — most SDRs can begin prospecting within their first day. The Chrome extension allows reps to pull contact data while browsing LinkedIn, and the built-in intent signals (while less precise than Bombora's) provide a baseline for account prioritization without requiring a second vendor. For a 3–5 person SDR team on a startup budget, the all-in-one nature of ZoomInfo reduces the operational complexity of managing multiple data vendors. The recommendation shifts to adding Bombora once the team has 3–6 months of CRM data to validate intent signal accuracy against real pipeline outcomes — at that point, layering intent becomes measurably valuable.
Demand generation marketer running programmatic ABM display campaigns targeting in-market buyers
Bombora is the clear winner for programmatic ABM use cases. When a demand gen marketer needs to serve targeted display ads to accounts showing research intent — not just accounts on a static list — Bombora's direct integrations with The Trade Desk and Google DV360 provide a direct activation path. A typical workflow: select 20–30 relevant Bombora topics, build an audience segment of accounts surging on those topics that match your ICP firmographic criteria, push that segment to your DSP, and serve account-based display ads to buying committee members at those accounts. This approach produces meaningfully higher engagement rates than firmographic-only targeting because you're reaching accounts during an active research cycle. ZoomInfo's MarketingOS has display capabilities, but its programmatic reach and DSP ecosystem depth lag behind what Bombora enables through LiveRamp and direct DSP partnerships.
Mid-market RevOps leader with limited budget evaluating which platform to prioritize for Q1
For a mid-market company with a 2-person RevOps team, limited budget, and pressure to show pipeline impact in 90 days, ZoomInfo SalesOS offers faster time-to-value. The platform bundles contact data, basic intent, engagement tools, and CRM integration in a single contract — reducing the vendor coordination overhead that a Bombora-plus-another-contact-data-source stack would require. A lean RevOps team doesn't need the optimization challenge of layering two data platforms when one covers 80% of the use case adequately. The honest caveat: ZoomInfo's intent data quality is generally considered inferior to Bombora's for precision ABM work. But for a mid-market team where reps need to fill their pipeline and leadership needs to see demos booked, ZoomInfo's breadth beats Bombora's depth. Revisit this decision in 12–18 months when pipeline processes are more mature and you can instrument intent-to-pipeline attribution properly.
Marketing ops manager at a regulated financial services firm evaluating data vendors under legal pressure to minimize CCPA/GDPR risk
Bombora's cooperative, consent-based, account-level-only data model presents materially lower regulatory risk than ZoomInfo's PII-heavy contact database for organizations in regulated industries. ZoomInfo has faced documented CCPA class-action litigation, BIPA-related settlements in Illinois, and ongoing scrutiny for its data scraping practices — risks that a legal or compliance team at a financial services, healthcare, or government-adjacent company will likely flag during vendor due diligence. Bombora, by contrast, does not process or distribute personal data (names, emails, phone numbers) — its signals are company-level, making it significantly easier to clear through legal review. For a firm where procurement requires a data processing agreement (DPA) and legal sign-off, Bombora's privacy architecture is a genuine differentiator. If contact data is still needed, consider pairing Bombora with a more privacy-forward contact vendor (e.g., Cognism, which has explicit consent-based data collection in Europe) rather than defaulting to ZoomInfo.
Growth-stage company already using ZoomInfo and considering adding Bombora as a complementary layer for their ABM motion
This is arguably the highest-ROI scenario for Bombora — not as a replacement for ZoomInfo, but as an intent intelligence layer on top of existing ZoomInfo contact data. The workflow: use Bombora to identify which accounts on your ICP are in active research cycles (surging on relevant topics), then use ZoomInfo to pull current contacts at those accounts and push them into a prioritized outreach sequence. The two platforms are architecturally complementary. Bombora tells you *when* to act; ZoomInfo tells you *who* to contact. Before purchasing, run a 30-day proof-of-concept: pull a list of accounts that surged on your top Bombora topics in the previous month and cross-reference with your CRM to see how many were already in active pipeline stages or recently engaged with marketing content. If the overlap is above 25–35%, Bombora's signals are validating real buying intent and the investment is justified. This first-party validation step is one most vendors won't walk you through, but it's the most reliable way to assess intent data ROI before signing a contract.
Frequently Asked Questions
Who is ZoomInfo's biggest competitor?
How accurate is Bombora intent data?
What is the ZoomInfo controversy?
What is the lawsuit against ZoomInfo?
Can you use Bombora and ZoomInfo together?
Is Bombora worth it for small B2B companies?
What data does Bombora collect and is it GDPR compliant?
How does Bombora's topic taxonomy compare to ZoomInfo Intent topics?
How quickly does contact data go stale in ZoomInfo versus Bombora?
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