When we got the opportunity to test Clay Audiences through the beta program, we were curious to see how it approached audience management and whether it could solve some of the challenges we see across GTM teams.
Following its official launch on June 23, Audiences is now available across all Clay plans, bringing support for unlimited records and making it easier to work with large datasets.
Across the organizations we work with, audience management is often more complex than it needs to be. Teams have access to CRM data, enrichments, and buying signals, but bringing those pieces together into actionable audiences can be surprisingly time-consuming.
After testing the feature, our biggest takeaway was simple: Clay Audiences brings together CRM data, enrichment, and signals in a way that makes audience management much more practical.
The Problem with CRM Data Alone
CRM systems are the foundation of most go-to-market operations. They tell us who our customers are, which opportunities are open, and how accounts are progressing through the funnel.
But they rarely tell the full story.
A company may have doubled in size since the last opportunity was created. A key decision-maker may have joined the organization. A prospect may have raised funding or expanded into a new market.
Those changes matter, especially when you're trying to prioritize outreach, identify expansion opportunities, or build highly targeted campaigns.
The challenge is that this information typically comes from multiple sources. CRM data lives in one place, company intelligence in another, and signals somewhere else entirely.
Bringing Everything Together
This is where Clay Audiences becomes interesting.
Rather than treating CRM records, enrichments, and signals as separate datasets, Audiences allows teams to use them together when defining target groups.
At the center of the feature are Clay's All Companies and All People datasets. Once connected to your CRM, these datasets can be enriched and combined with a variety of signals, making it possible to build audiences using a much broader set of criteria.
Instead of asking, "Who is in our CRM?" teams can start asking questions like:
The audience becomes more than a CRM report. It becomes a combination of historical data, current company information, and real-world signals.
Use Cases That Stood Out During Testing
As we explored Audiences, we started seeing clear opportunities for GTM teams:
➡️ Signal-Based Outbound
Timing plays a major role in outbound success. Hiring activity, funding announcements, leadership changes, and growth signals often indicate that something is happening inside an organization. With Audiences, these signals can become part of the audience definition itself rather than requiring separate research processes.
➡️ TAM Management
Most teams have a target account list. Fewer teams have a process for keeping that list up to date. As companies grow, adopt new technologies, expand into different markets, or change their focus, audience definitions need to evolve as well. Audiences provides a way to manage those segments more dynamically.
➡️ Customer Expansion
Signals aren't only valuable for prospecting. Existing customers can also be segmented based on company growth, hiring activity, technology adoption, or other indicators that may point to expansion opportunities.
➡️ Sales and Marketing Alignment
One challenge we frequently see is different teams working from different audience definitions. Marketing may have one version of a target segment, sales another, and RevOps a third. Audiences provides a shared layer where those definitions can be built and maintained using the same underlying data.
How It Fits Into the Clay Ecosystem
One thing we appreciated while testing the beta is that Audiences doesn't feel disconnected from the rest of the platform.
Many teams already use Clay for prospecting, enrichment, research, and workflow automation. Audiences extends those capabilities by providing a centralized place to define who you're targeting before activation happens.
Rather than moving data between multiple systems and rebuilding lists for every initiative, teams can create audiences that are connected to the same data and workflows they already use in Clay.
What Makes Audiences Worth Exploring
After spending time with the beta, we don't see Clay Audiences as just another segmentation feature.
What makes it interesting is its ability to connect CRM data, enrichment, and signals into a single audience layer. That combination gives GTM teams a more complete view of their market and makes it easier to build audiences based on what's happening today, not just what's stored in the CRM.
We're excited to continue exploring the feature and to see how teams use it as Audiences becomes available more broadly across the Clay ecosystem.
Let’s talk about how Infinityn can help you build a Clay-based GTM engine that is tailored to your business.