Tier-1 Account Deep Dive Playbook for Enterprise ABM
Tier-1 accounts are your future. Top 20 accounts could represent 40-60% of your annual pipeline.
Tier-1 accounts are your future. Top 20 accounts could represent 40-60% of your annual pipeline.
Each Tier-1 account deserves a dedicated account plan,not generic marketing, not standard sales process. This playbook shows you how.
A proper Tier-1 account plan has 5 sections:
Document this in a 5-10 page document shared with sales and marketing.
Section A: Company Facts - Company name, industry, location, size - Recent news (funding, acquisition, IPO, leadership change) - Revenue estimate (if available) - Key customers or use cases they serve
Section B: Technology and MarTech Stack - CRM: Do they use Salesforce, HubSpot, Pipedrive? - Marketing automation: Marketo, HubSpot, ActiveCampaign? - Data tools: Do they have Looker, Tableau, Snowflake? - Recent tech additions: Did they add a new tool in the last 6 months?
Why this matters: If they just implemented Salesforce, they’re probably 6 months away from buying account intelligence or ABM tools. If they use HubSpot, they care about marketing-sales alignment.
Section C: Organizational Structure - CEO and leadership team - CMO and marketing team size - VP of Sales and sales team structure - RevOps leader (if they have one) - CTO/VP of Engineering (for technical requirements)
Get the names and titles. LinkedIn is your friend.
Section D: Market Position and Strategy - What’s their go-to-market? (PLG? Sales-led? Hybrid?) - What’s their main customer segment? (SMB? Mid-market? Enterprise?) - Who are their competitors? - What’s their market positioning?
Why this matters: If they’re PLG, they don’t care about ABM (lead gen kills PLG). If they’re sales-led with 5-year sales cycles, ABM is their religion.
This is the most important section. Get it wrong and your engagement strategy falls apart.
Step 1: Identify the Buying Committee
For an ABM platform purchase, you typically need:
Research each person: - LinkedIn profile - Recent job changes or promotions - Previous companies and experience - Twitter/public presence (if any)
Step 2: Map Their Priorities
Each person cares about different things:
| Role | Name | Title | Priority 1 | Priority 2 | Priority 3 | Personality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Business Buyer | Jane Smith | CMO | Pipeline velocity | Marketing efficiency | Team growth | Data-driven, skeptical |
| Economic Buyer | Bob Chen | CFO | ROI in 12 months | Contract flexibility | Vendor stability | Cautious, financially focused |
| User Champion | Sarah Davis | Manager, Demand Gen | Ease of use | Integration with HubSpot | Customer support | Collaborative, hands-on |
| Stakeholder | Mike Johnson | CTO | API reliability | Data residency | Compliance certs | Detail-oriented, technical |
| Influencer | Tom Lee | Consultant | Best practices | Competitive positioning | Implementation timeline | External validation, strategic |
Step 3: Map Their Influence
Who influences whom? Create a simple influence matrix:
| Jane (CMO) | Bob (CFO) | Sarah (Manager) | Mike (CTO) | Tom (Consultant)
Jane (CMO) | , | 60% | 80% | 30% | 40%
Bob (CFO) | 20% | , | 10% | 20% | 25%
Sarah (Manager) | 40% | 5% | , | 25% | 20%
Mike (CTO) | 30% | 25% | 40% | , | 35%
Tom (Consultant)| 50% | 40% | 30% | 30% | ,
This tells you: “When Jane (CMO) speaks, Bob (CFO) listens 60% of the time. Tom (Consultant) listens 40% of the time.”
Use this to inform your strategy. If Jane has high influence over the final decision, winning Jane’s support is priority 1.
Question 1: Do they have the problem we solve?
If they sell to SMB, they probably don’t do ABM. If they sell to Enterprise with 6+ month sales cycles, they definitely do.
Answer this question by: - Reviewing their website and customer case studies - LinkedIn stalking their sales team - Reading recent investor updates or earnings calls - Asking industry peers if you know them
Question 2: Are they aware of the solution category?
Are they searching for “account-based marketing”? Or do they think of their problem as “pipeline attribution” or “demand generation efficiency”?
This shapes your messaging. If they don’t know the category, your first job is education, not selling.
Question 3: Do they currently have a solution in place?
Are they using a competitor? Are they building it in-house? Are they doing it manually?
If they use 6sense, they’ve already bought into ABM. But they’re committed to 6sense. Your job is to create urgency for change (e.g., “6sense’s intent data has a 30-day lag; ours is 48-hour fresh”).
If they’re doing it manually, they’re not yet convinced ABM is worth buying. Your job is to show the ROI.
Question 4: What’s their buying timeline?
Are they evaluating now (budget approved)? Or are they 9-12 months away (exploring, no budget yet)?
This determines whether you push for a pilot now (if evaluating) or nurture for 6 months (if early stage).
Document your assessment: “Acme is in [evaluation / exploration / not-in-market] stage. Our probability of winning in 12 months is [high / medium / low].”
Now create a detailed 90-day plan with monthly milestones:
Month 1: Awareness and Credibility Goal: Get Jane (CMO) to recognize us as a credible option
Week 1-2: - Sales sends personalized intro email to Jane - Marketing sends 1 piece of thought leadership content relevant to their situation - Research buying committee, add to CRM
Week 3-4: - Sales calls Jane (low-pressure discovery) - Offer: 20-min conversation or relevant resource - Marketing continues visibility (ads, content)
Success metric: 1st conversation with Jane scheduled
Month 2: Buying Committee Engagement Goal: Understand their specific challenges and engage 2-3 other stakeholders
Week 5-6: - Sales call with Jane, understand her top challenges - Identify next 2 stakeholders (likely Bob from Finance, Mike from IT) - Marketing sends 1-2 pieces addressing Jane’s stated challenges
Week 7-8: - Sales intro with Bob (Finance), 30-min conversation on ROI - Sales intro with Mike (IT), 30-min conversation on technical requirements - Send Bob a ROI calculator pre-populated with industry benchmarks
Success metric: Conversations with Jane, Bob, Mike. Understanding of their buying criteria.
Month 3: Move to Opportunity Goal: Either move to a pilot/demo, or clearly understand why not
Week 9-10: - Group call with Jane, Bob, Mike - Present 30-min customized overview of platform - Ask directly: “What would it take to move forward with a pilot?” - Listen for objections
Week 11-12: - Either: Schedule technical demo with Mike + champion - Or: Identify blocker, create plan to address it - Or: Move to nurture if timing is wrong
Success metric: Demo scheduled OR clear next step defined
Create 3-5 custom pieces for this account:
For Jane (CMO) - Business Buyer: - “How [Company] can improve pipeline predictability” (customized 1-pager using her company data) - Peer reference call (connect her with similar CMO at ref customer) - Case study from similar-size company in her vertical
For Bob (CFO) - Economic Buyer: - ROI calculator (pre-filled with her company metrics) - Cost-benefit analysis (cost of status quo vs. cost of our solution) - Contract flexibility summary (how we can structure the deal)
For Mike (CTO) - Stakeholder: - Technical security questionnaire + our answers - API documentation + integration examples - Data residency and compliance certification summary
For Sarah (Manager) - User Champion: - Product walkthrough video (10 min, focused on her use case) - Getting started guide (how quickly can she be productive?) - Peer community access (if we have one)
Don’t send these all at once. Release strategically based on the sales process.
Assign owners:
Weekly: - 30-min sync between AE and account marketing - Review engagement, adjust strategy if needed
Monthly: - 60-min sync with AE, marketing, and sales leadership - Review progress against 90-day roadmap
Define what you’re optimizing for:
Best Case: Pilot scheduled by end of month 3 Good Case: Demo scheduled, strong interest Acceptable Case: Clear next step (e.g., “We’ll revisit in Q3 when budget is approved”) Failure Case: They ghost you or say “We’re happy with current solution”
Don’t chase the failure case. Move to nurture and revisit annually.
Tier-1 accounts aren’t generic sales opportunities. They’re strategic partnerships that require strategy.
The investment per account: 40 hours (planning + execution + content creation + relationship management) over 90 days.
If each Tier-1 account is worth $100K, and you close 20-30% of them, the ROI is clear.
Ready to execute 1:1 ABM on your Tier-1 accounts? Schedule a demo to see how platforms help you map buying committees, track engagement, and manage complex deal cycles.
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.
Q: How do we know if Tier 1 account strategy is working?
A: Track these metrics weekly: meeting requests from the account, response rates to outreach, content engagement, email open rates, and advancement through your sales stages. If an account isn’t showing signal within 4 weeks, reassess fit and adjust your approach.
Q: What if a Tier 1 account goes quiet?
A: Don’t give up immediately. Accounts often go dark mid-quarter due to budget freezes, leadership changes, or competing priorities. Try a different contact, different angle, or different timing. If silent for 8+ weeks, move to quarterly check-ins rather than active hunting.
Q: How many Tier 1 accounts can one AE manage?
A: For true 1:1 ABM, expect 5-15 accounts per AE depending on sales cycle length and deal complexity. Long cycles (12+ months) require more focus. Short cycles (2-3 months) can handle more volume.
Q: Should we create custom content for every Tier 1 account?
A: Not necessarily. Create 1-2 custom pieces per account, then leverage existing content tailored to their vertical or use case. Custom doesn’t mean time-intensive; it means relevant.
Q: What if multiple Tier 1 accounts are in the same vertical?
A: Create vertical-specific content once, then customize the introduction and ROI metrics for each account. This gives you efficiency without sacrificing relevance.
Don’t rely on one contact. Identify 3-5 key stakeholders at each account (executive sponsor, procurement, technical buyer, end user). Build relationships with each over time. This insulates you if one person leaves and gives you multiple paths to deals.
Your AE, marketer, CSM, and sales engineer must be aligned on strategy and messaging. Weekly 15-minute syncs ensure everyone is rowing in the same direction. Nothing kills a deal faster than conflicting messages from your team.
Your existing customers are your best sales tool for Tier 1 accounts. Run a quarterly “reference account program” where customers do customer calls with prospects in similar verticals. These calls move deals faster than anything else.
When a competitor is actively selling, double down on your differentiation. Create comparison content, schedule extra business conversations, and bring in your product team to address technical questions. Don’t let competitors own the narrative.
Tier 1 accounts often have long sales cycles. Plan your engagement 6 months in advance: messaging, content, events, customer references. Execute relentlessly against that plan, but stay flexible if circumstances change.
Once you have a repeatable Tier 1 playbook, scale it. If you manage 5 Tier 1 accounts with strong results, add 5 more. If your AE has capacity, add 5 more. Focus on consistency and process before expansion.
The goal is not to manage 100 Tier 1 accounts; it’s to identify your most valuable 10-20 and win them systematically.
Ready to implement Tier 1 ABM? Schedule a demo to see how we help enterprise teams execute account strategy, buying committee mapping, and multi-touch engagement at scale.
Tier-1 accounts are your future. Top 20 accounts could represent 40-60% of your annual pipeline.
Tier-1 accounts are your future. Top 20 accounts could represent 40-60% of your annual pipeline.