B2B Sales GlossaryDefinition · List Building

MedTech

Definition

MedTech, short for medical technology, is the sector of companies that design, manufacture, and deliver medical devices, diagnostics, and digital health solutions. In B2B sales development and list-building, “MedTech” is used as a highly targeted industry segment for building prospect databases of healthcare technology buyers across hospitals, health systems, ambulatory centers, and life sciences organizations to drive complex, high-value sales cycles.

List BuildingUpdated June 2026Reviewed by the SalesHive team
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$678.88B

Estimated size of the global medical devices market in 2025, illustrating the massive MedTech addressable market that targeted list-building can tap into.

Source: Precedence Research

6-10

Typical number of decision-makers involved in a complex B2B buying group, highlighting why MedTech lists must capture full committees, not single contacts.

Source: Gartner

10+

Average number of people involved and nearly year-long duration of modern B2B buying journeys, underscoring the need for continuously maintained MedTech account and contact data.

Source: 6sense Buyer Experience Report 2025

73%

Share of B2B buyers who say they actively avoid suppliers that send irrelevant outreach, making precise role and context data vital for MedTech outbound success.

Source: Gartner Sales Survey 2025

In depth

What MedTech means in practice

In B2B sales development, MedTech (medical technology) refers to the ecosystem of companies that create medical devices, diagnostics, smart and connected equipment, and digital health platforms sold into healthcare providers, payers, and life sciences organizations. It sits at the intersection of hardware, software, and regulated clinical workflows, making it one of the most complex, and lucrative, verticals for outbound sales. The global medical devices market alone is projected to grow from about $678.9 billion in 2025 to roughly $1.15 trillion by 2034, with North America holding around 40% of revenue, underscoring the size of the MedTech opportunity.

Within sales development, “MedTech” is less about a product label and more about a tightly defined target universe. Reps sell capital equipment, implantables, diagnostics, wearables, and SaaS platforms into entities like IDNs, hospital systems, ambulatory surgery centers, imaging chains, and group practices. Effective list-building means not only knowing which organizations fit the ideal customer profile (ICP), but also mapping the complex web of stakeholders: clinical leaders, biomedical engineering, supply chain, IT, finance, and executive sponsors.

Modern MedTech buying is done by committees, not individuals. Gartner and other researchers find that typical B2B buying groups for complex solutions involve 6-10 or more decision-makers, while 6sense data shows these journeys span nearly a year and involve 10+ people on average. That reality directly shapes list-building: instead of pulling a single "head of cardiology" contact, high-performing teams build multi-threaded account maps that include budget owners, technical evaluators, clinical champions, and procurement gatekeepers from day one.

Because buyers spend only a small fraction of their total decision time with suppliers, Gartner estimates about 17%, often just 5-6% per vendor in competitive cycles, the quality of your MedTech prospect list has an outsized impact. If the right people aren’t identified and reachable, you may never even reach the discussion stage. At the same time, 73% of B2B buyers say they actively avoid suppliers that send irrelevant outreach, making accurate role and context data essential for personalization.

Over the past decade, MedTech has evolved from primarily device-focused selling to a broader healthtech landscape that includes AI-driven imaging, robotics, smart wearables, and cloud-based care coordination platforms. As subscription and outcomes-based models grow, sales teams must track new stakeholders (e.g., digital health, population health, data science) and new buying triggers (funding rounds, FDA clearances, new service lines). Modern MedTech list-building therefore blends classic firmographics (beds, locations, specialties) with technographics, regulatory context, and installed-base data, and then feeds that into outbound engines like cold calling, email sequences, and SDR teams to generate qualified opportunities at scale.

Why it matters

The upside of getting MedTech right

What teams gain when this is run well as part of a disciplined outbound motion.

Hyper-Targeted Account Selection

MedTech-specific list-building allows sales teams to focus on hospitals, IDNs, specialty clinics, and OEMs that precisely match their regulatory, clinical, and economic ICP. This reduces wasted dials and emails and ensures outreach is concentrated on accounts with real potential to adopt a given device or digital health solution.

Complete Buying-Committee Coverage

Well-built MedTech lists capture the full decision group, clinical, technical, financial, and procurement stakeholders, rather than a single champion. This enables multi-threaded outreach, improves consensus-building in complex deals, and reduces the risk of stalled opportunities when one contact changes role or leaves.

Higher Relevance and Personalization

Accurate role, specialty, and facility-level data makes it possible to tailor messaging to the specific clinical or operational problem each persona owns. Relevant, personalized outreach is critical in B2B today, as surveys show nearly three-quarters of buyers avoid suppliers that send generic messages.

Better Territory Planning and Forecasting

A structured MedTech database clarifies market coverage by region, care setting, and specialty, giving leaders a realistic view of total addressable market and penetration. That, in turn, improves territory design, SDR capacity planning, and pipeline forecasting for capital equipment and SaaS deals.

Regulatory and Compliance Alignment

Purpose-built MedTech lists can be sourced and maintained with healthcare-specific compliance in mind, including opt-out handling and data provenance. This reduces legal risk while still enabling targeted outreach to the right clinicians and administrators.

Best practices

How to do it well

Practical guidance from the team that runs outbound campaigns every day.

Define a Granular MedTech ICP

Go beyond "hospitals" and "clinics" by specifying sub-verticals (e.g., orthopedic surgery centers, cardiology service lines, imaging chains), bed counts, payer mix, and regulatory environment. A clear ICP document helps list builders and SDRs focus only on accounts where your device or platform can realistically win.

Map Full Buying Committees by Default

For every target account, identify multiple contacts across clinical leadership, biomedical engineering, IT, supply chain, finance, and the C-suite. Building this multi-threaded view into the list from the start supports coordinated outreach and reduces dependence on a single champion in long, complex cycles.

Layer Firmographics with Technographics and Signals

Combine core account data (beds, locations, service lines) with technographic indicators such as installed EMR, imaging systems, or remote monitoring platforms. Add trigger events like funding rounds, FDA clearances, or new service launches to prioritize lists around accounts most likely to be in an active buying cycle.

Continuously Enrich and Validate Data

Treat MedTech lists as living assets, not one-off exports. Use tools and human research to validate emails, direct dials, and titles on a regular cadence, and centralize this in your CRM so SDRs always work from the freshest view of the account.

Align Messaging with Clinical and Economic Outcomes

Ensure list segments map to specific value props, for example, reducing readmissions for a CNO persona versus increasing OR throughput for a COO. This alignment makes outbound touchpoints feel more like tailored guidance than a generic pitch, improving connect and meeting rates.

Partner with Specialized MedTech SDR Teams

If internal resources are limited, work with an outsourced SDR provider that understands MedTech and can handle list-building, personalization, and multi-channel outreach. This accelerates pipeline generation while keeping your internal team focused on demos, pilots, and closing.

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From the floor

Expert tips on MedTech

What our strategists and SDR coaches tell teams working on this right now.

Segment MedTech by Micro-Verticals

Don't treat MedTech as a single list. Create micro-segments like cardiology devices, surgical robotics, wound care, and digital monitoring, each with its own messaging, personas, and success metrics. This structure lets SDRs quickly tailor outreach to the exact clinical and operational context.

Start with a Tight Logo List, Then Expand

Begin with 50-150 best-fit logos based on your strongest use cases and success stories, and build deep multi-contact coverage at those accounts. Once you prove traction and refine your talk tracks, use lookalike criteria to scale MedTech list-building into adjacent geographies and specialties.

Use Trigger Events to Prioritize Outreach

Layer your MedTech lists with triggers like new service line launches, facility expansions, technology partnerships, or major funding rounds. Targeting accounts right after these events dramatically increases the odds they are actively exploring new devices or digital solutions.

Coordinate Messaging Across SDRs and AEs

Ensure SDRs, AEs, and marketing share the same MedTech account views and persona notes within your CRM. Consistent language around clinical outcomes, workflow impact, and ROI makes your outreach feel orchestrated rather than disjointed cold touches.

Regularly Review for Compliance and Brand Fit

Schedule quarterly reviews of MedTech lists with legal, compliance, and product marketing to confirm targeting criteria, messaging boundaries, and opt-out handling. This keeps outbound programs aligned with evolving regulatory expectations and your brand's standards in sensitive clinical markets.

Watch out for

Common challenges and pitfalls

The traps that quietly erode results, and what to do instead.

Fragmented and Incomplete Data Sources

Healthcare and MedTech data is scattered across provider directories, credentialing databases, conference lists, and legacy CRMs. Stitching these sources together often results in duplicates, missing roles, or outdated titles, which erodes SDR productivity and increases bounce rates.

Constant Organizational and Role Changes

Hospital mergers, system consolidations, and frequent leadership changes make contact data decay quickly. In long MedTech sales cycles that can run 9-18 months, it's common for key stakeholders to move or change responsibilities mid-deal, breaking communication if lists aren't continuously refreshed.

Multi-Stakeholder Complexity

Research shows buying groups for complex B2B solutions typically include 6-10 or more decision-makers. Without a disciplined approach to mapping all relevant personas, SDRs may over-index on a few clinicians or IT contacts and miss economic buyers or procurement, slowing or killing deals.

Regulatory and Privacy Constraints

MedTech prospecting must navigate healthcare privacy expectations and regional regulations, as well as internal legal review. Using non-compliant sources or consumer-style contact harvesting can expose vendors to risk and damage brand trust with sophisticated provider organizations.

Misaligned Targeting Across Teams

Marketing, sales, and channel partners often operate from different definitions of a "MedTech target account," leading to inconsistent lists and mixed messages. This misalignment wastes campaign dollars and makes it harder to attribute pipeline impact back to specific list-building efforts.

How SalesHive helps

Put MedTech to work

SalesHive helps MedTech companies operationalize this entire motion, from list-building to meetings booked. Their research and data teams construct highly targeted MedTech prospect lists that reflect your ideal customer profile across hospitals, IDNs, ambulatory surgery centers, imaging centers, and OEM partners, then enrich those lists with role-specific contacts spanning clinical, technical, and economic stakeholders.

Once the list is in place, SalesHive’s outsourced SDR teams execute multi-channel outreach through cold calling and personalized email sequences powered by their eMod AI engine. eMod automatically researches each prospect and tailors messaging to their role and organization, which is critical in a sector where irrelevant outreach is quickly ignored. Combined with a track record of booking over 100,000 meetings for B2B clients, SalesHive offers MedTech vendors a proven way to turn raw target accounts into qualified evaluations and pilots, all under flexible, no-annual-contract engagements.

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Questions, answered

MedTech FAQs

The short version is on the surface. Open any question to go deeper.

In B2B sales development, MedTech refers to companies that produce medical devices, diagnostics, and healthcare technology platforms sold into providers, payers, and life sciences organizations. For list-building, it's a distinct vertical that requires specialized account and contact data reflecting clinical, technical, and economic stakeholders inside healthcare ecosystems.
A MedTech list is built around the specific decision-makers who influence technology and device purchases, such as service line directors, biomedical engineering, IT, supply chain, and finance, rather than broad clinical or marketing contacts. It also incorporates details like installed technologies, service lines, and facility types that directly affect product fit and buying readiness.
Typical MedTech buying groups span clinical leaders (e.g., CMO, chief of surgery), operational and financial roles (COO, CFO, VP supply chain), technical evaluators (CIO, director of clinical engineering), and procurement or contracting. Including champions, influencers, and final approvers across these functions helps your team build consensus in complex committee decisions.
Because of frequent role changes, hospital mergers, and new service launches, MedTech lists should be refreshed continuously and formally reviewed at least quarterly. High-velocity outbound teams often run ongoing enrichment and validation so SDRs are always working from the newest titles, direct dials, and account hierarchies.
Focus on professional B2B contact data sourced from reputable providers, public directories, and consent-based channels, and ensure all outreach respects opt-out and regional privacy laws (such as GDPR where applicable). Work with legal to define approved sources, messaging boundaries, and retention policies so sales development efforts support rather than undermine your compliance posture.
Early-stage MedTech companies often lack the bandwidth and expertise to build and maintain high-quality lists while also navigating long, regulated sales cycles. Outsourcing list-building and SDR functions to a specialized partner can accelerate pipeline creation and validation of your go-to-market, while your internal team focuses on demos, pilots, and clinical validation.

Put MedTech to work for your pipeline.

Book a 30-minute strategy call and we’ll map out exactly how SalesHive books qualified meetings for your team.

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