One of the questions I get from prospects evaluating findmemail.io against Apollo or ZoomInfo: "your database is so much smaller — why?" The honest answer: it's a deliberate trade-off, and the smaller-but-cleaner approach actually wins for the use case I'm targeting. Here's the architecture reasoning. The "more contacts = better" myth Big B2B databases brag about contact count: Apollo claims 250M+, ZoomInfo claims similar, Seamless says 1.8B+ emails. The implicit promise is that more = better. In practice, more contacts = more stale records. Industry-standard B2B contact churn is ~3% per month — meaning a 250M database loses ~7.5M valid records every month. Re-verifying all of them at that scale is expensive enough that the providers don't do it on every entry; they batch-verify, delay flagging stale records, and let the "verified" status drift. The result: a "verified" Apollo email has, on average, a 5-15% chance of bouncing depending on how recently the record was touched.…