Dear SaaStr: Do Any Top B2B Events Give You “The List”?
No, no good ones do, and for good reason. Top tier B2B events, especially ones focused on quality over volume, deliberately don’t hand over attendee lists to sponsors as a blanket data asset.
If events sold attendee data freely, they’d destroy what makes them valuable in the first place. The real draw for sponsors isn’t a list you can mail-merge into your CRM. It’s in person access to decision-makers who are actively engaged and willing to talk. What actually happens at top events like SaaStr AI Annual is different. Sponsors get leads through intentional interaction: booth conversations, meetings you schedule ahead of time (through “Who Do You Want to Meet” programs), badge scans from people who opt in, and qualified hand-raisers who specifically express interest in talking to you.
At ** SaaStr AI Annual,** for example, the average sponsor walks away with
470+ qualified leads. B ut these come from real conversations and opt-in requests, not a broadcast list. Some sponsors got
50-100+ additional qualified leads just from the “Who Do You Want to Meet” program, where attendees specifically flagged who they wanted to meet.
If an event is promising you “the list,” that’s usually a red flag. It means either the attendee experience isn’t that great (why else would they need to buy data?) or the event itself isn’t attracting the right people. Focus instead on leading events where the attendees want to talk to you because real buyers are there to do discovery.
Most importantly, the real point of B2B events from a revenue perspective is that at the top events, buyers attend to, in part, to do discovery.
They walk the expo because they have budget and are in market, or plan to be soon. And it helps them to talk to the leading vendors, as well as 1 or 2 innovators breaking out, in person. It helps them, and that helps you.
Spamming them doesn’t help. Showing up in person with your A team does.