Account-based marketing sounds simple: Pick important accounts, market to them specially.
But if it was that simple, everyone would do it the same way. They don’t.
ABM works because it changes how companies think about their market and how they coordinate sales and marketing. This guide explains the full picture.
Traditional approach: Throw campaigns at a broad audience. Hope the right people respond. Scale fast.
ABM approach: Pick specific accounts. Build relationships with the buying committee. Move them toward a deal.
It’s a fundamental shift from volume to precision. It trades breadth for depth.
ABM typically follows this progression:
Phase 1: Account Selection (Weeks 1-4)
You and your sales team decide: Which accounts do we want to win?
You’re not picking randomly. You’re selecting based on: - They match your ICP (Ideal Customer Profile) - They’re in-market (showing intent signals) - They have the right budget - They’re winnable for your team (not already deep in a competitor’s deal)
You might pick 20 accounts (one-to-one ABM), 100 accounts (one-to-few ABM), or 500 accounts (one-to-many ABM).
Phase 2: Intelligence Gathering (Weeks 2-6, ongoing)
Now you research each account obsessively.
Who are the key stakeholders? The VP of Marketing, the VP of Sales, the CFO? What are their individual motivations?
What’s happening at the company? Are they growing? Did they raise funding? Did they hire a new CMO (replacement cycle)?
What problems are they facing? Are they researching your category? What competitors are they looking at?
This intelligence comes from: - Your sales team’s knowledge - Intent data (website visits, content downloads, search behavior) - LinkedIn research - LinkedIn Sales Navigator - Company news - Interviews with current customers
Phase 3: Strategy Development (Weeks 3-8)
Based on your research, you develop a campaign strategy for the account.
This is not generic. This is “for Acme Corp, here’s our approach.”
For the VP Marketing: “Here’s why ABM will improve your team’s productivity by 40%.”
For the VP Sales: “Here’s how ABM will reduce your sales cycle length.”
For the CFO: “Here’s the ROI calculation.”
Each person gets messaging relevant to their role and concerns.
You decide on tactics: - Website personalization (Acme visitors see Acme-specific content) - Custom email sequence (personalized to each person) - Account-based advertising (LinkedIn ads targeted to Acme) - Sales outreach (your rep calls at the right time) - Events (invite the buying committee to a roundtable)
Phase 4: Campaign Execution (Weeks 6-16, ongoing)
Now you run the coordinated campaign.
Marketing runs website personalization, email sequences, and advertising. Sales makes strategic outreach. You’re hitting the account from multiple angles with consistent messaging.
Every interaction is coordinated. When someone from Acme visits your website, your system knows. Marketing and sales both see it. Sales can make a strategic call.
When someone downloads a resource, they get added to a specific nurture sequence designed for people in their role.
The goal: Move the buying committee from awareness to consideration to decision.
Phase 5: Sales Engagement (Weeks 8-52, depending on cycle)
Sales takes the lead as the account gets more interested.
But sales isn’t working alone. They have marketing support. When a buying committee member goes quiet, marketing re-engages with relevant content.
Marketing provides: - Battle cards (competitive comparisons) - Executive briefings - ROI calculators - Case studies from similar companies - Proof points for objections
Sales focuses on relationship-building and closing.
Phase 6: Deal Review and Expansion (Weeks 20+)
The account becomes a customer.
Now what? Account-based expansion begins.
You look for new stakeholders, new departments, new use cases. You nurture expansion opportunities the same way you nurtured the initial sale.
Account Intelligence
You need to know: - Company financials and growth trajectory - Key decision-makers and their motivations - Current technology stack - Recent news and initiatives - Buying signals and research behavior
Tools that help: Intent data platforms (Demandbase, 6sense, Bombora), LinkedIn Sales Navigator, company research tools.
Multi-channel Campaigns
ABM uses multiple channels in concert:
Each channel reinforces the others. The prospect sees a consistent story across channels.
Buying Committee Mapping
ABM requires understanding the entire buying committee:
You develop unique messaging for each role. A CTO cares about technical architecture. A CFO cares about ROI. A champion cares about implementation speed.
Campaign Orchestration
Coordinating multiple channels and messages to multiple people is complex. You need tools or processes to manage it:
Measurement and Attribution
How do you know if ABM is working?
You measure: - Account engagement: How many people from target accounts are engaging? - Pipeline: Are target accounts creating opportunities? - Influence: Are target account opportunities closing faster or at higher values? - Revenue: Are target accounts delivering revenue? - ROI: Revenue from ABM campaigns divided by cost
ABM requires patience. It’s not a fast playbook. You might run a campaign for 6-12 months before seeing revenue impact.
Early-stage (pre-Series A)
ABM doesn’t make sense yet. You’re still figuring out product-market fit. You need volume, not precision.
Growth-stage (Series A-B)
You might start ABM for your top 10-20 accounts. Run it alongside demand gen and lead gen.
Scale-stage (Series C+)
You have ABM for your top 50-100 accounts. Demand gen for the next 200. Lead gen for the rest.
Enterprise
You have tiered ABM: - Tier 1: Full personalization for top 20 accounts - Tier 2: Account-based campaigns for next 200 - Tier 3: Targeted lead gen for the rest
Level 1: Account-based blocking and tackling
You pick accounts and marketers manually create campaigns. Heavy lift. Not scalable. But you prove the concept.
Level 2: Systems and tools
You implement ABM platforms, marketing automation, and CRM integration. Campaigns are more systematic.
Level 3: Data-driven account selection
You’re using intent data to identify best-fit accounts automatically. Targeting is smarter.
Level 4: AI-powered orchestration
AI recommends which accounts to target, which messages to send, and when to send them. You’re operating at scale with personalization.
Level 5: Predictive ABM
AI predicts which accounts are most likely to close fastest. You allocate resources accordingly.
Most companies are at levels 1-3. Level 4-5 is the frontier.
Alignment: Marketing and sales are working together, not competing.
Personalization: You’re addressing each prospect’s specific pain point, not a generic need.
Efficiency: You’re focused on accounts that matter, not wasting energy on poor-fit prospects.
Speed: With the whole buying committee aligned, deals close faster.
Predictability: You’re targeting known quantities (existing companies), not hoping new prospects appear.
You’re ready when:
You’re not ready if:
“ABM is only for enterprise”: False. Mid-market ABM works. One-to-many ABM works for smaller accounts.
“ABM is 100% personalization”: False. You can use templates and scale ABM across many accounts.
“ABM is only sales-focused”: False. ABM is about moving accounts toward a deal, which requires sales and marketing.
“ABM is quick”: False. ABM is a medium to long-term play. Plan for 3-6 months before you see real revenue.
“ABM is replacement for demand gen”: False. ABM and demand gen work together.
Platforms that support ABM:
ABM-specific: 6sense, Demandbase, Terminus, Rollworks
Marketing automation: HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot (have ABM features)
CRM: Salesforce, HubSpot (foundation for tracking)
Intent data: Bombora, LinkedIn, G2, Clearbit (fuels account selection)
Website personalization: Optimizely, Evergage, Unbounce (delivers personalized experiences)
Attribution: Marketo, HubSpot, Salesforce (shows which campaigns influence deals)
You don’t need all of these. Start with a few core tools and expand as you grow.
This isn’t fast. But it compounds.
ABM forces you to understand your market deeply.
It makes you think about your customer’s business, not just your product.
It aligns your sales and marketing teams around a common goal.
It turns sales from “hunt and hope” into “strategic focus.”
That’s why the best companies do it.
Book a demo with Abmatic to see how our account-based marketing platform helps you execute ABM from account selection through closing.
Whether you’re a marketer, sales leader, or revenue operations professional, here’s how to apply these concepts to your day-to-day work.
Focus on creating assets and campaigns that support this framework. Build content libraries organized by stage: awareness, consideration, and decision. Ensure your team understands the buyer journey and can map their initiatives to each stage.
Train your team on this framework. Help them recognize where prospects are in their journey. Equip them with the right messaging and content for each stage. Measure win rates and cycle time by stage to identify bottlenecks.
Set up tracking and reporting for this framework. Build dashboards that show pipeline progression, conversion rates by stage, and cycle time. Use this data to identify improvements in your process.
Track these metrics: - Progression rate by stage (what % move from awareness to consideration?) - Conversion rate (what % convert at each stage?) - Cycle time (how long in each stage on average?) - Deal size (does content quality correlate with larger deals?)
These metrics tell you where your process is working and where you need to improve.
Start small, stay consistent, and revisit your framework quarterly. The teams that win with ABM are those that treat it as an operating system, not a campaign.