Most B2B companies are doing some form of outbound. Emails are being sent, calls are being made, campaigns are running, and leads are coming in. On the surface, it can look like there is plenty of motion in the market.
What is often missing is the connection between those efforts.
In many organizations, inbound and outbound operate alongside each other rather than as part of the same system. Marketing generates attention, sales pursues outreach, and both teams are active, but the work is not always coordinated in a way that creates a steady, reliable pipeline. Leads may be followed up on once or twice and then left behind. Prospecting may be happening, but without enough targeting, persistence, or support from the broader brand presence in the market.
The companies getting stronger results are approaching this with more structure. Rather than treating inbound and outbound as separate activities, they are combining both into what is known as Allbound. Brand awareness builds familiarity. Outbound creates direct conversations with the right accounts. Together, those motions strengthen each other.
This is becoming even more relevant as AI enters the sales workflow. AI can improve research, targeting, and messaging support, but it does not replace the need for trust, judgment, and human interaction. In many B2B environments, especially those with longer sales cycles and more complex buying decisions, the human side of selling is becoming more visible again, not less.
A useful way to assess your own outbound motion is to ask a few simple questions:
Steve’s latest article explores these questions in more depth and looks at where most outbound efforts fall short, how Allbound works in practice, and why human interaction is becoming more valuable again in B2B sales.
👉 Read the full article: The Evolution of Outbound Motions (And What is Allbound?)
Book a Discovery CallWaterotor Energy Technologies, a Canadian hydrokinetic energy company, partnered with Roadmap to strengthen the foundation for its next stage of growth. The engagement began with Strategic Foundations work that helped clarify how the company’s technology, opportunity, and licensing model should be presented to the market.
That work led directly into a website redevelopment and HubSpot implementation designed to improve how Waterotor communicated with investors, partners, and stakeholders, while creating a more structured system for capturing and managing inbound engagement.
With a redesigned website, integrated lead capture, centralized CRM, and clearer visibility into ongoing conversations, Waterotor now has the digital infrastructure needed to support growth with greater organization and consistency.
See how strategy, website development, and HubSpot implementation came together.
Read The Case StudyPodcast Episode S2E05
In this episode of Driving Growth, host Steve Whittington engages with Melanie Whittingham, a master networker, to explore the art of networking and its impact on professional growth.
Podcast Episode S2E06
In this episode of Driving Growth, host Steve Whittington explores the key elements of a strategic marketing plan and how the right structure can support revenue growth.
Most B2B companies overlook the growth potential in existing accounts. This blog shows how a structured account management strategy can drive retention, expansion, and more predictable revenue.
Lead generation is not about one tactic or quick fix. This blog shows why businesses need a full demand generation ecosystem, built on a clear strategic narrative, consistent messaging, and aligned channels, to create steady pipeline growth.




