Your ABM program is only as good as the list it runs on. You can have the best messaging, the tightest sequences, and a sales team that actually follows up. None of it matters if you are targeting the wrong companies.
A target account list (TAL) is not just a spreadsheet of companies you want to sell to. It is a scored, tiered, continuously refreshed set of accounts that sales and marketing both agree on. Built well, it focuses execution. Built poorly, it wastes budget on accounts that will never buy.
This guide walks through how to build a TAL that actually converts, from ICP definition through scoring and tiering to ongoing maintenance.
The most common failure mode is not bad data. It is a list that was built once and never updated. Marketing exports a list from a data vendor, sales adds their wish-list logos, nobody agrees on criteria, and within 90 days the list is full of accounts that are too small, already customers, or in geographies you cannot support.
The second failure mode is a list without tiers. Treating all 500 accounts the same means your Tier 1 logos get the same one-touch LinkedIn ad as a company that barely fits your ICP. That is not ABM. That is spray-and-pray with account-level targeting on top.
A good TAL solves both problems: it has clear entry criteria and a tiering logic that tells the team exactly how much investment each account deserves.
Before you build a list, you need to know what you are looking for. Your ICP is the set of attributes that define the companies most likely to buy from you, get value quickly, and stick around.
Start with the basics:
What technology does your best customer typically use? If your product integrates with Salesforce, you want accounts running Salesforce. If your value prop is replacing a legacy tool, you want accounts still running that tool.
Common technographic signals to capture:
Tools like Clearbit, ZoomInfo, and BuiltWith let you filter prospect lists by tech stack. Abmatic surfaces real-time technographic signals for accounts visiting your site, so you can see what tools a company uses before you reach out.
Firmographics tell you who could buy. Behavior tells you who is ready to buy.
The behavioral layer is what separates an ABM list from a cold prospecting list. Prioritize accounts showing active signals, not just ones that fit your ICP on paper.
Once you know what you are looking for, you need to find the accounts.
Your CRM: Start here. Closed-lost opportunities, churned customers (if re-engage is in scope), and existing prospects. These accounts already know you exist.
Website visitor data: Accounts that have already visited your website but have not converted are high-intent and often overlooked. Visitor identification tools surface the company behind anonymous traffic.
Review site audiences: G2, Capterra, and TrustRadius show you which companies are actively evaluating tools in your category. Many platforms let you retarget those audiences.
Data vendors: ZoomInfo, Apollo, Lusha, and Cognism let you filter company databases by ICP attributes. Use these to fill gaps after you have exhausted the above.
Partner lists: If you have integration partners, co-sell or co-market with them. Their customer lists often overlap heavily with your ICP.
Conference and event attendees: Industry events, trade shows, and even webinar attendance lists can surface qualified accounts. People who show up to category-specific events are actively trying to solve the problem you solve.
More accounts is not better. It just dilutes execution.
A starting range by team size:
If you are running a pilot program, start with 50 accounts and prove the model before expanding.
Not all accounts deserve the same level of investment. Tiering lets you allocate effort proportionally.
Tier 1 (High-touch, 10 to 20 accounts): Your biggest opportunities. Perfect ICP fit, strong buying signals, strategic logos. These accounts get bespoke treatment: personalized content, direct sales outreach, executive alignment, possibly one-to-one events. Budget per account is highest here.
Tier 2 (Moderate-touch, 50 to 150 accounts): Strong ICP fit but fewer active signals, or solid signals but partial ICP fit. These accounts get personalized messaging at the segment level, programmatic ads, and sequenced outreach. Not fully custom, but not generic either.
Tier 3 (Low-touch, up to 500 accounts): Good ICP fit but no active signals yet. These accounts enter nurture programs, get broad ABM ads, and receive standard outreach sequences. The goal is to keep them warm until signals emerge.
Build a scoring model with two dimensions:
Fit score (0 to 100): Weighted sum of ICP attribute matches. Example weighting: - Industry match: 25 points - Headcount in range: 20 points - Revenue in range: 15 points - Technographic match: 20 points - Geography match: 10 points - Business model match: 10 points
Engagement score (0 to 100): Weighted sum of behavioral signals. Example weighting: - Pricing page visit (last 30 days): 30 points - Use-case page visit: 20 points - Content download: 15 points - Email engagement: 15 points - Third-party intent signal: 20 points
Combine scores: Tier 1 = Fit 80+ AND Engagement 60+. Tier 2 = Fit 60+ OR Engagement 50+. Tier 3 = everything else that passes minimum fit threshold.
The exact weights should reflect your historical win data. Pull your last 20 closed-won deals and see which attributes they shared. Let that calibrate the model.
A TAL that only marketing believes in is not a TAL. It is a marketing list. Sales will ignore it and run their own targeting.
Run a monthly TAL review with AEs, SDRs, and the marketing lead. Agenda:
This meeting does two things: it keeps the list accurate, and it builds shared ownership. When sales sees that marketing is actively managing account selection, they trust the list more and follow through on outreach.
Write down the entry and exit criteria and put them somewhere both teams can find them. A shared Notion page, a pinned Slack channel, a Google Doc. It does not matter where, as long as it is accessible and version-controlled.
Entry criteria: What attributes qualify an account for each tier? Exit criteria: What removes an account? (Won, churned, out of ICP, no engagement in 180 days, marked do-not-contact by sales)
Clear exit criteria prevents the list from getting stale.
A TAL is not a one-time project. It needs ongoing maintenance or it degrades.
Every quarter, pull your closed-won data and compare it against your TAL. Were the accounts you won on the list? Were they in the right tier? If you are winning accounts that were not on the list, figure out why and update your entry criteria.
If you are not winning accounts that are on the list, dig into the reasons: wrong messaging, too long in nurture, weak personalization, or wrong contacts.
Manual list management does not scale. As your program matures, consider automating:
Platforms like Abmatic handle scoring and signal aggregation in one place, surfacing the accounts that are warming up so your team can focus execution where it counts most. If you want to see how that works in practice, request a demo at abmatic.ai/demo.
A list is only valuable if it drives action. Connect your TAL to execution across every channel.
Feed your TAL into LinkedIn Matched Audiences, Google Customer Match, and programmatic display networks. Accounts in your Tier 1 get higher bids and more personalized creative. Tier 3 gets standard brand messaging.
Segment creative by tier and by buying stage signals. An account that just visited your pricing page should see different ads than one that has never been to your site.
Give your SDRs and AEs an account-level view that shows ICP fit score, engagement score, and recent activity. They should be reaching out to the highest-combined-score accounts first, not working alphabetically through a list.
Personalize the first line of every outbound email to the specific company. Even two or three account-specific sentences improve reply rates. Generic sequences sent to ABM accounts waste the targeting investment you already made.
Create content specifically for your top ICP segments. If your Tier 1 is predominantly VP of Revenue at Series B SaaS companies, your guides, case studies, and email nurture should speak directly to that persona’s language and problems.
Distribute content via channels your target accounts actually use: LinkedIn for most B2B audiences, Slack communities, newsletters in your vertical.
Building the list once and ignoring it: Engagement signals decay. Fit criteria evolve. A list from six months ago is partially wrong. Schedule regular refreshes.
Including accounts you cannot actually close: A Fortune 500 logo looks good on the list, but if your team cannot get to the right contacts or the deal is too complex for your current sales motion, remove it. It only creates wasted effort.
Letting sales add unlimited accounts without scoring: AEs will always want to add their favorite logos. That is fine. But those accounts should go through the same scoring process. If they do not meet minimum criteria, they belong in a separate watch list, not the TAL.
Using only firmographic data: Firmographics tell you who fits. They do not tell you who is ready. Layer behavioral signals into your scoring from day one, even if the data is imperfect at first.
Not having clear tier definitions: If you do not define what Tier 1 means in terms of investment and activities, marketing and sales will interpret it differently. Specify exactly what each tier gets.
A strong target account list is the foundation of every successful ABM program. Get the ICP criteria right, source accounts from multiple channels, score them on fit and engagement, tier them by investment level, and maintain the list regularly.
The list itself is not the hard part. The hard part is getting sales and marketing to agree on it, keep it updated, and actually use it to drive execution. That alignment is what separates ABM programs that book demos from ABM programs that produce reports.
If you want to see how Abmatic accelerates the scoring and signal layer of this process, book a demo and we will walk through it with your actual ICP.
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.