ABM fails when sales and marketing aren't aligned. They fight over credit, blame each other for missed metrics, and operate as separate departments.
When they're aligned, they become a revenue machine.
Here's how to actually make it happen.
Most sales and marketing teams misalign on three things:
Fix these three, and alignment happens.
Before you execute a single campaign, both teams must agree on:
Goal 1: Shared named account list (TAM)
Goal 2: Shared revenue target
Goal 3: Shared operational definition
Lock these three things in writing. Get both VP Sales and VP Marketing to sign off. This is your North Star.
Marketing and sales must agree on the plays they'll run together.
Schedule a 2-hour workshop:
Invite: - VP Sales + 1-2 top AEs - VP Marketing + demand gen lead - Sales ops - Marketing ops
Agenda:
Buying committee mapping (45 min) - AEs describe: Who are the 3-4 stakeholders in a typical $250K+ deal at your target accounts? - What's their title, concern, and trigger event? - How do they interact (does CMO recommend to CRO? Does IT Director block?) - Output: Stakeholder matrix with titles and common concerns
Objection and close drivers (30 min) - AEs list: What are the top 5 objections you hear? - What actually closes deals? (Not "we built a feature." What REALLY closes them?) - Output: Objection script snippets and close driver inventory
Play design (45 min) - Marketing proposes: cold inbound, warm engagement, event, expansion plays - Sales reacts: "That sequence is too long." "We never call cold prospects." "You're missing a stakeholder." - Iterate until both agree - Output: 3-4 core plays with sequencing, cadence, and owner (marketing-led or sales-led)
Take notes. Publish a 1-page play sheet:
| Play | Trigger | Duration | Sequence | Cadence | Owner | Success metric |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cold inbound | Account is cold | 21 days | 2 emails + 3 calls | 1 email + 1 call per week | Marketing lead, AE follow | Meeting scheduled |
| Warm engagement | Account visited site or opened email | 14 days | 1 email + product demo + 2 calls | 2x per week | Sales lead, marketing support | Demo or call completed |
| Event | Account confirmed attending industry conference | 30 days | Pre-event briefing + on-site dinner + follow-up | 1 touch per week | Sales lead | Executive conversation started |
This play sheet becomes your operational manual.
ABM requires real-time coordination. Schedule a weekly 30-minute sync:
Attendees: - VP Sales (or sales ops) - VP Marketing (or demand gen lead) - 1-2 SDRs - 1 marketer
Agenda (30 min):
Review top 10 accounts by score (10 min) - Pull up your account scoring dashboard - Each account: status, what happened last week, what's next? - Example: "Acme Corp: warm engagement play running. 3 email opens, 1 site visit. CMO meeting scheduled Friday. Next: VP IT needs to be identified and included." - Adjust plays if needed (pause, accelerate, switch focus)
Closed deals and attribution (10 min) - Any deals closed last week? Mark them in CRM with ABM play that triggered them. - Create a one-line case note: "Closed $250K deal. CMO touched by cold inbound play; IT Director in warm engagement. 60 days from first email to close." - This becomes your attribution record for ROI reporting.
Blockers and asks (10 min) - Sales: "We need content comparing us to Salesforce for IT directors." (Marketing commits.) - Marketing: "We're pulling accounts into warm engagement play, but AEs aren't calling them." (Sales re-commits to cadence.) - Ops: "Five accounts in play have outdated stakeholder info." (Marketing refreshes from Apollo/Hunter.)
This sync keeps both teams synchronized. It also surfaces problems fast (AEs not executing, marketing not creating assets) so you can fix them.
Both teams must work from a single CRM with shared fields and views.
Required CRM setup:
Account-level fields: - ABM account: yes/no - ABM score (fit, engagement, composite) - Assigned AE - Active play (cold inbound, warm engagement, event, expansion, etc.) - Buyer committee (stakeholder names, titles, contact info) - Next action and date
Opportunity-level fields: - ABM triggered (yes/no) - ABM play that triggered (which play led to this deal?) - Days from first touch to opportunity - Days from opportunity to close
Shared views/dashboards: - "ABM accounts by score" (sorted by composite score, color-coded by status) - "Opportunities from ABM accounts" (pipeline from ABM, closed-won from ABM) - "Active plays" (which accounts are in which play, who owns next action)
Assign one person (sales ops or marketing ops) as the "CRM keeper." Every week, they verify: - Are AEs updating account status? - Are closed deals tagged with the ABM play that triggered them? - Are inactive accounts being re-engaged?
This person is the referee between sales and marketing. They keep data clean.
Publish a monthly ABM report that both teams see:
| Metric | Last month | Target | Variance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accounts in active plays | 45 | 50 | -5 |
| Accounts in warm engagement | 12 | 15 | -3 |
| Meetings booked (from plays) | 8 | 10 | -2 |
| Opportunities opened | 6 | 8 | -2 |
| Pipeline value (ABM accounts) | $1.8M | $2M | -$200K |
| Deals closed (ABM accounts) | $500K | $600K | -$100K |
| ABM vs. non-ABM performance | Outperforming | Improve weekly | On track |
This report shows BOTH teams how they're performing against shared goals. It creates accountability and makes wins visible.
Once a quarter, pull the VPs of sales and marketing for a 60-minute ABM review:
Document decisions. Update plays and goals accordingly.
Alignment doesn't happen overnight. It happens when sales and marketing win together, see the same data, and both know the goals.
That's when ABM works.
Abmatic gives sales and marketing a shared dashboard for account scoring, plays, and attribution. See how alignment transforms your ABM results.