Most B2B content is built for the top of funnel. Blog posts on “What is ABM?” target a million companies. Account-based content is the opposite: it’s built for 20-50 named accounts you’re actively selling to.
This guide shows you how to shift from “broadcast content” to “account-specific content” without tripling your content workload.
Traditional content is an iceberg: 1000s of companies see it, 10 convert. Account-based content is a rifle: 50 companies see it, 5-10 convert.
Why does it work?
Relevance: Generic content talks about “how to implement ABM.” Account-based content talks about “how Acme Corp implements ABM given their MarTech stack and team structure.”
Timing: You send account-based content when the account is in active evaluation, not randomly.
Personalization: It addresses their specific company, industry, or use case, not a generic persona.
Result: 3-5x higher engagement, 2-3x faster sales cycles, higher close rates.
Not all accounts need the same content strategy.
Tier 1 (1:1 ABM): 5-20 accounts - Your largest/highest-potential accounts - Each gets dedicated content and plays - Example: Your top 10 customer logos + 10 net-new high-value prospects
Tier 2 (1:Few ABM): 50-100 accounts - Mid-market accounts with good fit - Content is tailored by vertical or use case, not individual account - Example: “All DevTools companies” or “All Series B SaaS startups”
Tier 3 (Account-based, Scalable): 500-1000 accounts - Fit your ICP but less developed - Content is templated and personalized via automation - Example: “Lifecycle stage content” where all accounts at evaluation stage get the same content, personalized with their name/company
Tier 4 (Standard Marketing): Everyone else - Content is broadcast through your website, email, ads - Traditional top-of-funnel approach
Each segment needs different content because they have different problems.
For Tier 1 (1:1 ABM):
Content should address their specific business model, team structure, and competitive situation.
For Tier 2 (1:Few ABM - Vertical):
Content is organized by vertical or buyer persona, not individual account.
For Tier 3 (Account-Based, Scalable):
Content is templated but triggered by behavioral/lifecycle stage signals.
Creating content is half the battle. Distribution is harder.
For Tier 1 Accounts (1:1):
Distribution is personal:
Send a custom email from your VP of Sales with one piece of custom content. No pitch, just value: “I came across this and thought you’d find it relevant given your current priorities.”
Have your champion share it internally (if they’re willing)
Depending on response, schedule a 20-minute business conversation with the executive sponsor
Don’t send a content “series.” Send 1-2 pieces strategically, then wait for engagement before sending more.
For Tier 2 Accounts (1:Few):
Distribution via email + ads:
Create a 5-email nurture sequence for “Fintech companies in evaluation.” Each email has one asset from your vertical playbook.
Run account-based ads showing the same content to employees at accounts in the vertical (via LinkedIn targeting)
Retarget website visitors from Fintech companies with vertical-specific content
If they engage (open >30%, click >10%), move to a sales conversation
For Tier 3 Accounts (Scalable):
Distribution via email automation + website:
Set up lifecycle-based email flows: Early awareness → active evaluation → late-stage
Each account automatically receives content based on their behavior (website time spent, email opens, stage in CRM)
Personalize the email with their company name, vertical, and a 1-sentence custom line (“I know you’re evaluating pipeline acceleration solutions”)
Don’t gate heavy content behind forms. Let them download, then re-target with ads
Not all formats work for all segments.
Tier 1 (1:1): Formats that feel custom
Tier 2 (Vertical): Formats that feel relevant
Tier 3 (Scalable): Formats that are fast to produce
You can personalize at scale using three tactics:
Tactic 1: Progressive Profiling Ask for company name and role on first form fill. Subsequent forms pre-fill this data and ask for 1-2 new fields. Each time they engage, you learn more.
Tactic 2: Behavioral Personalization If an account spent 5+ minutes on your “Pipeline Acceleration” page, subsequent content is pipeline-focused. If they spent time on “Intent Data,” subsequent content is intent-focused.
Tactic 3: Template Personalization Every asset has an [ACCOUNT_NAME], [INDUSTRY], [PROBLEM] variable. When you send content, these populate automatically.
Example: “How [ACCOUNT_NAME] can implement ABM to solve [PROBLEM] in [INDUSTRY]”
Becomes: “How Acme Corp can implement ABM to solve pipeline attribution in Fintech”
This feels custom but takes 1 minute to deploy at scale.
Track metrics at the account level:
| Account | Visits | Time Spent | Content Downloads | Email Opens | Clicks | Webinar Attended | Opportunity Created | Influenced |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Acme Corp | 12 | 45m | 3 | 8 | 2 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Beta Inc | 2 | 8m | 0 | 2 | 0 | No | No | No |
| Gamma LLC | 8 | 22m | 2 | 5 | 1 | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Calculate:
Engagement Rate by Tier: - Tier 1: X% engaged (expected: 80%+) - Tier 2: X% engaged (expected: 40-50%) - Tier 3: X% engaged (expected: 10-15%)
Content-to-Opportunity Conversion: - Of Tier 1 accounts that engaged, what % became opportunities? (Expected: 50%+) - Of Tier 2 accounts that engaged, what % became opportunities? (Expected: 20-30%)
Content Format Performance: - Which content formats had highest engagement? (Case studies? Playbooks? Videos?) - Which led to most opportunities created?
Use this data to iterate: double down on high-performing formats, kill low-performers.
To keep this from exploding into unmanageable work, standardize the workflow:
Monthly Content Planning (2 hours): 1. Review which Tier 1 accounts are in active selling cycles 2. Identify 2-3 content gaps (something you need for them that doesn’t exist) 3. Assign: Will this be custom, vertical-based, or templated?
Weekly Content Production (4-5 hours): 1. Create 1 custom piece for top Tier 1 opportunity 2. Customize 1 existing piece for a Tier 2 vertical 3. Deploy templated content to Tier 3 based on lifecycle stage
Bi-Weekly Distribution (2 hours): 1. Send Tier 1 custom content + personal note 2. Deploy Tier 2 vertical content to 50+ accounts via email 3. Monitor Tier 3 automation delivery
Monthly Measurement (1 hour): 1. Pull engagement metrics by account 2. Identify top-performing content 3. Kill underperformers; expand winners
Account-based content is not “more content.” It’s “smarter content,” distributed strategically to the right accounts at the right time.
Start with Tier 1: Pick your top 10 opportunities and create 1-2 custom pieces for each. Measure engagement. Then scale the playbook to Tier 2.
Ready to launch account-based content? Book a demo to see how content platforms help you track engagement and measure content influence on pipeline.
This section covers the practical steps for implementing the strategies discussed above.
Start by understanding your current state. Take inventory of: - Existing tools and systems - Team capabilities and gaps - Data quality and availability - Current sales and marketing alignment level
Document your findings in a shared spreadsheet. Identify which areas will require training, new tools, or process changes.
Don’t wait for perfect conditions. Identify 2-3 quick wins you can accomplish in the first 30 days: - Pull your top 20 prospects and have sales and marketing align on messaging - Create one targeted campaign for a high-value account - Set up basic metrics tracking to show impact
These early wins build credibility and momentum for the larger program.
Once you have proof of concept, scale systematically. Expand your target account list gradually. Refine messaging based on what’s working. Train your team on new processes.
Track metrics religiously. What gets measured gets managed. Share results with leadership monthly to maintain support and budget.
To manage account-based content at scale, establish clear governance:
Content Ownership: Who creates it? Who approves it? Who distributes it? - Custom content for Tier 1: AE + Marketing Manager - Vertical content for Tier 2: Marketing + Sales Manager - Templated content for Tier 3: Marketing automation
Content Calendar: Plan quarterly. Map out which accounts need which content in which months. This prevents reactive scrambling and ensures consistency.
Review Cycle: Every draft goes through: accuracy review, brand review, sales alignment review before sending. This takes 2-3 days but prevents disasters.
Feedback Loop: After every piece of content lands, measure engagement. Share results with the content creator and the sales team. “This case study got 40% open rate and led to two meetings.” This motivates continued effort.
Archiving: Track every piece of content created and its performance. Build a content library. Repurpose high-performers. Kill low-performers.
Mistake 1: Too Generic “How to implement ABM” is broadcast content. “How Fintech companies with <$50M revenue implement ABM in 90 days” is account-based content.
Mistake 2: No Timing Sending content randomly is spam. Send content when the account is in active evaluation. Use trigger events (new funding, hiring announcement, product launch, etc.) to time your outreach.
Mistake 3: Wrong Format A Tier 1 executive doesn’t want a 50-page guide. They want a 2-page executive brief and a 30-minute conversation. Match format to audience.
Mistake 4: No CTA Every piece of content should have a clear call to action. “Reply to this email,” “Schedule a call,” “Download the full guide.” Don’t be vague.
Mistake 5: Overpromising Don’t claim “20% lift in pipeline” unless you have data. Use phrases like “typically see,” “often report,” “benchmarks suggest.” Be honest.
The ultimate goal: Content drives engagement, engagement drives conversations, conversations drive opportunities, opportunities drive revenue.
Track this funnel: - Sent X pieces of content to Tier 1 accounts - Y% engaged (opened, clicked, downloaded) - Z% who engaged became opportunities - W% of opportunities closed
If engagement is low, your content isn’t resonating. If engagement is high but conversion is low, your message or sales follow-up is weak.
Iterate on the weakest link. Most likely: your timing is off or your content doesn’t address their actual problem.
Ready to build your content engine? Schedule a demo to see how content platforms help you track engagement by account and measure content influence on pipeline.