Personalization in ABM doesn’t mean custom content for every account. That’s not scalable.
Real personalization means: Taking standardized content and making it feel relevant to the specific person and account.
“Hi [FirstName]” is not personalization. It’s mail merge.
Real personalization is: Your VP Sales sees a case study about a Series B SaaS company similar to theirs, solving the exact problem their company is having.
This guide walks you through building a personalization strategy that scales.
There are four levels of personalization. Each requires different effort.
Segment your ABM accounts and buying committee by: - Role (VP Sales, Sales Manager, Sales Ops) - Industry vertical (SaaS, FinTech, Healthcare) - Company size (Series A, Series B, mid-market) - Use case (new sales team, sales process optimization, forecasting)
For each segment, create one version of key content.
Example: - Case study for VP Sales focuses on: team results, quota impact, ROI - Case study for Sales Ops focuses on: process improvement, data quality, integration - Case study for IT/Security focuses on: data security, compliance, integration
Same company (the customer), same content topic (case study), but three different angles.
Effort: 2-3 hours per content piece (one piece becomes 3 versions) Impact: 3-5x higher engagement than generic content Scale: Works for 50-500 accounts
Segment further by account characteristics: - Company revenue or growth rate - Geographic location - Recent triggers (funding, new hire, acquisition) - Competitive situation (comparing to a specific competitor)
For each micro-segment, slight content variation.
Example: - “Scaling sales for Series A SaaS” (one version of content) - “Scaling sales for Series B SaaS” (another version, emphasis on process vs. people) - “Scaling sales for enterprise” (third version, emphasis on governance)
Same problem, slightly different angle based on company stage.
Effort: 3-4 hours per content piece (5-7 versions) Impact: 5-10x higher engagement Scale: Works for 50-200 accounts
Create unique content for your top 10-20 accounts.
Example: - “How [Acme Corp] Can Reduce Sales Cycle by 30%: A Tailored Playbook” - “How [Beta Corp] Can Improve Forecast Accuracy With Better Data: Your Situation” - “[XYZ Inc] Competitor Comparison: How to Evaluate [Competitor] vs. Alternatives”
Uses their company name, their situation, their pain.
Effort: 4-6 hours per account (research + personalization) Impact: 10-50x higher engagement and conversion Scale: Only for top 10-20 accounts
Use technology to personalize at scale.
Examples: - Website personalization: Different landing page for different industries (SaaS visitors see SaaS case study, FinTech visitors see FinTech) - Email personalization: Different email version based on company size (“As a Series A company…” vs. “As an enterprise…”) - Ad personalization: Different ads based on visited pages (visited pricing page? show ROI case study)
Effort: 8-10 hours setup, 1-2 hours per asset (if using tool) Impact: 3-5x higher CTR, 10-20% higher conversion Scale: Works for 500+ accounts Tools: Demandbase, 6sense, Terminus, or simple tool like Dynamic Yield
What are the natural ways you segment your audience?
Example segmentation framework:
By Role:
- VP Sales / Sales Director
- Sales Manager
- Sales Operations
- SDR / BDR
By Industry:
- SaaS (B2B)
- FinTech
- Healthcare
- Manufacturing
By Company Size:
- Series A ($5-20M ARR)
- Series B ($20-100M ARR)
- Mid-market ($100M+ ARR)
- Enterprise (2,000+ employees)
By Use Case / Pain:
- New sales team building
- Sales process optimization
- Forecasting and pipeline
- Sales rep productivity
- Hiring and retention
Rule of thumb: 3-5 segments per dimension. More = too many versions, hard to maintain.
Map your content to segments.
Content Type | Role | Vertical | Company Size | Use Case | Status
Case Study | VP Sales | SaaS | Series B | Productivity | DONE
Case Study | Sales Ops | SaaS | Series B | Process | DONE
Webinar | VP Sales | FinTech | Series A | Team Building | TODO
Webinar | Sales Ops | FinTech | Series A | Process | TODO
ROI Guide | VP Sales | SaaS | All | All | DONE
Competitor Comparison | Sales Mgr | SaaS | Series B | Forecasting | TODO
How-To Guide | Sales Ops | All | All | Integration | DONE
This shows you: - Which content pieces you have - Which segment combinations you’re missing - Where to invest in new content
Start with your top 2-3 segments (biggest opportunity).
Template: Case Study for Segmentation
Create one case study, then adapt it for different segments.
Base case study: “How Acme Corp Improved Sales Efficiency”
For VP Sales segment: - Headline: “How Acme Corp Increased Win Rate by 25% (And Doubled Revenue Per Rep)” - Opening: Appeal to business impact and team performance - Body: Focus on: quota impact, team results, leadership value - Close: “If your team is struggling with [pain], here’s how Acme did it”
For Sales Ops segment: - Headline: “How Acme Corp Automated Sales Workflows (Without Breaking CRM)” - Opening: Appeal to process and data - Body: Focus on: integration challenges solved, data quality, system setup - Close: “If you’re responsible for [system/process], here’s what Acme learned”
For Sales Manager segment: - Headline: “How Acme Corp Coached Reps to Hit Quota (Training Framework)” - Opening: Appeal to rep performance and management - Body: Focus on: coaching approach, rep adoption, onboarding process - Close: “If you’re managing a team with [challenge], here’s Acme’s playbook”
Same customer story, three different lenses.
Not all accounts get the same personalization effort.
Tier 1 (Top 10-20 strategic accounts): - Personalization level: Account-specific (Level 3) - Effort: 4-6 hours per account for research + customization - Content: Custom case studies, tailored playbooks, industry-specific comparisons - Delivery: Email, direct, account-specific landing page - Goal: Make the account feel uniquely understood
Tier 2 (20-50 high-priority accounts): - Personalization level: Micro-segmentation (Level 2) - Effort: 3-4 hours per content piece (multiple versions) - Content: Industry-specific case studies, role-based webinars, vertical-specific resources - Delivery: Targeted email, targeted ads, role-based nurture sequence - Goal: Feel relevant to their specific situation
Tier 3 (Remaining 50-200 accounts): - Personalization level: Segmentation (Level 1) - Effort: 2-3 hours per content piece (3-5 versions) - Content: General case studies (multiple versions by role/industry), role-based messaging - Delivery: Email nurture sequences, paid ads targeting segments, general landing pages - Goal: Feel relevant to their role and company type
Personalization changes at each stage.
Awareness stage (they’re learning about the problem): - Generic content works (broad appeal) - Segment by role (different roles care about different aspects) - Don’t mention your product yet (just educate) - Examples: “5 Ways Sales Ops Improve Accuracy” (not your product in the title)
Consideration stage (they’re researching solutions): - Segment by industry and company size (more specific pain) - Show proof (case studies, customer logos) - Start mentioning your solution (“Acme uses our tool to…”) - Examples: “How SaaS Companies (Like Yours) Built Predictive Forecasting” (industry + product)
Evaluation stage (they’re comparing options): - Account-specific personalization (if top-tier accounts) - Competitive comparisons (why us vs. them) - Technical detail (how it works, integration, data) - Examples: “Your Sales Process + Our Platform = 30% Faster Cycles”
Decision stage: - Remove friction (pricing, security, terms clear) - Address final objections (case studies, references, testimonials) - Simplify next steps (contract, demo, trial)
You can do Levels 1 and 2 (segmentation and micro-segmentation) with spreadsheets and email tools.
For Level 3 (account-specific) and Level 4 (dynamic), you need tools.
Email personalization: - HubSpot: Personalized email templates with conditional fields - Marketo: Advanced personalization and dynamic content - Instantly, Lemlist: Email outreach with personalization
Landing pages: - Unbounce, Instapage: Different landing pages for different audiences - HubSpot: Conditional content blocks
Simple approach: Create variations and manually choose which account gets which version (spreadsheet-based)
Website personalization: - Demandbase: Show different content/offers based on company visiting - 6sense: AI-powered website personalization - Terminus: ABM platform with personalization - OneTrust: Cookie-based personalization
Email personalization at scale: - Marketo: Dynamic content blocks based on profile - HubSpot: Workflows with personalization - Custom development: Use APIs to personalize email based on data
Ad personalization: - LinkedIn: Matched audiences (show different ads to different account lists) - Google Ads: Audience-based personalization - Demandbase/6sense: Intent-based ad personalization
Measurement: - Email: Open rate, click rate, reply rate by segment - Ads: CTR, CPC, conversion rate by segment - Content: Downloads, time on page, follow-up actions by segment - Pipeline: Which segments move fastest to opportunity/close
Mistake 1: Over-personalization Creating unique content for every account. Not scalable.
Fix: Start with segmentation (Level 1). Move to account-specific only for top 10-20.
Mistake 2: Personalization without substance “Hi [FirstName], we noticed you’re a VP Sales at [Company]” isn’t personalization. It’s creepy mail merge.
Fix: Personalize the message, not just the greeting. Reference their specific pain, problem, or situation.
Mistake 3: Generic personalization attempts Saying “companies like yours” without specifics.
Fix: Be specific. “Series B SaaS companies” is specific. “Growing companies” is not.
Mistake 4: Personalization at the wrong stage Sending account-specific content before the account is in market.
Fix: Awareness stage = generic. Consideration = segmented. Evaluation = account-specific.
Mistake 5: Forgetting to measure You create segmented content but don’t track which performs best.
Fix: Always measure. Email engagement, ad performance, conversion rate by segment.
Q: Can we personalize at scale without tools? A: Yes, up to Level 2 (micro-segmentation). Level 3+ requires tools or heavy manual work.
Q: How many versions of content is too many? A: More than 5 versions of the same piece becomes hard to maintain. Stick to 3-5 core segments.
Q: Should we personalize based on individual behavior or segment? A: Both. Start with segment. Add behavioral personalization (if they visited pricing, show pricing content) later.
Q: How often should we update personalized content? A: Segmented content: Quarterly or annually (doesn’t change much) Account-specific content: As triggers change (new funding, new hire, market shift)
Q: What if we don’t know someone’s role or company size? A: Use defaults. Default case study for VP Sales. If you learn more (email opens, form fill), update what they receive.
Q: Should sales reps customize content further for their account? A: Yes. Personalization is a floor, not a ceiling. Rep adds personal note: “John, I thought you’d find this relevant given your focus on [X].”
Personalization scales when you segment smartly and create variations strategically. Start with segmentation. Add account-specific for high-value. Automate with tools when you’re ready.