An increasing number of organisations are adopting an account-based marketing approach. In fact, 70% of companies surveyed as part of HubSpot’s 2022 State of Marketing Trends Report reported using ABM as a marketing strategy.

Okay, so it’s popular—but why?

In this article we’ll take a look at seven key benefits of account-based marketing but, before we get to that, we think it’s key to ask if ABM is right for everyone.

Is ABM right for everyone?

Whenever a marketing strategy starts getting a lot of attention it’s easy to fall into the trap of thinking you need to jump on it. After all, you don’t want to be missing an opportunity.

However, ABM is not right for every type of organisation—so, who is it right for?

First of all, ABM is a B2B marketing strategy. So, if you’re selling to consumers, you don’t need to carry on reading this…

Okay, B2Bs—it should just be us now.

However, ABM is still more relevant to some of you than others. Below is how ABM compares with outbound and inbound marketing:

As you can see, it’s a strategy that’s best suited to longer and more considered sales cycles, particularly when the product or service offerings are higher in value. ABM requires a lot of time investment, so the potential ROI needs to make those efforts worthwhile.

It also needs to be possible to identify target accounts. You’ll need to figure out your ideal customer profile (ICP), as well as the key buyer personas and decision makers you need to get in front of.

7 benefits of ABM

Still think account-based marketing is right for your organisation? Let’s take a look at seven benefits of adopting an ABM marketing approach.

  1. Align your sales and marketing teams
  2. Create more engaging content
  3. Increase your chances of closing bigger deals
  4. Quality not quantity
  5. Upsell and cross-sell your highest value accounts
  6. Involve all key decision makers from the start
  7. Easier to measure results

1. Align your sales and marketing teams

When lead generation is targeted around volume it’s easy for sales and marketing to become adversarial. Sales complains that marketing isn't sending them high quality leads. Marketing’s response is that sales simply isn’t converting the leads they’re sending them.

ABM helps bring sales and marketing together by flipping the marketing funnel on its head.

Instead of focusing on content campaigns and specific channels, ABM shifts the focus towards being audience first. It’s your target accounts—which both teams agree on—that will lead your marketing and sales efforts.

2. Create more engaging content

When we’re targeting broad buyer personas we lose a certain amount of engagement. After all, people love personalised content.

ABM allows you to create marketing messaging that’s personalised to specific industries, companies and even roles within your target accounts.

Think about it.

You’re far more likely to engage with a piece of content—whether that’s an eBook or an outreach email—if it’s tailored to your specific challenges. In fact, 73% of companies that adopted an ABM approach have seen improvements in engagement.

3. Increase your chances of closing bigger deals

Closing deals is great. Closing big deals is even better.

However, it’s hard to close those high value deals with the same marketing messaging and tactics you use for everyone else. You won’t be able to maximise your brand’s relevance among those high value accounts without personalisation of marketing and sales collateral, and the communication and service/product information you share—and low relevance means it’s unlikely to close a big deal.

A survey of ABM marketers found that 91% reported their ABM accounts had bigger deal sizes than non-ABM accounts, while 25% reported deal sizes at least 50% larger.

4. Quality not quantity

You can generate hundreds of MQLs with your marketing, but if those MQLs don’t progress through the sales funnel it’s a pointless endeavour.

According to Gleanster Research, only 25% of MQLs are typically of a high enough quality to immediately advance to sales. What’s more, costs-per-lead are rising across most industries.

ABM prioritises quality over quantity.

Your target accounts list will be carefully curated to ensure every organisation on that list fits your ICP. There’s no need to spend time qualifying bad-fit leads or picking up the phone only to find out your services are far outside of their budget.

5. Upsell and cross-sell your highest value accounts

Account-based marketing makes it easier to land and expand those larger value deals, with companies leveraging ABM for their marketing generating 208% more revenue, increasing retention and facilitating customer expansion, with 84% reporting this.

Treating your customers as what they are—unique people and organisations with specific goals and challenges—rather than one of many, doesn’t just make them feel more supported, but also helps to ensure they get the most value from your products or services.

6. Involve all key decision makers from the start

On average, a company’s purchasing decision process involves more than five different stakeholders. With this in mind, involving multiple decision makers from an early stage is so important.

With an ABM approach, part of the process for prospecting target accounts involves identifying all of the key stakeholders within an organisation, rather than focusing all your efforts on the primary contact who first gets in touch with you directly or engages with marketing material.

7. Easier to measure results

With broad reach, non-ABM marketing it can be difficult to attribute revenue back to your marketing efforts. If you close an inbound lead that got in touch via a contact form you don’t necessarily know if they’ve been touched by previous marketing campaigns.

By contrast, account-based marketing defines your target accounts first. When you close a deal with an organisation on that list, you can directly attribute that revenue back to your ABM efforts.

Ready to find out more about what an account-based marketing approach can do for you? Get in touch with our team today.

It’s possible you’ve heard about account-based marketing (ABM) by now, because it’s getting a lot of attention in the world of B2B marketing.

“ABM offers organisations a much greater return on their investment compared with traditional digital marketing!”

“ABM starts more conversations and closes more deals!”

“ABM flips the B2B sales and marketing funnel on its head!”

Sounds pretty great, doesn’t it?

Of course, at this stage you might be asking yourself a valid question: “What the hell is account-based marketing?”

Account-based marketing definition

Account-based marketing (ABM) is a strategic approach to B2B marketing in which marketing and sales teams target ‘best-fit’ prospects. This involves creating targeted messaging that speaks directly to the goals and objectives of the companies — and those companies’ stakeholders — you want to turn into customers.

This differs from traditional digital marketing where you target generalised buyer personas with broader messaging.

ABM tactics can also be used for marketing to existing customers to encourage upselling and cross-selling, ensuring you generate the most value from your accounts.

Check out the below table to see how ABM compares with Outbound and Inbound marketing.

Which industries are Account-based Marketing campaigns most suited to?

Account-based marketing is a strategic marketing approach that works exclusively for B2B industries, but does it work for all B2B organisations?

Although there’s no specific B2B industry that ABM is best suited to, it does work for some types of companies better than others.

Companies that are solving problems for their customers

All products and services solve a challenge for an individual or organisation, but the solutions for some problems aren’t as obvious as others, and require a bit of education.

Whether your target accounts have industry-specific, role-specific or business-growth challenges, ABM campaigns are ideal for situations where stakeholders need to be educated on the benefits of your solution. This is because you’ve already identified their main challenges during the prospecting phase, and created tailored content around solving them.

You’re working with larger deal sizes

ABM requires a significant investment of time and resources to be effective, and this means you need to see a high ROI.

If your products are priced below £100 for example, it’s unlikely an ABM campaign is going to generate enough revenue to be profitable. After all, you’re creating tailored content for specific target accounts, and this isn’t something you can do quickly or at scale.

You’re working with longer sales cycles

Following on from the deal size point, ABM campaigns are also better suited to products or services that require longer sales cycles.

If all it takes is a single advert and landing page to generate a sale you don’t need to spend time creating personalised content.

Your buyers have multiple stakeholders

ABM is typically a good fit for B2B companies that have multiple stakeholders involved in any purchase decision. For example, if you’re selling a comprehensive software solution you might be targeting the IT Director, the CFO and the CEO all with different messages.

It’s very difficult to target all of these people effectively with a single message, but with an ABM approach you can create tailored messaging for each stakeholder that’s specific to their unique challenges.

How to effectively implement ABM

There are five key steps for effectively implementing account-based marketing:

Step 1: Define your strategic accounts

Here at Aira, we have a few predefined buyer personas. However, these are not examples of strategic accounts.

Instead of defining types of people that make up your target audience, you need to define specific types of companies — your ideal customer profile.

Your ideal customer profile should represent the accounts that generate the most revenue for your business, as well as other desirable criteria. The completed profile(s) will typically include elements such as annual turnover, company size, industry and location, and will rely on both qualitative and quantitative research.

Step 2: Identify your target accounts

Once you’ve defined your ideal customer profile you need to create a long list of target accounts that fit this profile, before digging deeper into these companies to identify factors such as:

At this stage, you’ll also want to think about the type of ABM campaigns you’ll be executing. There are three types of account-based marketing approaches:

One-to-one

One-to-one ABM is typically focused on less than 10 accounts, with hyper-targeted and highly customised messaging that is solely relevant to that business and that business alone.

One-to-few

One-to-few is an approach suitable for anywhere between 10 and 50 accounts, where content is still personlised, but can be reproduced and tweaked slightly for its intended recipient, assuming the accounts have similar challenges and objectives.

One-to-many

One-to-many is designed for an entire group of accounts (50-1000) and involves targeting a wider audience with content that isn’t as personalised, but still more tailored than ‘broad reach’ marketing.

The content collateral required for these campaigns is typically repurposed, rather than created specifically for certain accounts.

Step 3: Create personalised campaigns

Now you know who your target accounts are and what makes them tick, you can start creating content and messaging that’s personalised to those target accounts and the stakeholders you need to get in front of.

To create ABM content that’s going to be effective you need to align marketing and sales teams. Your sales teams will be heavily involved in making sure your ABM campaigns are a success, so they need to be bought into the messaging they’re going to be using when reaching out to prospects.

During step two you’ll have identified which channels are best for reaching the key stakeholders at your target accounts, and this will also be a factor when creating these marketing campaigns.

Step 4: Execute your ABM campaign

When executing traditional digital campaigns it’s all about maximising (relevant) reach, increasing traffic and generating inbound leads. This can lead to a bit of a more-is-more approach to frequency of content.

However, keep in mind that ABM is a much more targeted approach. Make sure you don’t bombard your target accounts with repeated messages across multiple channels, or overdo it remarketing on specific channels.

Also remember that you’re not just targeting one or two buyer personas at your target organisations, but multiple key stakeholders within the organisation — so bear this in mind when setting up your targeting.

Step 5: Measure the results

As with all marketing campaigns, make sure you constantly measure the results of your ABM campaigns and optimise appropriately.

Measuring the success of ABM campaigns isn’t exactly the same as traditional digital marketing campaigns. After all, you don’t necessarily care about impression numbers, web page visits or total form submissions.

Instead, consider the following:

Note that the nature of ABM campaigns makes it hard to run effective A/B, multivariate or other tests, because the content should be tailored to each target account. However, that doesn’t mean you can’t identify what marketing assets are working or not working and iterate based on those results.

Implementing an ABM approach can deliver more sales and increase revenue, but it’s not right for every organisation. If you’re not sure whether or not to take the ABM plunge, drop us a message here, or feel free to give us a call. We’ll be honest with you about whether or not it’s the right strategy for your business and what you want to achieve, and advise on what you should be doing.

Getting started is as easy as having a conversation.

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