Company Size Targeting
Company size targeting segments and prioritizes prospects by firmographic scale, usually employee count or annual revenue, to align offers and sales effort with each tier.
In depth
Company size targeting recognizes that an SMB and an enterprise buy very differently, so it groups accounts into bands such as SMB, mid-market, and enterprise and adapts pricing, messaging, and sales motion to each. Smaller companies favor self-serve and fast time-to-value, while larger ones expect security reviews, procurement, and dedicated support, so matching the motion to the band prevents wasted effort and mismatched expectations. Size is frequently paired with industry to form a precise ICP.
The common pitfall is using a single funnel for every size band, which overwhelms small buyers with enterprise complexity or underwhelms large buyers with a thin self-serve flow. In a quiz-funnel workflow, you can branch scorecards by size, asking an enterprise respondent about governance and integrations while a startup gets questions about speed and budget, then route the resulting leads to the right sales track. This produces cleaner segmentation and lets each tier receive a follow-up cadence and offer that actually fits.
Example in practice
Frequently asked questions
How is company size usually measured for targeting?
The two most common measures are employee headcount and annual revenue, sometimes supplemented by funding stage or location count. Teams group these into bands like SMB, mid-market, and enterprise.
Why adapt the sales motion to company size?
Small companies want fast, self-serve value while large ones require procurement, security reviews, and dedicated support. Matching the motion to the band avoids overwhelming small buyers and under-serving large ones.
Can a quiz branch by company size?
Yes. A scorecard can ask a sizing question early and branch into tier-specific questions and offers, then route leads to the right sales track. This keeps each segment relevant and improves qualification.