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FullEnrich is a B2B email and phone waterfall enrichment platform that aggregates contact information from over 15 premium vendors to find the emails and phone numbers of leads.
Use Fullenrich with DialNexa when a buyer, customer, partner, or account contact gives information that should change pipeline, ownership, qualification, or follow-up.

Where Fullenrich fits in a DialNexa workflow

Fullenrich should receive DialNexa output when the conversation affects a lead, contact, company, deal, activity, task, or account-owner alert. The handoff should explain what the caller asked for, what DialNexa learned, which record or object is affected, and who owns the next step.

Qualify callers

Capture pain, role, budget signal, timeline, objection, source, and next step before a rep follows up.

Move deals with evidence

Update stage or activity only when the caller confirms intent, decision process, urgency, or blocker.

Route hot accounts

Notify the owner when an existing account calls with expansion intent, churn risk, procurement questions, or renewal blockers.

Keep CRM hygiene clean

Search by phone, email, company, and open opportunity before creating new records.

What DialNexa should capture for Fullenrich

  • Caller name, company, email, phone, source, owner, lifecycle stage, and CRM match confidence
  • Qualification answers, pain point, objection, urgency, budget signal, and buying timeline
  • Deal stage suggestion, callback window, meeting request, task owner, and due date
  • Opt-out, wrong-number, duplicate, student, vendor, competitor, or low-fit flags
  • Recording link, transcript link, DialNexa call ID, CRM URL, calendar URL, and email thread URL

High-value Fullenrich workflows

DialNexa should capture the preferred time, timezone, owner, promise made, and contact channel before updating Fullenrich. The receiving team should see exactly why the follow-up exists and what the caller expects next.
When this happens, DialNexa should mark the record as a suppression or cleanup case in Fullenrich. Include the exact reason, caller identity, source, and whether future outreach should stop so the team does not keep chasing a bad or unwanted contact.
For this scenario, DialNexa should treat Fullenrich as an escalation destination. Send the impact, urgency, affected customer or object, owner, and transcript link so the right team can act before the issue gets colder.
In Fullenrich, this should become a revenue handoff with the matched account, buying signal, stage or owner suggestion, objection, and next action. DialNexa should separate real intent from noise before creating tasks.
DialNexa should capture the preferred time, timezone, owner, promise made, and contact channel before updating Fullenrich. The receiving team should see exactly why the follow-up exists and what the caller expects next.
Use search company before answering, routing, or creating follow-up. DialNexa should verify the lookup result against the caller and send low-confidence matches to a human queue.
Use create contact data list only when DialNexa has a matched caller, a clear destination object, and enough call context to justify opening a new CRM record. If the caller is unclear, route to review instead of creating noise.

Workflows that pair Fullenrich with other integrations

Implementation notes

  • Use the DialNexa call ID as the idempotency key before running Fullenrich actions.
  • Write a short operational summary into Fullenrich and link to the full transcript or recording for audit.
  • Map required fields before launch: destination object, owner, status, urgency, next step, and record URL.
  • Create review paths for low-confidence matches, sensitive requests, high-value customers, and actions that change money, access, legal terms, or customer commitments.

FAQs

Log missed-call status, voicemail summary if available, retry window, owner, and whether a human callback is required.
Notify Slack for hot accounts, enterprise prospects, renewal risk, buying intent, escalation requests, or missed VIP callbacks.
No. Search contacts, companies, deals, and open tasks first. Create a new record only when the caller is new or the call changes pipeline, ownership, qualification, or follow-up.
Short and factual: who called, why they called, what DialNexa learned, what was promised, who owns the next step, and when it is due.
Yes for clear rules such as booked demo, confirmed no interest, or requested quote. Use review for high-value deals, legal blockers, procurement issues, and unclear intent.
Tag the low-fit reason, suppress from sequences when appropriate, and avoid creating sales tasks that reps will ignore.
Match by phone, email, domain, company name, and open deal before creating or updating records. Store the DialNexa call ID on the activity.
Caller identity, company, pain, urgency, buying role, objection, requested next step, owner, and transcript link.