How Do I Find Prospects?
Finding prospects is the foundation of every business that intends to grow. Whether you’re a founder, an early sales rep, a freelancer, or someone responsible for generating pipeline, your ability to find the right people determines how well your pitch, product, and sales process will perform.
But prospecting isn't about randomly contacting people. It’s about identifying qualified prospects who match your ideal customer profile, have a real need, and may benefit from what you offer.
This article breaks down exactly how to find prospects—online, offline, and through scalable systems—so that you build a predictable, reliable flow of new opportunities.
1. What Is Prospecting, Really?
Prospecting is the process of identifying individuals or organizations who could potentially become customers.
The goal is simple:
Find people who are likely to buy what you offer.
Prospecting is not selling. It's not pitching. It’s simply identifying who you should talk to.
A good prospector understands three truths:
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Not everyone is a prospect.
-
You must look for fit, not force a conversation.
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The best prospects already show signs of need, interest, or intent.
Once you understand that, prospecting becomes less about pressure and more about sorting.
2. The Foundation: Know WHO You’re Looking For
Before you prospect, you must know what type of customer you are trying to find.
You cannot find prospects without a target.
This means defining:
• Your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)
This is a description of your perfect buyer—based strictly on facts (industry, size, role, problem, budget, etc.).
• Buyer Persona
This is a more human description: motivations, fears, challenges, goals.
• Actual Indicators (Signals)
Examples:
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A business recently hired new staff
-
Someone just downloaded a resource
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A company posted a job opening
-
A person publicly stated they struggle with an issue you solve
Finding prospects starts with recognizing the signals that someone might need your help.
Once this is clear, we move into where to actually find prospects.
3. Where to Find Prospects Online
Today, online prospecting is faster, more scalable, and more measurable than offline methods. The key is knowing where your buyers spend their time.
Below are the best online channels for finding quality prospects.
A. LinkedIn
LinkedIn is the world’s most powerful B2B prospecting tool.
Ways to find prospects on LinkedIn:
• LinkedIn Search
Filter by job title, industry, company size, geography.
• LinkedIn Sales Navigator (premium)
Allows advanced filtering:
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Tech used by company
-
Funding raised
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Leadership changes
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Financial insights
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Hiring history
Sales Navigator is the gold standard for B2B lead discovery.
• Content & Engagement
Prospects reveal interest by:
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Commenting on industry topics
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Following thought leaders
-
Reposting challenges you can solve
Anybody engaging in relevant conversations becomes a warm prospect.
B. Email + Email Discovery Tools
Using email finder tools, you can identify prospects based on:
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Company websites
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LinkedIn profiles
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Domain searches
Popular tools:
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Apollo
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Hunter
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Clearbit
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Lusha
Once collected, prospects can be added to CRM or outreach sequences.
C. Google Search
Searching for:
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“Top companies in [industry]”
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“Fastest-growing startups in [region]”
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“[Job title] hiring right now”
This reveals companies experiencing growth or pain—prime prospecting conditions.
D. Social Media Platforms
1. Twitter (X)
Great for founders, creators, and tech buyers.
Look for:
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Complaints
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Feature requests
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People asking for recommendations
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Industry discussions
2. Reddit
Subreddits often contain high-intent discussions:
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r/Entrepreneur
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r/smallbusiness
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r/sales
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r/startups
People openly talk about their challenges.
3. Facebook Groups
Still extremely effective for B2C or local businesses.
4. Instagram & TikTok
More effective for:
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Creators
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Coaches
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Agencies
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E-commerce
People post needs, ask questions, or follow relevant content.
E. Online Directories & Databases
Examples:
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Crunchbase (funding info)
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AngelList (startups)
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Clutch (agencies)
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Yelp (local businesses)
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ProductHunt (new software)
These platforms show new companies, fast-growth companies, and businesses with specific needs.
F. Event Platforms
Virtual events often attract engaged, curious prospects.
Platforms:
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Eventbrite
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Meetup
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Hopin
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Zoom webinars
Participants are usually problem-aware and eager to learn.
4. Where to Find Prospects Offline
Despite digital dominance, offline prospecting is still powerful.
A. Networking Events
Conferences, industry meetups, and seminars let you meet high-quality prospects face-to-face.
B. Trade Shows
People who attend trade shows:
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Have budgets
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Are actively researching
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Are in “buying mode”
Perfect for B2B.
C. Local Business Visits
For local industries, walking in and introducing yourself still works.
D. Referrals (The Hidden Goldmine)
Every customer or contact can lead to more prospects.
A simple script:
“Do you know anyone else facing this problem?”
Referrals close faster than any other prospecting method.
5. Tools to Find and Organize Prospects
Prospecting becomes easier with the right tools.
CRM Systems
To organize prospects:
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HubSpot
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Salesforce
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Pipedrive
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Zoho CRM
Lead Databases
Bulk lead generation:
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Apollo
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ZoomInfo
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Uplead
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Clearbit
Email Finders
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Hunter
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Snov
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VoilaNorbert
Automation
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Lemlist
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Instantly
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Outreach
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SalesLoft
These tools help scale prospecting without losing personalization.
6. How to Find Qualified Prospects, Not Just Contacts
Finding people is easy.
Finding the right people is what matters.
Use three qualification layers:
Layer 1: Fit
Do they match your ICP?
Check:
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industry
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company size
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role/title
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geography
If no → stop.
Layer 2: Need
Do they have a problem you can solve?
Examples:
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Hiring aggressively
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Complaining publicly
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Using outdated tools
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Struggling with growth
Layer 3: Intent
Are they showing signs they may be ready to change?
Signals:
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Downloaded a guide
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Visited the pricing page
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Attended a webinar
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Followed competitors
High intent = priority prospect.
7. Build a Repeatable Prospecting Routine
Consistency beats luck.
Here’s a simple daily routine:
Daily Prospecting Routine (45 minutes)
15 minutes – Find new leads
Use LinkedIn, Google, databases.
15 minutes – Research
Look at their challenges, posts, and company context.
15 minutes – Outreach
Send emails or messages personalized to the prospect.
Do this every day, and your pipeline will never run dry.
8. How Many Prospects Do You Actually Need?
A general guideline:
100 prospects → 30 conversations → 10 meetings → 3 opportunities → 1 closed deal
This varies, but it's a reliable ratio.
To hit your revenue goals, reverse engineer how many prospects you need weekly.
9. Prospecting Mistakes to Avoid
Common mistakes:
1. Talking about your product too early
Prospecting is about them, not you.
2. Contacting everyone instead of qualified people
Focus beats volume.
3. Using generic messages
Prospects ignore automation that feels automated.
4. Not using data or signals
You waste time on people who aren’t ready.
5. Giving up after one attempt
Most meetings happen after the 3rd–7th touch.
10. Summary: The Smartest Way to Find Prospects
If you want an efficient, repeatable prospecting system, follow this flow:
Step 1 — Define WHO you want
ICP + persona + signals.
Step 2 — Find WHERE they spend time
LinkedIn, databases, Google, events.
Step 3 — Identify which ones show need + intent
Those go to the top of your list.
Step 4 — Create a daily routine
Even 30–45 minutes daily is enough.
Step 5 — Track everything in a CRM
This builds predictability.
Step 6 — Always personalize outreach
Relevance > volume.
Conclusion
Prospecting is not about pressure, persuasion, or pushing people into a call.
It’s about identifying the right people, understanding their context, and building genuine conversations.
When done correctly, prospecting becomes:
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predictable
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systematic
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measurable
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scalable
And it sets the foundation for your entire sales success.
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