In broad demand generation, you create content once and distribute it widely. A blog post about “7 Ways to Improve Your Sales Process” goes to thousands of people.
In ABM, you create content that speaks to specific accounts and specific buying committee members. A case study about “How Acme Corp Reduced Implementation Time” is designed for Acme Corp specifically.
This requires a different content strategy. Instead of volume (100 blog posts), you focus on depth (20 highly polished case studies and frameworks). Instead of one version of a resource, you create account-specific versions.
This guide walks through how to build a content library that drives ABM deals.
ABM content serves a different purpose than demand gen content:
Demand gen content goal: Drive awareness and inbound interest at scale. A blog post about “Sales Trends 2026” reaches thousands of potential buyers.
ABM content goal: Remove objections and accelerate deals for specific accounts. A case study about how a financial services company reduced implementation time speaks directly to the CTO who is worried about disruption.
Because the audience is smaller and more specific, you can afford to make ABM content more detailed, more personalized, and more valuable.
A complete ABM content library has 5 layers:
Purpose: Establish credibility and educate accounts about ABM as a category, your approach, and why it matters.
Content types: - “The ABM Playbook 2026” (comprehensive guide to how ABM works) - “10 Reasons Your Sales Cycles Are Too Long (And How ABM Fixes Them)” (problem-focused guide) - “Account-Based Marketing Case Study Roundup” (multiple customer stories in one resource) - Blog posts: “How to Select Your ABM Accounts,” “Why ABM Is Better Than Lead Gen” (educational) - Videos: “What is ABM and Why It Works” (3-5 minute overview)
Audience: Broad; anyone in account that might recommend your solution
Distribution: Website, email nurture, advertising landing pages
Purpose: Show that you understand the specific challenges of the vertical and have solutions.
Content types (per vertical): - “ABM for SaaS: Proven Framework for $100K+ Deals” (SaaS-specific playbook) - “How [SaaS Company] Reduced ABM Setup Time from 6 Weeks to 2 Weeks” (SaaS-specific case study) - “SaaS Buying Committee Orchestration Playbook” (framework for SaaS sales cycle) - “Competitive Analysis: ABM Platforms for SaaS” (SaaS-specific comparison) - Vertical industry report or trend analysis
Audience: Vertical-specific (e.g., VP of Marketing at SaaS companies)
Distribution: Email to vertical accounts, advertising to vertical audiences
Purpose: Address the specific concerns and priorities of each buying committee member.
Content types (per persona):
For Economic Buyers (CFO, CRO): - “What Is the ROI of ABM? A Financial Analysis” (whitepaper) - “ABM Platform ROI Calculator” (tool they can use) - “Customer Financial Impact Case Studies” (e.g., “Acme Corp: $2M Revenue Impact”)
For Champions (VP of Marketing): - “ABM Implementation Timeline and Plan” (shows speed) - “ABM Campaign Quick Start Guide” (first 30 days) - “Getting Sales to Adopt ABM” (playbook for adoption)
For Technical Buyers (VP of Eng, RevOps): - “Technical Integration Guide: Abmatic + Salesforce” (specific to your product) - “API Documentation” (detailed for developers) - “Security and Compliance: SOC 2, GDPR, CCPA” (whitepaper)
Audience: Specific roles on the buying committee
Distribution: Email from sales, sales enablement portal, direct to specific personas
Purpose: Remove final objections and prove that you understand this specific account’s situation.
Content types: - “Acme Corp + Abmatic: Custom Implementation Plan” (account-specific document) - “Industry Analysis: How Companies Like Acme Corp Use ABM” (data from accounts similar to them) - “Competitive Positioning: Abmatic vs. RollWorks for SaaS Companies” (account-specific) - “Why [Specific Competitor] Is Stronger Here, Why Abmatic Is Stronger Here” (direct comparison) - “Customer Reference List: Companies Like You” (list of similar companies using your product)
Audience: Specific account, specific buying committee
Distribution: Sales email, sent by account executive
Purpose: Help customer succeed with implementation and adoption.
Content types: - “ABM Program Kickoff Checklist” (first 30 days) - “Campaign Setup Step-by-Step Guide” (video + written guide) - “Sales Enablement Playbook” (how to use Abmatic in daily sales) - “Advanced: Account Strategy Deep Dives” (quarterly strategy refinement) - “Best Practices from Other Customers” (success stories on how-tos)
Audience: Customers
Distribution: Customer success portal, email campaigns, webinars
Create a spreadsheet of all content you currently have: - Blog posts - Case studies - Guides and playbooks - Videos - Whitepapers - Comparison resources - Tools (calculators, templates)
For each piece, note: - Topic - Stage it addresses (awareness, consideration, decision) - Audience (broad, vertical, persona, account-specific) - Format (blog, PDF, video, tool) - Last updated - Performance (if tracked)
Compare what you have against the ABM content library framework above. Which layers are weak?
Most companies have: - Strong: Foundational content and blog posts (demand gen legacy) - Weak: Vertical-specific content, persona-specific content, account-specific content
Do not try to create everything at once. Prioritize based on:
Priority 1 (create immediately): - 1-2 case studies from your best customers - 1 ROI calculator or financial impact guide - 1-2 implementation playbooks - 1 competitive comparison resource
Priority 2 (create in next 60 days): - Vertical-specific content for your top 2 verticals - Persona-specific content for your 3 key personas - 2-3 additional customer case studies
Priority 3 (create ongoing): - Account-specific content (created for each major account in your ABM program) - Post-sale enablement content
For each piece of content, create a brief that specifies:
Content brief template:
CONTENT BRIEF
Content title: [Title]
Content type: [Blog, case study, guide, video, tool, whitepaper]
Content stage: [Awareness, consideration, decision, post-sale]
Target audience: [Specific persona/vertical/account]
Goal: [What should reader think/do after consuming this?]
Key messages (3-5):
- [Message 1]
- [Message 2]
- [Message 3]
Proof points:
- [How will you prove each message? Data? Customer quotes? Examples?]
Structure outline:
- [Section 1 heading and key points]
- [Section 2 heading and key points]
- [Section 3 heading and key points]
Tone and style:
- [Professional/casual/edgy?]
- [Long-form/short-form?]
- [Academic/practical?]
Success metrics:
- [How will you measure if this content works? Downloads? Email clicks? Sales feedback?]
Clear briefs dramatically improve content quality and speed.
Do not create one case study at a time. Create in batches:
Batch 1: Customer case studies - Reach out to 3-5 customers willing to participate in a case study - Interview them using a consistent interview guide - Write 3-5 case studies in 2-3 weeks - Publish all 3-5 together so you have a portfolio
Batch 2: Vertical-specific resources - Write vertical playbook - Write 2-3 vertical-specific case studies - Create vertical-specific comparison guide - Create vertical-specific checklist or tool - Publish all together
This batch approach is more efficient than creating one piece, then waiting, then creating the next.
Content gets stale. Set a quarterly content refresh cycle:
Q1 refresh: Update customer success stories and case studies (new results from current customers) Q2 refresh: Update competitive comparisons (competitors change; your positioning may need adjustment) Q3 refresh: Update guides and playbooks (new best practices emerge) Q4 refresh: Update ROI models and financial impact (based on current customer results)
Length: 1500-2500 words Structure: 1. Client profile (company, size, challenge) 2. Why they chose your solution 3. How they implemented 4. Results (quantified) 5. Lessons learned / best practices 6. Quote from customer
Tips: - Quantify results: “Reduced implementation time by 40%” not “Saved a lot of time” - Include specific timeline: “Went from campaign concept to launch in 3 weeks” - Include customer name and quote (social proof) - Target similar companies (e.g., SaaS case studies for SaaS companies)
Distribution: Email to prospects at similar companies, sales enablement, website
Length: 2000-3000 words Structure: 1. Why this matters (context) 2. Step-by-step framework (5-7 steps) 3. Common mistakes to avoid 4. Real example 5. Next steps / checklist
Tips: - Make it actionable (step-by-step, not conceptual) - Include templates or checklists - Use numbers (5-step framework, not “a framework”) - End with a clear next step
Distribution: Email nurture sequences, sales enablement, website
Length: 1500-2000 words Structure: 1. Intro (why this matters) 2. Comparison table (feature-by-feature) 3. Detailed comparison (narrative on key differences) 4. When to choose each option 5. Summary
Tips: - Be honest (acknowledge where competitor is stronger) - Focus on what matters (do not compare on obscure features) - Show pricing (if available) - Include customer perspective (“Here is what a customer said about the tradeoff”)
Distribution: Sales email, sales enablement, website
Format: Interactive spreadsheet or web tool Elements: - Input fields for their specific situation (company size, sales cycle, deal size, current CAC) - Calculation of financial impact - Downloadable report with their custom numbers
Tips: - Make assumptions transparent (show how you calculated impact) - Allow customization (let them adjust assumptions) - Provide benchmark data (how do their metrics compare to industry?) - Offer to review with them (calculators are good sales conversation starters)
Distribution: Email offer (“Download your custom ROI model”), sales enablement, website
Length: 3-7 minutes Types: - Customer talking about their results - Product walkthrough (how to set up and use) - Framework explanation (whiteboard-style explanation)
Tips: - Keep it short (attention span is short; 5 minutes is ideal) - Show customer name and company (credibility) - Include captions (many watch without sound) - Host on YouTube or your website
Distribution: Email (link to video), website, sales enablement
Foundational content (1-2 resources): - “The ABM Playbook 2026” (comprehensive guide, 5000 words, downloadable PDF) - “Why ABM Beats Lead Gen” (blog post, 2000 words)
Vertical-specific (per vertical, 4-5 resources per vertical): - SaaS: “ABM for SaaS: Playbook,” “SaaS Case Study 1,” “SaaS Case Study 2,” “SaaS Implementation Timeline,” “SaaS Buying Committee Guide” - Enterprise: “ABM for Enterprise,” “Enterprise Case Study 1,” “Enterprise Case Study 2,” “Enterprise Negotiation Playbook” - Financial Services: “ABM for Financial Services,” “FinServ Case Study,” “Compliance and ABM,” “ABM for Regulated Industries”
Persona-specific (per persona, 2-3 resources per persona): - Economic Buyer: “ABM ROI Calculator,” “Financial Impact Case Studies,” “Pricing and ROI Whitepaper” - Champion: “ABM Implementation Checklist,” “30-Day Campaign Quick Start,” “Getting Sales to Adopt ABM” - Technical Buyer: “Integration Guide,” “API Documentation,” “Security Whitepaper”
Account-specific (created for each major account in ABM program): - “[Account Name] ABM Implementation Plan” (custom document for their situation) - “[Account Name] Competitive Positioning Analysis” - “[Account Name] Customer Reference List” (list of similar companies)
Total content library: ~30 resources - 2 foundational - 15 vertical-specific (5 per vertical) - 9 persona-specific (3 per persona) - 4+ account-specific (created as needed)
This library allows every stakeholder in every account to find relevant content at every stage.
Track which content drives results:
Let data guide what you create next. If a case study drives 20+ downloads and 5 meetings, create more case studies. If a whitepaper gets 2 downloads, consider why and whether to refresh it.
Efficient content creation requires clear workflows. Here is a realistic timeline for different content types:
Timeline: 4-6 weeks 1. Week 1: Identify customer, confirm participation, schedule interview 2. Week 2: Conduct interview (1 hour), research company background 3. Week 3: Write draft (based on interview notes and company research) 4. Week 4: Internal review (marketing manager, sales), incorporate feedback 5. Week 5: Get customer review and approval 6. Week 6: Final edits, design, publish
Tips: Batch interviews. Interview 3-5 customers in one week, write 3-5 case studies over next 3-4 weeks.
Timeline: 2-3 weeks 1. Week 1: Outline and research (what are the key points? what data supports them?) 2. Week 1-2: Write draft (if you are experienced; 2-3 hours) 3. Week 2: Internal review, incorporate feedback 4. Week 3: Final edits, design, publish
Tips: Use templates. If you have written 5 playbooks, the 6th is faster because you reuse structure.
Timeline: 1-2 weeks 1. Day 1-2: Research competitors (visit their websites, review their messaging, pull pricing) 2. Day 3: Outline (what dimensions will you compare?) 3. Day 4-5: Write draft 4. Day 6: Review and edit 5. Day 7: Publish
Tips: Timely. Comparison guides get outdated quickly. Plan to refresh every 6 months.
Timeline: 3-4 weeks 1. Week 1: Define financial model (what are the inputs? what assumptions?) 2. Week 2: Build calculator (use Google Sheets, Airtable, or custom tool) 3. Week 3: Test with customers (get feedback on assumptions) 4. Week 4: Refine and publish
Tips: Start simple. A basic calculator (10 inputs, 3 outputs) can launch in 2 weeks. A sophisticated model (20+ inputs, 10+ outputs) takes 4+ weeks.
A strong ABM content library is your unfair advantage in competitive deals. When you have the right resource for every stakeholder at every stage, conversion rates improve and sales cycles compress.
Abmatic is a mid-market and enterprise ABM platform that covers all 14 core account-based marketing capabilities in one product, including deanonymization, web personalization, outbound sequencing, multi-channel advertising, AI workflows, and built-in analytics. Pricing starts at $36K/year.
Abmatic covers every capability that 6sense and Demandbase offer, plus adds AI-native workflows, outbound sequencing, and web personalization in a single platform. Most enterprise teams find they can consolidate 3-4 point tools when they move to Abmatic.
Yes. Abmatic is purpose-built for mid-market and enterprise B2B companies. It is not designed for early-stage startups or SMBs. Enterprise pricing is available on request; mid-market plans start at $36K/year.