Outsourced SDR Teams: The Real Math Behind Renting Your Prospecting

Outsourced SDR Teams: The Real Math Behind Renting Your Prospecting - hero image

In a SaaS­tr sur­vey of more than 1,200 SaaS exec­u­tives, only 7% said an out­sourced SDR engage­ment real­ly worked for them. Anoth­er 26% said it sort of worked — and rough­ly half report­ed los­ing mon­ey on the arrange­ment. Yet out­sourced SDR firms keep grow­ing, because the prob­lem they solve is real: most founders are ter­ri­ble SDR man­agers, and an unman­aged SDR — in-house or rent­ed — pro­duces almost noth­ing.

This arti­cle is about out­sourc­ing one spe­cif­ic func­tion: the SDR (sales devel­op­ment rep­re­sen­ta­tive) role, the per­son who does cold out­reach and books qual­i­fied meet­ings for your closers. It is not about out­sourc­ing your entire sales func­tion — account exec­u­tives, deal clos­ing, account man­age­ment. That is a dif­fer­ent deci­sion with dif­fer­ent math, and I cov­er it sep­a­rate­ly in the guide to out­sourced SaaS sales. Here we’ll define what an out­sourced SDR team actu­al­ly does, what it costs in 2026, and — the part most cov­er­age skips — the cost-per-oppor­tu­ni­ty math that tells you whether rent­ing prospect­ing capac­i­ty beats build­ing it.

What an Outsourced SDR Team Actually Does

An SDR (sales devel­op­ment rep­re­sen­ta­tive) sits at the top of your sales fun­nel. The role exists to do one job: turn a list of strangers into qual­i­fied meet­ings on your account exec­u­tives’ cal­en­dars. Done well, the func­tion car­ries real weight — Crunch­base reports that sales devel­op­ment teams can gen­er­ate 30–45% of new busi­ness rev­enue at B2B com­pa­nies. A tra­di­tion­al SDR research­es tar­get accounts, per­son­al­izes out­reach, sends cold emails and LinkedIn mes­sages, makes cold calls, fol­lows up per­sis­tent­ly, and qual­i­fies who­ev­er responds before hand­ing them to a clos­er.

An out­sourced SDR team is a third-par­ty firm you pay to run that func­tion for you. Depend­ing on the mod­el, the firm sup­plies the peo­ple, the out­reach tech­nol­o­gy, the con­tact data, the scripts, and — in the bet­ter arrange­ments — the man­age­ment lay­er that keeps dai­ly activ­i­ty on track.

What the firm does not sup­ply is the strat­e­gy under­neath the activ­i­ty: who to tar­get, what prob­lem to lead with, and what counts as a qual­i­fied meet­ing. Those stay your job, and as we’ll see, that’s where most engage­ments qui­et­ly die.

A use­ful men­tal mod­el: the SDR func­tion is not real­ly sales. It’s a fac­to­ry that pro­duces qual­i­fied meet­ings. It has inputs (con­tact lists, mes­sag­ing, hours of out­reach activ­i­ty), a pro­duc­tion process, and a mea­sur­able out­put rate. When you out­source SDRs, you are rent­ing fac­to­ry capac­i­ty. Rent­ing capac­i­ty from some­one else’s fac­to­ry works fine — but only if you know exact­ly what the machine is sup­posed to pro­duce and you inspect the out­put every week.

Outsourced SDR outreach converting into booked meetings — a conveyor belt of envelopes and telephone receivers emerging through a glowing doorway as bright polished spheres

Outsourced SDR vs. Outsourced Sales: Two Different Decisions

These two get con­flat­ed con­stant­ly, and con­flat­ing them leads to bad con­tracts. The dis­tinc­tion mat­ters because the risk pro­files are com­plete­ly dif­fer­ent.

DimensionOutsourced SDR (this article)Outsourced full sales function
What you hand overProspecting and meeting booking onlyProspecting, demos, negotiation, closing
Who talks to buyers about moneyYour own account executivesThe vendor's closers
Product knowledge requiredModerate — enough to earn a meetingDeep — enough to win a deal
Damage when it failsWasted budget, weak pipeline for a quarterBurned prospects, mispriced deals, brand damage
ReversibilityHigh — turn it off, pipeline source endsLow — customer relationships live outside your company

Out­sourc­ing the SDR lay­er is a bound­ed, reversible exper­i­ment: the ven­dor nev­er nego­ti­ates price, nev­er signs con­tracts, and your AEs (account exec­u­tives — the sales­peo­ple who run demos and close deals) keep every buy­er con­ver­sa­tion that involves mon­ey. Out­sourc­ing the full sales motion hands a stranger your rev­enue engine. If you’re weigh­ing the big­ger deci­sion, read the out­sourced SaaS sales guide — the fail­ure modes there are more severe and the pre­con­di­tions stricter.

What Outsourced SDR Services Cost

The out­sourced SDR mar­ket in 2026 spans a wide price range because “out­sourced SDR” describes at least four dis­tinct ser­vice mod­els.

A note on the num­bers: the prices below are illus­tra­tive fig­ures reflect­ing mar­ket con­di­tions at the time of writ­ing. They’re includ­ed to show the rel­a­tive dif­fer­ences between mod­els — ver­i­fy cur­rent pric­ing with ven­dors before bud­get­ing.

ModelTypical monthly priceWhat you getWatch out for
Full-service SDR firm (US-based)$7,000–$10,000Dedicated SDR plus a fractional manager who runs their daily activityHighest price; quality varies by which rep you're assigned
Offshore / nearshore SDR$2,500–$5,000Dedicated rep in a lower-cost region, usually with shared managementAccent, time zone, and product-fluency friction on phone-heavy motions
Lead generation agency (email/LinkedIn)$2,000–$5,000Campaign-based outreach at volume; replies routed to youYou still do the qualifying; volume can burn your domain reputation
Pay-per-meeting appointment setting$200–$1,500 per held meetingYou pay only for meetings that happenIncentive is meeting quantity, not quality — qualification bar erodes

Two struc­tur­al details mat­ter more than the stick­er price.

  1. Whether man­age­ment is includ­ed. The most use­ful inno­va­tion in the cat­e­go­ry is the firm that rents you an SDR and a frac­tion­al SDR man­ag­er togeth­er. SDRs by them­selves don’t per­form — the role has a dai­ly account­abil­i­ty cadence that most founders have nei­ther the time nor the skill to run. If the quote does­n’t include a named man­ag­er doing dai­ly activ­i­ty review, you are buy­ing an unman­aged junior employ­ee who hap­pens to sit some­where else. Expect to pay more for includ­ed man­age­ment; it’s usu­al­ly worth it.
  2. Who owns the data and the domain. Out­reach runs on con­tact data, email send­ing domains, and sequenc­ing tools. If the ven­dor owns all three, switch­ing costs are high and a slop­py ven­dor can dam­age your email deliv­er­abil­i­ty (the per­cent­age of your emails that actu­al­ly reach inbox­es instead of spam fold­ers). Insist on out­reach from sub­do­mains you con­trol and export rights to every con­tact touched.

The Math: Outsourced SDR vs. In-House SDR

Ven­dors sell against the salary of an in-house SDR. That com­par­i­son is wrong in both direc­tions — it under­states the true cost of in-house, and it ignores the qual­i­ty dif­fer­ence in what each option pro­duces. Let’s do it prop­er­ly, with real­is­tic num­bers for a B2B SaaS com­pa­ny in the $5M–$15M ARR range.

The true cost of an in-house SDR

The salary is the vis­i­ble piece. The ful­ly loaded cost — what the role actu­al­ly costs your P&L once you count every­thing attached to it — looks like this:

Cost componentAnnual amount
On-target earnings (OTE — base salary plus bonus at full quota; ~$55K base + ~$25K variable)$80,000
Benefits and payroll taxes (~20% of OTE)$16,000
Tools and data (sequencer, dialer, contact database, LinkedIn seat)$12,000
Management allocation ($140K SDR manager spread across 7 reps)$20,000
Fully loaded annual cost$128,000

That’s $10,667 per month — rough­ly 2.3 times the month­ly base salary the ven­dor quot­ed against.

But the ful­ly loaded month­ly cost still under­states real­i­ty, because an in-house SDR is not pro­duc­tive every month you pay them. Two adjust­ments:

  1. Ramp time. A new SDR takes about 3 months to reach full pro­duc­tiv­i­ty.
  2. Tenure. SDR is a high-turnover role; assume rough­ly 15 months of aver­age tenure, plus about $5,000 in recruit­ing cost per hire.

So each hire gives you 15 paid months, of which about 12 are ful­ly pro­duc­tive:

Effec­tive month­ly cost = (15 months × $10,667 + $5,000 recruit­ing) ÷ 12 pro­duc­tive months ≈ $13,750

At a real­is­tic 12 qual­i­fied meet­ings held per pro­duc­tive month:

In-house cost per qual­i­fied meet­ing = $13,750 ÷ 12 ≈ $1,146

The outsourced comparison

Now the out­sourced SDR at $8,500/month all-in (mid-range full-ser­vice firm, man­age­ment includ­ed), ramp­ing in about a month and book­ing 10 held meet­ings per month:

Out­sourced cost per qual­i­fied meet­ing = $8,500 ÷ 10 = $850

The ven­dor’s pitch writes itself: $850 ver­sus $1,146 — about 26% cheap­er per meet­ing, no recruit­ing, no ramp, no turnover risk, can­cel any time. On cost per meet­ing, out­sourc­ing gen­uine­ly wins.

But cost per meet­ing is the wrong unit of analy­sis.

In-house vs outsourced SDR cost comparison — two transparent columns of stacked coins side by side, one tall and blue, one shorter and amber

The Number That Decides It: Cost per Opportunity

A meet­ing is not rev­enue. A meet­ing is an input to your AEs’ cal­en­dars. What you actu­al­ly want to buy is sales-qual­i­fied oppor­tu­ni­ties — meet­ings where the prospect fits your ICP (ide­al cus­tomer pro­file — the nar­row def­i­n­i­tion of who your prod­uct is actu­al­ly for), has the prob­lem you solve, and engages in a real eval­u­a­tion. Meet­ing qual­i­ty is where out­sourced SDR engage­ments are won or lost, because the ven­dor’s rep knows your prod­uct and your mar­ket less deeply than your own peo­ple do.

Extend the same exam­ple. Sup­pose 50% of your in-house SDR’s meet­ings con­vert to real oppor­tu­ni­ties, while the out­sourced meet­ings con­vert at 35% — a typ­i­cal gap when an exter­nal rep is qual­i­fy­ing against a check­list instead of gen­uine under­stand­ing:

MetricIn-house SDROutsourced SDR
Effective monthly cost$13,750$8,500
Qualified meetings held / month1210
Cost per meeting$1,146$850
Meeting-to-opportunity rate50%35%
Opportunities / month6.03.5
Cost per opportunity$2,292$2,429

The 26% per-meet­ing advan­tage just evap­o­rat­ed. At a 35% meet­ing-to-oppor­tu­ni­ty rate, the out­sourced option costs more per oppor­tu­ni­ty than the in-house rep — and every down­stream num­ber inher­its the dif­fer­ence. At a 20% oppor­tu­ni­ty-to-close rate, the prospect­ing cost baked into each new cus­tomer is about $11,458 in-house ver­sus $12,143 out­sourced (these fig­ures cov­er the prospect­ing lay­er only — AE time and mar­ket­ing sit on top, and all of it even­tu­al­ly rolls up into your CAC and LTV/CAC ratio).

Run the break-even on qual­i­ty and you get the sin­gle most use­ful num­ber in this entire deci­sion:

Break-even meet­ing qual­i­ty = $850 ÷ $2,292 ≈ 37%

If at least 37% of the ven­dor’s meet­ings turn into real oppor­tu­ni­ties, the out­sourced SDR beats your in-house eco­nom­ics in this exam­ple. Below that, you’re pay­ing a pre­mi­um for the appear­ance of pipeline. And if a ven­dor can match in-house qual­i­ty — 50% con­ver­sion — the math swings hard in their favor: $1,700 per oppor­tu­ni­ty ver­sus $2,292, a 26% advan­tage.

That’s the whole game. The deci­sion isn’t “out­sourced ver­sus in-house” in the abstract. It’s: what meet­ing-to-oppor­tu­ni­ty rate will this spe­cif­ic ven­dor achieve against my spe­cif­ic ICP, and is it above my break-even? Every­thing you do to man­age the engage­ment — the tar­get­ing, the score­card, the week­ly inspec­tion — exists to push that one num­ber above the line. Your num­bers will dif­fer; the struc­ture of the cal­cu­la­tion won’t. (If you want to see where these assump­tions come from, the deep­er treat­ment is in SaaS unit eco­nom­ics.)

When Outsourced SDR Works

The pat­tern in the suc­cess sto­ries is con­sis­tent. Out­sourced SDR works when:

  1. You’ve already proven the out­bound motion your­self. Some­one inside your com­pa­ny — often the founder — has per­son­al­ly sent the emails, made the calls, and booked meet­ings at a repeat­able rate. You know the reply rates, the objec­tions, and the mes­sage that lands. The ven­dor is scal­ing a recipe, not search­ing for one. This is the same prin­ci­ple behind build­ing a repeat­able sales process before hir­ing closers.
  2. Your ICP is nar­row and writ­ten down. A defined uni­verse — “dig­i­tal agen­cies between 20 and 200 employ­ees in North Amer­i­ca” — gives the ven­dor a finite list to work and gives you a clean way to audit whether they’re call­ing the right peo­ple. If you can’t artic­u­late your ide­al cus­tomer pro­file pre­cise­ly, an out­sourced team will spray your mes­sage across who­ev­er their data­base coughs up.
  3. The meet­ing is easy to earn rel­a­tive to deal size. Prod­ucts with a clear, rec­og­niz­able prob­lem state­ment and a sales cycle mea­sured in weeks suit rent­ed prospect­ing. The first con­ver­sa­tion does­n’t require deep prod­uct flu­en­cy — it requires dis­ci­plined out­reach vol­ume and a crisp pitch.
  4. You’re test­ing a new seg­ment or region. Want to know whether mid-mar­ket health­care responds to your mes­sage before com­mit­ting head­count? A 3‑month out­sourced SDR pilot is a cheap­er, faster exper­i­ment than hir­ing, and shut­ting it down costs you noth­ing but the notice peri­od.
  5. You treat the rent­ed team as part of the core team. The com­pa­nies that get this to work micro­man­age it — they review the lists, edit the scripts, join the ven­dor’s week­ly calls, and inspect call record­ings. The ones who “set and for­get” fund the ven­dor’s oth­er clients’ suc­cess sto­ries.

Note what’s not on the list: “we don’t have time to do out­bound.” Lack of time is the most com­mon rea­son CEOs sign these con­tracts, and it’s the sin­gle best pre­dic­tor of fail­ure — because the engage­ment needs more of your atten­tion in the first 90 days, not less.

When Outsourced SDR Fails

The fail­ure data is blunt: 7% clear suc­cess, 26% par­tial, rough­ly half los­ing mon­ey. The caus­es clus­ter into four pat­terns.

  1. Out­sourc­ing a motion you nev­er fig­ured out in-house. This is the big one. The com­pa­nies most eager to out­source SDRs are usu­al­ly the ones who could­n’t make the SDR mod­el work inter­nal­ly — which means they’re hand­ing a ven­dor an unsolved prob­lem and pay­ing retail for the dis­cov­ery process. If out­bound has nev­er worked for you, an out­sourced team gives you scale on a thing that does­n’t work. You can’t out­source what you haven’t fig­ured out.
  2. Com­plex prod­ucts with long cycles. When buy­ers expect prod­uct depth in the very first con­ver­sa­tion — com­mon in enter­prise SaaS sales and tech­ni­cal plat­forms — a script-dri­ven exter­nal rep gets fil­tered out by exact­ly the buy­ers you most want. High aver­age order val­ue plus sophis­ti­cat­ed buy­er is the worst-fit pro­file for rent­ed prospect­ing.
  3. Qual­i­ty decay behind a healthy dash­board. The meet­ings-booked num­ber stays green while meet­ing qual­i­ty qui­et­ly col­laps­es: wrong titles, wrong com­pa­ny sizes, prospects who agreed to a meet­ing to end the phone call. You dis­cov­er it a quar­ter lat­er when AE con­ver­sion drops and your pipeline turns out to be the­ater. This is why the score­card below tracks con­ver­sion through the fun­nel, not booked meet­ings.
  4. Ven­dor incen­tive mis­align­ment. Pay-per-meet­ing pric­ing rewards vol­ume; month­ly retain­ers reward renew­al. Nei­ther rewards oppor­tu­ni­ties-that-close unless you build the con­tract around that def­i­n­i­tion. The fix isn’t find­ing a saint­ly ven­dor — it’s defin­ing “qual­i­fied” con­trac­tu­al­ly and audit­ing against it week­ly.

There’s also a struc­tur­al fail­ure mode worth nam­ing: rent­ed pipeline does­n’t com­pound. An in-house SDR who stays becomes an AE who knows your mar­ket cold; the call record­ings, objec­tion pat­terns, and mes­sag­ing lessons accu­mu­late inside your com­pa­ny. With a ven­dor, that learn­ing walks out the door at con­tract end — which is also why an acquir­er doing dili­gence will dis­count pipeline that depends on a third par­ty they can’t retain. Treat that as a real cost even though it nev­er shows up on an invoice.

Outsourced SDR decision flowchart — prove outbound first, define the ICP, compare cost per opportunity against in-house, then run a 3-month pilot gated on break-even meeting quality

How to Manage an Outsourced SDR Firm

Remem­ber the fac­to­ry mod­el: the SDR func­tion is a meet­ing fac­to­ry with mea­sur­able through­put at every stage. Man­ag­ing an out­sourced SDR firm means inspect­ing that through­put on a fixed cadence — dai­ly activ­i­ty inside the ven­dor’s team (their man­ager’s job), week­ly results review with you (your job, 30–45 min­utes, non-nego­tiable).

The week­ly score­card needs only six num­bers:

MetricWhat it tells youHealthy signal
Outreach activities per day (calls + emails + LinkedIn touches)Is the machine running?Consistent with the contracted volume
Reply rateIs the message landing?Stable or improving week over week
Meetings bookedTop-line outputAt or above the contracted pace
Meeting show rateAre these real prospects?Roughly 70%+ of booked meetings actually happen
Meeting-to-opportunity rateThe quality numberAbove your break-even (~37% in our example)
Cost per opportunityThe decision numberAt or below your in-house benchmark

Beyond the score­card, four prac­tices sep­a­rate the 7% from the rest:

  1. Audit the list before any­one touch­es it. Review the first 200 accounts against your ICP. Every bad-fit account you remove before out­reach saves a wast­ed touch and pro­tects your mar­ket’s per­cep­tion of you.
  2. Lis­ten to call record­ings — two per week min­i­mum. SDR man­age­ment is ver­i­fi­ca­tion: the qual­i­ty of the research before the call, the qual­i­ty of the con­ver­sa­tion on it. You can­not ver­i­fy what you don’t hear.
  3. *Run the engage­ment off your CRM (cus­tomer rela­tion­ship man­age­ment sys­tem — the data­base where your deals live).* If results live in the ven­dor’s report­ing por­tal, you lose the data on exit and can’t trace meet­ings through to closed rev­enue.
  4. Pre-com­mit your exit cri­te­ria. Before sign­ing, write down the 90-day num­bers that mean “scale,” “fix,” or “exit.” Decid­ed in advance, these are data; decid­ed in month three, they’re a nego­ti­a­tion with your own sunk costs. (Sunk costs — mon­ey already spent that you can’t recov­er, and that humans reli­ably over­weight when decid­ing whether to con­tin­ue.)

If this sounds like more work than you expect­ed to del­e­gate away, recal­i­brate: you’re del­e­gat­ing the exe­cu­tion — the 300 dai­ly touch­es — not the account­abil­i­ty. The same is true of every out­sourced func­tion in your sales mod­el, and it rhymes with why hir­ing a VP of Sales to “fig­ure out sales for you” fails so often. Exe­cu­tion del­e­gates; own­er­ship does­n’t.

Inspecting outsourced SDR meeting quality — a brass magnifying glass beside a row of glass domes holding glowing embers, one lifted and burning brightest

What About AI SDRs?

The SDR role is being unbun­dled by AI, and any out­sourc­ing deci­sion made in 2026 has to account for it.

Look at what a tra­di­tion­al SDR actu­al­ly does all day: research the con­tact, per­son­al­ize a mes­sage, send the email, send the LinkedIn mes­sage, leave the voice­mail, log the activ­i­ty. AI tool­ing now han­dles most of that — per­son­al­iza­tion at scale, mul­ti-chan­nel send­ing, even auto­mat­ed voice­mail drops — with no labor beyond set­up. What AI does­n’t yet do well is decide who to con­tact (strat­e­gy), have the live qual­i­fy­ing con­ver­sa­tion (judg­ment), and adapt the mes­sage when the mar­ket shifts (taste).

Three prac­ti­cal impli­ca­tions:

  1. Don’t pay human prices for automat­able work. If a ven­dor’s val­ue propo­si­tion is “we send a lot of emails,” that’s now a soft­ware sub­scrip­tion, not a $7,000/month ser­vice. The ven­dors worth pre­mi­um pric­ing are sell­ing judg­ment: list strat­e­gy, mes­sage iter­a­tion, live phone con­ver­sa­tions, and man­age­ment dis­ci­pline.
  2. Ask any prospec­tive ven­dor how they use AI. A firm run­ning AI-assist­ed research and per­son­al­iza­tion can deliv­er more touch­es per dol­lar. A firm that has­n’t changed its process since 2022 is sell­ing you yes­ter­day’s cost struc­ture at today’s prices.
  3. The hybrid is often the right first move. AI sales tools plus a part-time inter­nal own­er can run the founder-led out­bound test that proves your motion — at a frac­tion of either an out­sourced con­tract or a full-time hire. Prove the recipe cheap­ly, then decide who scales it.

AI com­press­es the exe­cu­tion cost of prospect­ing toward zero. It does noth­ing to the strat­e­gy cost — know­ing who to tar­get and what to say. Which means the part of the SDR func­tion you could safe­ly out­source is shrink­ing, and the part you can’t is becom­ing the whole job.

AI tools reshaping the outsourced SDR role — a translucent robotic arm passing a glowing orb to an outstretched human hand

A Decision Framework by ARR Stage

Where out­sourced SDR fits depends most­ly on what you’ve already proven and what man­age­ment capac­i­ty you actu­al­ly have.

StageDefault answerReasoning
Under $1M ARRNo — founder-led outboundYou're still searching for the message and the ICP. That discovery can't be delegated; a vendor amplifies whatever you give them, including noise. Use AI tooling to multiply your own outreach instead.
$1M–$5M ARRPilot, if the motion is provenIf founder-led outbound books meetings at a known rate, a 3-month outsourced SDR pilot is a legitimate way to scale it before committing headcount. If outbound is unproven, fix that first.
$5M–$15M ARREither — decide on cost per opportunityYou have the deal flow to measure quality quickly and the management capacity to inspect weekly. Run the break-even math from this article against real vendor quotes; let the number decide. Hybrids work well here: in-house SDRs for the core segment, outsourced for new-segment tests.
Above $15M ARRMostly in-house; outsource at the edgesAt this scale the compounding value of an internal team — SDR-to-AE promotion pipeline, accumulated market knowledge — usually dominates the convenience of renting. Vendors still earn their keep on new-region entry and overflow capacity.

One refine­ment at every stage: out­sourced SDR com­petes not just against in-house SDRs but against every oth­er way to gen­er­ate qual­i­fied pipeline — demand gen­er­a­tion, con­tent, part­ner­ships, paid acqui­si­tion. Before sign­ing, com­pare the ven­dor’s pro­ject­ed cost per oppor­tu­ni­ty against the cost per oppor­tu­ni­ty of your best exist­ing lead gen­er­a­tion chan­nel. Some­times the hon­est answer is that anoth­er $8,500/month into a chan­nel that already works beats open­ing a new one that might.

Common Mistakes

  1. Buy­ing meet­ings instead of oppor­tu­ni­ties. The con­tract is priced and report­ed in meet­ings; your eco­nom­ics run on oppor­tu­ni­ties. Define “qual­i­fied” in writ­ing — title, com­pa­ny pro­file, prob­lem acknowl­edg­ment — and rec­on­cile every booked meet­ing against it.
  2. Skip­ping the in-house cost base­line. If you don’t know your own ful­ly loaded cost per oppor­tu­ni­ty, you can’t tell whether $8,500/month is a bar­gain or a tax. Do the twen­ty min­utes of math before the first sales call with a ven­dor.
  3. Judg­ing the pilot on month one. Even a good ven­dor needs 4–6 weeks to tune lists and mes­sag­ing. Judge at 90 days — but on the pre-com­mit­ted num­bers, not on opti­mism.
  4. Let­ting the ven­dor own the assets. Con­tact data, send­ing domains, CRM records, call record­ings. If you can’t take it with you, you’re build­ing the ven­dor’s busi­ness, not yours.
  5. Out­sourc­ing to avoid learn­ing sales. The CEOs who get this to work could run the SDR func­tion them­selves and choose not to. The ones who get burned are hop­ing the ven­dor knows some­thing about their mar­ket that they don’t. The ven­dor nev­er does — and per the out­bound lead gen­er­a­tion ser­vices guide, this prin­ci­ple applies to the entire cat­e­go­ry, not just SDRs.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does an outsourced SDR cost?

As of this writ­ing: $7,000–$10,000 per month for a US-based ded­i­cat­ed SDR with man­age­ment includ­ed, $2,500–$5,000 for off­shore or nearshore reps, $2,000–$5,000 for cam­paign-based lead gen­er­a­tion agen­cies, and $200–$1,500 per held meet­ing under pay-per-meet­ing mod­els. The spread reflects man­age­ment depth, rep loca­tion, and who car­ries the meet­ing-qual­i­ty risk.

Is an outsourced SDR worth it?

Only if two things are true: you’ve per­son­al­ly proven the out­bound motion works for your prod­uct, and the ven­dor’s meet­ing-to-oppor­tu­ni­ty rate clears your break-even (in our worked exam­ple, about 37%). Sur­vey data sug­gests most engage­ments fail — but the fail­ures con­cen­trate among com­pa­nies that out­sourced an unproven motion and man­aged it loose­ly.

How long should an outsourced SDR pilot run?

Three months. Short­er sam­ples are noise — too few meet­ings to judge qual­i­ty. Define suc­cess cri­te­ria before sign­ing: meet­ings held, show rate, meet­ing-to-oppor­tu­ni­ty rate, and cost per oppor­tu­ni­ty ver­sus your in-house base­line.

What’s the difference between an outsourced SDR firm and a lead generation agency?

An out­sourced SDR firm sup­plies named peo­ple who work your list across email, phone, and LinkedIn, and usu­al­ly books meet­ings direct­ly onto your AEs’ cal­en­dars. A lead gen­er­a­tion agency runs cam­paigns — typ­i­cal­ly email or LinkedIn at vol­ume — and routes replies to you for qual­i­fi­ca­tion. The SDR firm sells you a func­tion; the agency sells you a chan­nel.

Can I outsource SDRs for enterprise sales?

Usu­al­ly a poor fit. Enter­prise buy­ers expect prod­uct flu­en­cy from the first touch, and the mul­ti-stake­hold­er, long-cycle motion pun­ish­es script-dri­ven out­reach. If your aver­age deal runs well into six fig­ures, build the prospect­ing mus­cle in-house and aim out­sourced exper­i­ments at your mid-mar­ket seg­ment instead.

Should I hire an in-house SDR or outsource first?

If your motion is proven and you have man­age­ment capac­i­ty (or will rent the ven­dor’s), out­sourc­ing first is a rea­son­able way to buy speed — a ven­dor ramps in weeks ver­sus the rough­ly 4 months of recruit­ing plus ramp­ing a hire. If nobody has ever booked out­bound meet­ings for your prod­uct, nei­ther option is ready; run founder-led out­bound first.

The Bottom Line on Outsourced SDR

Out­sourced SDR is a legit­i­mate tool with a lousy base rate. The eco­nom­ics are decid­ed by one num­ber — the ven­dor’s meet­ing-to-oppor­tu­ni­ty rate against your ICP — and that num­ber is deter­mined far more by what you bring (a proven mes­sage, a nar­row ICP, week­ly inspec­tion) than by any­thing on the ven­dor’s web­site.

Do the math before the demo calls: com­pute your ful­ly loaded in-house cost per oppor­tu­ni­ty, derive the break-even meet­ing qual­i­ty a ven­dor must hit, and pre-com­mit your 90-day exit cri­te­ria. If you’ve proven the motion and you’re will­ing to man­age the fac­to­ry you’re rent­ing, an out­sourced SDR team can com­press your time-to-pipeline mean­ing­ful­ly. If you’re hop­ing to del­e­gate a prob­lem you haven’t solved, you’ll fund some­one else’s case study — the 7% who make this work earn their way in before they ever sign.

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author avatar
Vic­tor Cheng
Author of Extreme Rev­enue Growth, Exec­u­tive coach, inde­pen­dent board mem­ber, and investor in SaaS com­pa­nies.

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