
Madison Logic is an enterprise ABM suite, while Satlo positions itself as a LinkedIn Ads analytics and buyer intent platform.
In this guide, I have compared Madison Logic vs. Satlo on features, pricing and ABM fit so your marketing and sales teams can quickly see which platform aligns with their ABM motion.
I have also discussed how ZenABM can work as a lean LinkedIn-first alternative or serve as a complementary layer due to its unique features.
In case you want it short:
| Category | Madison Logic | Satlo |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Type | Enterprise ABM activation and intent platform | LinkedIn Ads analytics and buyer intent platform |
| Main Strength | Multi-channel ABM, syndication and large-scale intent data | Clear company-level LinkedIn engagement insights |
| Weakness | Complex, expensive, heavy top of funnel bias | No multi-channel activation, limited attribution depth |
| Intent Signals | Bombora surge intent plus first-party engagement | Engagement-based intent scoring only |
| Attribution | Cross-channel attribution with ML Measurement | LinkedIn only data matched to CRM |
| Integrations | Salesforce, HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot, Adobe, and Gong | HubSpot, Apollo, basic CRM sync |
| Best For | Large ABM teams with multi channel budgets | LinkedIn heavy teams wanting company-level visibility |
| Pricing | Custom enterprise pricing | Starts at €58 per month |
A third option: ZenABM gives account-level LinkedIn ad engagement, pipeline dashboards, account scoring, ABM stages, CRM sync, first-party qualitative intent, automated BDR assignment, custom webhooks, an AI chatbot Zena that gives deep LinkedIn ABM analytics in natural language, and job title analytics starting at $59 per month.
Madison Logic is an enterprise ABM platform that helps you reach named accounts across several paid channels from one place.
Here is a condensed look at what it does, what it costs and how users see it.
The Activate ABM platform in Madison Logic combines content syndication, ads and intent data in a single system.
Madison Logic coordinates content syndication, display, LinkedIn ads, CTV and digital audio in one platform.
You can reach target accounts through whitepapers, webinars, LinkedIn Sponsored Posts and streaming TV or audio placements.


Madison Logic claims a large B2B intent graph built over many years and a broad set of accounts and contacts.
These signals feed ML Insights, which scores and prioritizes in market accounts so you know who to focus on.
Madison Logic can syndicate your content through its publisher network to generate MQLs from target accounts.
Though Madison Logic claims tight filters, some marketers say syndication can be opaque and inconsistent on lead quality.
One Redditor called it “a blind network with no way of filtering out of spec leads.”

Madison Logic runs programmatic display and LinkedIn campaigns against your account list.
As a LinkedIn Marketing Partner, it syncs segments into Campaign Manager and includes LinkedIn as part of multi-channel sequences.
The goal is sustained exposure across display, social and other channels.
Note: Display networks still struggle with bots and banner blindness.

So, I’d say, more reliable platforms like LinkedIn make more sense for account-based advertising.
And this is where ZenABM comes into the picture.

You get:
Best part?
All data is pulled straight from LinkedIn’s official Ads API!
For teams with creative capacity and budget, Madison Logic can also activate CTV and digital audio campaigns as part of an ABM mix.

ML Measurement and the ML Intent Dashboard connect engagement to pipeline and revenue. The Intent Dashboard centralizes intent, engagement and benchmarks, then surfaces hot accounts and recommended next steps, with views for stage movement and cross-channel performance.

Similarly, ZenABM gives deep plug-and-play LinkedIn ABM analytics.
From campaign performance data to revenue metrics, you get it all in a unified analytics dashboard:

Madison Logic built its edge on deep intent data.
Its data arm later became Bombora, and the platform still blends first-party engagement with Bombora Company Surge, plus firmographic and technographic data inside the ML Data Cloud.
Targeting uses firmographics and job attributes, so you can reach the right roles and regions via syndication, display and LinkedIn.
Third-party keyword surge intent can skew toward curiosity rather than purchase intent, and some G2 reviews point out a strong top-of-funnel tilt.

Madison Logic connects to major CRM, MAP and sales tools, which suit complex B2B stacks, although setup and upkeep can require ops effort.
| Platform | Integration Details | User Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Salesforce (CRM) | Embeds account insights and engagement data and connects campaigns to the pipeline. | “The integration with Salesforce is everything when it comes to our reporting.” |
| HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot (MAP) | Pushes leads and engagement data into nurture flows that sync with CRM. | Some users mention early setup friction and occasional manual CSV fallback. |
| LinkedIn Marketing Solutions | Exports account segments into Campaign Manager for activation. | Reported to streamline activation and reduce launch time. |
| Gong | Feeds intent-backed insights into call prep and follow-ups. | Used to personalize conversations with AI-supported cues. |
| Convertr | Enriches leads in real time with intent scores and topics. | Helps route qualified leads faster into the right workflows. |
| Adobe Experience Platform | Feeds intent data into Adobe tools such as Journey Optimizer. | Supports full funnel personalization for enterprise programs. |
Madison Logic does not share list pricing publicly, so most buyers will see custom enterprise quotes.
Public benchmarks suggest:
Well, conclusively, Madison Logic is at least $20k+ per month.
ZenABM, on the other hand, starts at just $59/month.
User feedback reflects strong capabilities along with predictable tradeoffs.
Pros:



Cons:

Satlo positions itself as a LinkedIn Ads analytics and buyer intent platform.
Here is how it works, what it costs and what users say.
Satlo markets itself as an ABM platform that bridges ad performance and sales activation.
It aims to fill LinkedIn’s reporting gaps and help B2B marketers detect buyer intent and pass qualified opportunities to sales.

Satlo provides company-level LinkedIn engagement data (impressions, clicks and so on), which LinkedIn Campaign Manager does not expose directly.
ZenABM offers similar company-level views:

Satlo integrates with tools like HubSpot and Apollo to push company lists into sales workflows.
It identifies which companies engaged with your ads and writes those accounts into your CRM.
Pro Tip: ZenABM also focuses on CRM sync (HubSpot and Salesforce) but goes deeper:

Satlo gives dashboards and exports that let marketers slice LinkedIn performance by account. Highlights include:
ZenABM provides a more sophisticated unified dashboard for revenue metrics and campaign performance data:

Satlo’s AI companion runs across all companies reached by your LinkedIn ads, surfaces sales actions, and provides intent signals for key accounts.
It works across your ad accounts and unlimited data history and is available from the Pro tier onward.
The aim is to highlight accounts that shifted from passive exposure to active interest based on campaign interactions and company engagement, not just single clicks.
ZenABM also provides an AI agent (Zena) that provides deep LinkedIn ABM analytics in natural language:


Satlo has three main plans, structured around the number of LinkedIn ad accounts and the depth of insight.
All plans include unlimited historical LinkedIn Ads data and the ability to export audiences and performance to Excel.

For individuals or small teams that want faster LinkedIn analysis without complexity.
Includes:
For growing teams that need broader coverage and deeper buyer insights.
Includes:
For larger organizations managing multiple accounts or needing custom integrations and support.
Includes:
Satlo also offers a 14-day free trial and uses Stripe for billing.
ZenABM’s pricing is similar to Satlo and starts at just $59/mo.
Madison Logic vs. Satlo differences are summarized here.
| Feature | Madison Logic | Satlo |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Focus | Full-stack ABM with syndication and multi-channel activation | LinkedIn Ads analytics with basic buyer intent |
| Advertising Channels | LinkedIn, programmatic display, syndication, CTV, audio | LinkedIn only |
| Intent Data | Bombora plus proprietary engagement signals | Simple engagement-derived intent score |
| ABM Features | Account prioritization, content syndication, multi-channel sequences | Company lists, basic intent scoring, CRM routing |
| Attribution | Pipeline and revenue influence reporting | Basic CRM match for LinkedIn exposures |
| CRM Integrations | Very broad across CRM, MAP and sales tools | HubSpot, Apollo, simple CRM push |
| Complexity | High, requires advanced ops | Low to moderate |
| Ideal Team Size | Enterprise teams with full ABM budgets | Lean teams focused on LinkedIn performance |
| Pricing Model | Custom enterprise agreements | €58 to €99 monthly, plus a custom enterprise tier |
Madison Logic is for enterprise teams that run ABM across syndication, programmatic, CTV and LinkedIn. It is powerful, but expensive.
Satlo is a lightweight LinkedIn analytics layer that tries to fill in the gaps LinkedIn Campaign Manager leaves open. It is simpler, cheaper and not built for real ABM orchestration.
After we have discussed the Madison Logic vs. Satlo angle, let me introduce a third option: ZenABM.
ZenABM is built for teams that rely on LinkedIn as the primary ABM channel and want first-party accuracy, automation, and revenue visibility without the price or complexity of multi-channel suites.
Let’s look at its core features:


ZenABM connects to the official LinkedIn Ads API and captures account-level data for all campaigns so you can see which companies see, click, and engage with your ads.
Because this is first-party data from LinkedIn’s environment, it is more reliable than IP or cookie-based visitor ID.
A Syft study puts IP-based identification at around 42 percent accuracy.

ZenABM treats LinkedIn ad engagement itself as first-party intent. When several people in one company keep engaging with your ads, that is a strong buying signal without rented intent feeds.

ZenABM updates engagement scores as accounts interact with your ads across campaigns, so you can see who is heating up over short or long windows and let marketing and sales prioritize accounts that show real intent.
ZenABM also shows the full touchpoint timeline for each company:



ZenABM lets you define stages such as Identified, Aware, Engaged, Interested, and Opportunity and automatically places accounts in the right stage using scores and CRM data.
You control thresholds, and ZenABM tracks movement over time.


This gives you funnel visibility similar to larger suites, but powered by LinkedIn data.
ZenABM integrates bi-directionally with CRMs like HubSpot and adds Salesforce sync on higher tiers.
LinkedIn engagement data flows into the CRM as company-level properties:

Once an account crosses your score threshold, ZenABM updates the stage to Interested and automatically assigns a BDR.

ZenABM lets you derive intent topics from LinkedIn campaigns by tagging campaigns by feature, use case, or offer.
ZenABM then shows which accounts engage with which themes.

This is clean, first-party intent from owned interactions.
You can push these topics into your CRM, so sales and marketing can tailor outreach to what each company has actually explored.

ZenABM ships with dashboards that connect LinkedIn ads to account engagement, stage movement, and revenue.



ZenABM shows which job titles engage with your creatives and gives dwell time and video funnel analytics.

ZenABM provides its AI chatbot called Zena that basically answers all you want from ZenABM in natural language.
You can ask Zena open-ended questions like you would a smart analyst and get company-level answers about:
Under the hood, Zena combines OpenAI with a library of carefully designed prompts and endpoints to join ad engagement, spend and CRM deals so it can explain which campaigns drove pipeline, which accounts turned into opportunities, which formats perform best and which companies are high intent but untouched by sales.
Instead of exporting spreadsheets and stitching pivot tables, you get plain language insights, ready to drop into strategy reviews, weekly sales standups or executive updates.

ZenABM’s custom webhooks let you push events into your stack, for example, Slack alerts, enrichment flows, or other ops automations.

Most tools treat each LinkedIn campaign separately. ZenABM lets you group several into one ABM campaign object so you can see performance across regions, personas, or creative clusters.
Instead of juggling fragmented reports in Campaign Manager, you see spend, pipeline, account movement, and ROAS for the entire initiative.
For agencies, ZenABM offers a multi-client workspace.
You can manage multiple ad accounts and clients in one environment, each with its own ABM strategy, dashboards, and reporting, instead of constantly switching accounts in Campaign Manager.

Plans start at $59 per month for Starter, $159 for Growth, $399 for Pro (with AI), and $479 for Agency.
The agency plan still stays under $6,000 per year.
All tiers include core LinkedIn ABM features. Higher tiers mostly increase limits and add Salesforce sync.
Plans are available monthly or annually, and every plan includes a 37-day free trial.
Pick Madison Logic if you are running ABM like a big enterprise machine: content syndication + programmatic + LinkedIn + CTV/audio, plus Bombora-style intent to prioritize accounts at scale. It’s built for reach, volume, and multi-channel activation, not for being “simple” or “affordable” or other cute fantasies.
Pick Satlo if your ABM is basically LinkedIn Ads, and you want a cleaner way to see company-level engagement, intent-ish scoring, and CRM routing without buying a full ABM suite. It’s lightweight, low-cost, and focused, but it’s not trying to orchestrate your whole go-to-market.
Pick ZenABM if LinkedIn is your primary ABM channel, and you want first-party company insight + scoring + stages + CRM alignment + pipeline dashboards in one place, starting at $59 per month. It’s the practical option when you want revenue clarity without paying enterprise tax.
Even if you use Madison Logic, you may still want ZenABM anyway as the LinkedIn truth layer, because it adds the parts teams actually struggle with while running ABM on LinkedIn: