Target Company URL Sales Research Analysis — B2B Guide (2026)

Target Company URL Sales Research Analysis — The Complete B2B Guide (2026)
B2B Sales Research — Complete Guide — Updated June 2026

Target Company URL Sales Research Analysis — The Complete Guide

15 min read Verified: June 17, 2026 For: SDRs, Sales Managers, Marketing Ops

Most B2B sales teams waste 60–70% of their prospecting time on companies that were never going to buy. This guide shows you the complete process: find your target companies’ website URLs, analyse what you find on those sites, score prospects by fit, and write outreach that actually gets replies — all starting with a free URL lookup.

5-step workflow Scoring framework Website analysis checklist Real example walkthrough Outreach template
42%of sales reps say prospecting is the hardest part of their job
22.5%of B2B contact data becomes outdated every year
24%of time sales reps actually spend selling (the rest: research & admin)
91%of buyers research you online before the first call

1. What Is Target Company URL Sales Research Analysis?

It is a three-part process that B2B sales teams use before reaching out to any company. First you find the website URL. Then you research the website. Then you analyse what you found to decide whether to reach out — and what to say.

Let’s use a simple analogy. Imagine you are a door-to-door salesperson. Before knocking on someone’s door, a good salesperson would:

  1. Find out which house belongs to whom — that is the URL research part
  2. Walk around and observe the house — the size, the car, the garden — that is the website research part
  3. Decide if this person is worth your pitch — that is the analysis and qualification part

In B2B sales, the “house” is the company’s website. Their URL is the address. And just like a good salesperson wouldn’t knock on every door in the city, a good B2B sales team doesn’t contact every company that exists. They find the right ones first.

📚 Simple definition (the 10-year-old version)

Imagine you have a list of 100 company names. You want to sell something to them, but you don’t know anything about them yet. URL sales research analysis means: (1) finding each company’s website, (2) visiting it to learn what they do, how big they are, and what problems they might have, and (3) deciding which companies are worth your time. It turns a list of names into a list of “yes — contact them” and “no — skip them.”

The complete 5-step workflow at a glance

🎯
Build List
Define ICP, collect company names
🔗
Find URLs
Company names → website addresses
🔍
Analyse Sites
Visit and research each website
📊
Score & Qualify
Decide who deserves outreach
✉️
Outreach
Personalised, research-backed messages

2. Why the Company URL Is Your Starting Point — Not an Optional Step

Most sales teams skip URL verification and go straight to finding contact emails. This is a mistake that wastes significant time. Here is why the URL is the foundation for everything else:

🔑
It unlocks all other research

Without the correct URL, you cannot visit the company website, find their product pages, pricing, team, or recent news. The URL is the key that opens the door to all sales intelligence.

No URL = no research possible
It verifies the company exists

B2B contact data decays at 22.5% annually. Companies close, rebrand, or merge constantly. A live website confirms the company is still active before you invest research time.

Dead URL = skip this company
🎯
It confirms you have the right company

There are often multiple companies with similar names. “Mercury Software” in Boston and “Mercury Software” in London are different companies. The URL disambiguates which one you found.

Wrong URL = wrong company = wasted call
It enables instant qualification

Within 90 seconds of visiting a company website, you can determine their industry, approximate size, and product category. That is faster than any other qualification method.

90 seconds = enough to qualify or disqualify
⚠️ The real cost of skipping URL verification

According to Salesforce State of Sales, sales reps spend only 24% of their time actually selling. The rest goes to research, admin, and chasing the wrong prospects. Teams that implement structured URL verification and website analysis frameworks reclaim hours each week by removing bad-fit companies before investing outreach effort.

Step 1 — Build Your Target Company List

Before you can research any company, you need a list of company names to research. This step is about defining exactly what kind of company is worth your time — and building a list of those companies. The technical term for this is your Ideal Customer Profile, or ICP.

1
Define your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)
The characteristics of your perfect-fit customer company

Your ICP answers: “What type of company is most likely to buy from us, get real value, and stay a customer?” Think of it like a description of your perfect customer. Once you have this, every company you research can be checked against it.

Build your ICP by answering these 6 questions:

  • Industry: Which industries do your best customers come from? (e.g. SaaS, manufacturing, healthcare)
  • Company size: How many employees does your typical customer have? (e.g. 50–500 employees)
  • Location: What countries or regions do your customers operate in?
  • Technology: What software do your ideal customers already use? (e.g. Salesforce CRM, HubSpot, AWS)
  • Growth stage: Startup? Scale-up? Enterprise? Publicly traded?
  • Pain point: What specific problem do your best customers have that you solve?
✅ Example ICP

“B2B SaaS companies in the UK and US with 50–200 employees, using Salesforce CRM, that have raised a Series A or B funding round in the past 12 months, and are actively hiring SDRs — indicating they are scaling their sales team.”

Where to get company names for your list

  • LinkedIn Sales Navigator: Filter by industry, size, location. Export to CSV.
  • Trade show attendee lists: Industry events publish company sponsor/attendee lists.
  • G2, Capterra, or Clutch: Review sites where companies profile themselves by category.
  • Crunchbase: Filter companies by funding stage, industry, and location.
  • Industry association member lists: Professional bodies often publish member directories.
  • Your own CRM: Past opportunities that didn’t close, or similar companies to existing customers.

Step 2 — Find Company URLs (URL Research)

You now have a list of company names. The next step is converting every name into a verified website URL. For 5–10 companies, you can Google each one. For 50, 500, or 5,000 companies, you need a URL research tool.

2
Find and verify company website URLs
Convert company names into verified official website addresses

Method A: Use TargetCompanyURLResearch.com (Free — No Sign-Up)

  • Go to targetcompanyurlresearch.com
  • Type company names into the URL Lookup tool — one per line
  • As you type, live autocomplete suggestions appear — click one to confirm the correct company
  • Click Find URLs — results appear in seconds with the official domain, company logo, industry, and confidence score
  • Click Export CSV to download all results into a spreadsheet
  • Check the confidence score: High = use directly. Medium = verify manually. Low = Google it
💡 What the confidence score means — simply explained

Think of it like a matching game. If you type “Salesforce” and the tool finds “salesforce.com” — the name matches perfectly, so the confidence is High. If you type “Atlas” and the tool finds “atlas.com” — but there are many companies called Atlas — the confidence is Medium or Low, because the tool isn’t certain it found the right one. Always check Medium and Low results before using them.

Method B: Use the GEO Search Tab (for International Research)

If you are researching companies in a specific country and need the regional website (not just the global one), use the GEO Search tab:

  • Click the Geo Search tab on the tool
  • Select the target country from the dropdown (e.g. United Kingdom, Germany, Australia)
  • Enter the brand or company name
  • The tool returns the regional website (e.g. amazon.co.uk for Amazon in the UK)

What to do with the results

After finding URLs, add them to a spreadsheet with these columns:

ColumnWhat to put there
Company NameThe name you searched for
Website URLThe full https:// URL returned
ConfidenceHigh / Medium / Low from the tool
Verified?Yes / No — did you manually check it?
ICP ScoreBlank for now — you’ll fill this in Step 4
NotesAny quick observations from a first glance

Step 3 — Analyse Target Company Websites

This is the most important step. A company’s website tells you almost everything you need to know before your first outreach. Here are the 6 signals to look for — and exactly what each one tells you about the prospect.

3
The 6-Signal Website Analysis Framework
What to look for and what each signal tells you
🏢
Signal 1: About Page

What to look for: Company founding date, team size mentioned, office locations, mission statement. Look for headcount statements (“200-person team”) or employee count on LinkedIn.

What it tells you: How big the company is, how mature they are, and whether they fit your ICP size criteria.

📍 Where: /about, /company, /our-story
💰
Signal 2: Pricing Page

What to look for: Price ranges, plan names, “Enterprise” tier, “Contact sales for pricing.” Hidden pricing usually means higher budgets.

What it tells you: Their budget level. A company that sells $500/month software can afford different tools than one selling $50,000/year enterprise contracts.

📍 Where: /pricing, /plans, /pricing-enterprise
👥
Signal 3: Customers & Case Studies

What to look for: Customer logos on homepage, detailed case studies, testimonials. Look for companies you recognise. Note the industries they serve.

What it tells you: Who they trust, what industries they understand, and whether they have experience in your space — useful for personalising outreach.

📍 Where: /customers, /case-studies, homepage
📰
Signal 4: Blog & News

What to look for: Recent press releases, product launches, funding announcements, partnerships, or expansion news. Look at dates — recent posts (last 30–90 days) show an active company.

What it tells you: Current priorities and conversation starters for outreach. A recent product launch or new market entry is a perfect hook for your first message.

📍 Where: /blog, /news, /press
💼
Signal 5: Careers Page

What to look for: Active job listings — especially roles in your area. Are they hiring SDRs, marketers, engineers, ops? How many open roles? What technologies do they mention in job descriptions?

What it tells you: Growth signals (many open roles = scaling fast = more budget). Technology use (job descriptions reveal what tools they use). Strategic direction (new team = new priorities).

📍 Where: /careers, /jobs, /work-with-us
⚙️
Signal 6: Technology Stack

What to look for: Chat widgets, cookie banners (Intercom, Drift, HubSpot), footer credits, job listing requirements (“experience with Salesforce preferred”).

What it tells you: Whether they use tools compatible with yours. If they use HubSpot, they are likely open to marketing tools. If they mention Salesforce, they invest in sales infrastructure.

📍 Where: Any page footer, job listings, cookie banner
⏱️ How long should website analysis take?

For a structured first pass: 3–5 minutes per company. Visit the homepage, About page, Pricing, Customers, and Careers. Take notes directly into your spreadsheet. For your top-tier prospects (Hot accounts), do a deeper 10–15 minute analysis including reading one blog post and one case study. For everyone else, 3 minutes is enough to make a qualified yes/no decision.

The quick 90-second analysis for large lists

If you have 200+ companies on your list, doing 5 minutes per company is 17+ hours of work. Use this 90-second triage approach first to cut the list down before doing deeper analysis:

  1. Does the website load? (5 sec) — Dead site = remove from list immediately.
  2. Does the homepage match your ICP industry? (10 sec) — Wrong industry = remove.
  3. Is there a pricing page? (10 sec) — Visible pricing gives instant budget context.
  4. Any obvious size indicator? (15 sec) — “Trusted by 10,000 businesses” or “our 500-person team” tells you scale.
  5. Are they hiring? (20 sec) — Any open roles = active company. Many roles = growing company.
  6. Any recent news? (30 sec) — Skim blog or news for dates. Nothing in 6 months = potentially inactive.

After 90 seconds, place each company into one of three buckets: Proceed to deep analysis, Low priority — nurture long-term, or Remove from list. This cuts your list by 40–60% before you invest real research time.

Step 4 — Qualify and Score Prospects

You have now visited each company’s website and taken notes. This step turns those observations into a score that tells you exactly how to prioritise your time. The goal is to create a clear answer for every company: Hot, Warm, or Cold.

4
The 100-Point Company Scoring Framework
Score each company using what you found on their website

Rate each company from 0 to the maximum points for each criterion below. Add up the scores to get a total out of 100.

Criterion Max Points How to score it
Industry fit 20 pts Exact ICP industry match = 20. Related industry = 10. Different industry = 0.
Company size fit 20 pts Headcount exactly in your ICP range = 20. One band off = 10. Too large or too small = 0.
Budget indicators 20 pts Visible high-value pricing / Series B+ funded / enterprise customers = 20. Some signals = 10. No pricing visible, very small = 0.
Technology fit 15 pts Uses tools that integrate with yours = 15. Uses compatible tech = 8. No visible tech signals = 0.
Growth signals 15 pts 5+ active job listings / recent funding / new office / product launch = 15. Some signals = 8. None visible = 0.
Timing triggers 10 pts News item from last 30 days you can reference / hiring your exact buyer = 10. 90-day news = 5. Nothing recent = 0.

Interpreting your scores: the three tiers

90–100
🔥 HOT Prospect

Contact within 24 hours. Personalised, research-backed email + LinkedIn message. Prioritise for phone outreach.

70–89
🌡️ WARM Prospect

Add to a structured 5-step email sequence over 2–3 weeks. Monitor for growth signals that push them to Hot.

0–69
❄️ COLD — Skip for Now

Remove from active outreach. Add to a long-term nurture list or discard entirely. Do not invest SDR time here.

✅ Why removing Cold prospects saves your team money

Research shows organisations implementing early disqualification protocols save 32% of sales time. If your SDR earns $50,000/year and spends 32% less time on wrong prospects, that is $16,000 of SDR time recovered per rep per year — time now spent on prospects who could actually buy.

Step 5 — Build Personalised Outreach Using Your Research

The research you have done is wasted if your outreach message ignores it. The single biggest reason cold emails fail is that they are generic — the same message sent to every company on the list. The website research you did in Step 3 gives you specific, personal hooks that make your message feel like it was written just for them — because it was.

5
Convert website research into personalised outreach
Use what you found to write messages that get replies

The 4 research-to-personalisation connections

What you found on their website How to use it in outreach
Recent product launch or feature update “Congratulations on the launch of [Product Name] — I noticed it specifically addresses [problem area]. That’s exactly the kind of growth stage where teams find [your solution] most valuable.”
Hiring SDRs or sales roles “I saw you’re scaling your sales team — 4 SDR roles open right now. Teams at your stage often hit [specific problem] when onboarding that volume. We help with that.”
A customer logo you recognise “I noticed you work with [Company X] — they’re a customer of ours too. I’d love to show you how we helped them with [result].”
A blog post about a specific challenge “I read your recent post on [topic]. Your take on [specific point] resonated — it’s the same challenge we hear from most [industry] teams.”

Example outreach email built from website research

Here is an example cold email that uses real website research to personalise every line:

Example cold email — based on website research
Subject: SDR scaling + [Your Company Problem]
Hi [First Name], I was researching [Company Name] this week and noticed you have 5 SDR roles open right now — looks like a big push on outbound. One thing teams at your stage consistently run into: getting company website data for prospect lists fast enough to keep up with the new team’s capacity. Manual Googling 500 company names takes hours that should go into calls. We help [Company Type similar to theirs] automatically turn company name lists into verified website URLs — with confidence scoring so the team knows which results to verify before reaching out. Worth a 15-minute call to see if it fits your current workflow? [Your name] [Your title] | TargetCompanyURLResearch.com

Notice what this email does not do: it does not mention features, pricing, or ask for a “quick demo.” It references something specific from the company’s website (5 SDR job listings), connects it to a problem that causes, and offers a relevant solution. This kind of message gets a 3–5x higher reply rate than generic outreach.

Tools for Each Step of the Workflow

Here is every tool you need for the complete target company URL sales research analysis workflow — including free options at every stage.

Step Tool Cost What it does Best for
Step 1: Build listLinkedIn Sales Navigator$99/moFilter companies by ICP criteria, export namesBest quality B2B lists
Step 1: Build listCrunchbase (free)Free / $29/moSearch by funding stage, industry, locationFunded startups & scale-ups
Step 2: Find URLsTargetCompanyURLResearch.comFree (10/session)Company names → verified URLs with confidence scoresFast, no sign-up URL lookup
Step 2: Find URLsHunter.ioFree 25/moCompany domain lookup + email finderWhen you need email + domain
Step 3: Analyse sitesBuiltWithFree / $295/moSee the technology stack a website usesTech stack compatibility
Step 3: Analyse sitesSimilarWebFree (limited)Traffic estimates, top pages, audience dataCompany scale indicators
Step 3: Analyse sitesLinkedIn (company page)FreeHeadcount, growth rate, employee rolesSize verification
Step 4: Score prospectsGoogle Sheets (custom)FreeSpreadsheet with scoring formulaSmall teams, flexible
Step 4: Score prospectsHubSpot CRMFree tierAdd lead scores, track research notesTeams with an existing CRM
Step 5: OutreachApollo.ioFree tierFind contacts, send sequences, track repliesFull outreach workflow
Step 5: OutreachInstantly.ai$37/moCold email sequencing, inbox managementHigh-volume email outreach
💡 The complete free stack for small teams
  • List building: Crunchbase free + LinkedIn company search
  • URL research: TargetCompanyURLResearch.com (10 free lookups per session)
  • Website analysis: Manual + BuiltWith free + LinkedIn company page
  • Scoring: Google Sheets with the 100-point scoring formula above
  • Outreach: Apollo.io free tier + Gmail

Total cost: $0. This stack is enough to process 100 companies per week as a solo SDR.

Real Example Walkthrough — End to End

Let’s walk through the complete process for a real-world scenario. You are an SDR at a company that sells an AI-powered meeting notes tool. Your ICP is: B2B SaaS companies, 50–200 employees, using Zoom or Google Meet, in the UK or US.

🎯
Example: Researching “Notion” as a target company
Complete walkthrough — URL research → website analysis → scoring → outreach hook
1

URL Research

Paste “Notion” into TargetCompanyURLResearch.com. Result: notion.so with High confidence score. Live in 2 seconds, no manual Googling needed.

🔗 URL confirmed: https://notion.so — High confidence
2

About Page Analysis

Notion.so/about confirms: global team, Series C funded, serves companies of all sizes. LinkedIn shows 500+ employees. Slightly over ICP size range but worth investigating.

📊 Size: 500+ employees — over ICP range, reduce size score
3

Pricing Page Analysis

Notion.so/pricing shows: Free, Plus ($8/mo), Business ($15/mo), Enterprise (contact sales). The Enterprise tier confirms they serve large teams with significant budgets.

💰 Budget signal: Enterprise pricing tier visible — budget available
4

Careers Page Analysis

notion.so/careers shows 12 open roles including: Head of Sales, Account Executive (Enterprise), Sales Operations. This is a strong growth signal — actively investing in sales.

📈 Growth signal: 12 open roles, 3 in sales — scaling fast
5

Scoring

Industry: SaaS = 20/20. Size: 500+ (over ICP) = 10/20. Budget: Enterprise tier = 20/20. Tech: Remote-first, likely Zoom/Meet = 15/15. Growth: 12 open roles = 15/15. Timing: Recent funding news = 10/10. Total: 90/100.

🔥 Score: 90/100 — HOT prospect — contact within 24 hours
6

Outreach hook from research

Lead with the 12 open sales roles: “Saw you’re onboarding 3 new AEs — their first meeting notes are usually chaos. We help sales teams at Notion’s scale capture structured notes from every discovery call automatically, straight into Notion itself.”

✉️ Personalisation: job listings + product integration = highly relevant hook

Tips for Better Target Company URL Research Results

Batch your URL lookups

Process 10 company names at once in the URL research tool rather than one at a time. It is 10x faster and the results come back simultaneously.

🗓️

Research on Mondays

Monday website visits take 10–15 minutes. Save analysis for a dedicated research block. Interrupting other work to research single companies is inefficient.

📌

Save hiring signals for outreach

Screenshot the specific job listing you found. Reference the exact job title in your email. “I see you’re hiring a Head of RevOps” is 10x more specific than “I see you’re growing.”

🔄

Re-check monthly

A company that scored 65 (Cold) in January might score 88 (Warm) in March after a funding round or product launch. Revisit your list monthly and re-score.

🌍

Use GEO search for international lists

For UK or Australian prospects, use the GEO Search tab to find regional domains (amazon.co.uk vs amazon.com). Sending to the wrong regional entity wastes the outreach.

📊

Track your conversion rates by score tier

After 90 days, check: what percentage of Hot, Warm, and Cold prospects converted? Use this to calibrate your ICP scoring criteria for your specific product and market.

Frequently Asked Questions

The most common questions about target company URL sales research analysis — with clear, direct answers.

Start your first target company URL research now

Free tool — no sign-up, no credit card. Paste up to 10 company names, get verified URLs with confidence scores, and export to CSV. Your research workflow starts here.

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