11 June 2026 · 3 min read
B2B Lead Generation: A Practical Pipeline Infrastructure Guide
Most B2B lead generation fails because the work gets split into parts that never meet.
One person buys a list. Another writes emails. Someone else runs LinkedIn Ads. Sales gets a few replies and half-filled forms. Nobody knows what worked.
That is not a pipeline. It is activity.
A pipeline needs four things: the right accounts, the right message, the right channel mix, and a clear route from first touch to booked call. That is the model behind Empra Labs: build the pipeline, then let your team close.
What B2B lead generation actually needs
LinkedIn defines lead generation as the process of finding, attracting, and building relationships with possible buyers, with marketing and sales both involved. (LinkedIn)
A good lead has: a company that fits your market, a person with real buying power or influence, a reason to care now, a route into a sales conversation, and enough data for sales to act fast.
The five-part B2B pipeline system
1. ICP before data
"B2B SaaS founders" is too broad. "UK-based B2B SaaS founders, 11–50 employees, hiring sales roles, selling to finance teams" is usable.
Before you buy data or run ads, define: industries, company size, geography, buying triggers, job titles, seniority, exclusion rules, and pain points by role.
Empra's Outbound work starts here because lead quality depends on fit before anything else.
2. Research-ready lead lists
A lead list should not just be names, emails, and LinkedIn URLs. Each record needs context: company signals, likely pain points, relevant decision-makers, and personalisation fields your email copy can use.
A stronger lead record includes: company name, website, industry, headcount, revenue band, funding stage, hiring signals, tech stack, recent news, likely business problem, and a suggested email angle.
3. Email infrastructure that protects the brand
Cold email depends on trust from inbox providers. Google's sender rules require SPF or DKIM for all senders, and SPF, DKIM, and DMARC for bulk senders, with Gmail spam rates kept below 0.3%. (Google Help)
A clean outbound setup has: separate sending domains, proper DNS records, SPF/DKIM/DMARC, warmed inboxes, daily volume caps, bounce checks, reply handling, and sender rotation.
This is why Empra has a dedicated Deliverability page.
4. LinkedIn Ads for the accounts already warming up
Cold email reaches buyers before they are searching. LinkedIn Ads keeps you visible when the same buyers start checking you out — one creates direct conversations, the other builds repeat exposure.
Use LinkedIn Ads to warm up cold accounts, retarget site visitors, promote proof, and support outbound campaigns.
5. Fast follow-up
A lead is only worth something if someone follows up. Your lead route should define who owns the lead, what happens in the first minute, what data gets added before sales acts, and how meetings are tracked.
What to measure
Track: account fit, email bounce rate, open rate, reply rate, positive reply rate, ad CTR, cost per lead, meeting rate, show rate, sales accepted leads, and revenue by source.
Where Empra fits
Outbound gives you researched lead lists and sending setup. LinkedIn Ads builds paid demand around the same ICP. Deliverability protects the sending layer.
If you want to see how this would work for your market, book a 15-minute call.