Decide if ABM is right for you.
As more than 79% of marketers report higher ROI from ABM than any other marketing effort, it's clear that ABM can be an effective strategy for almost any B2B company or business with long sales cycles. With the right approach, ABM can work for a company of any size — from enterprises to small and midsize businesses — across every industry.
However, ABM isn't necessarily for everyone. To get started with ABM, you need enough high-value customer accounts to make the strategy worthwhile; the data in your CRM can help you see whether this is the case.
Once you've selected your target accounts, ABM takes time, effort, and coordination. If your marketing department has the correct accounts, team members, and amount of time for ABM, then ABM is likely a good fit for you. If not, it's always good to keep ABM in mind as a helpful strategy you can try in the future.
Make sure you have the right tools for ABM.
ABM requires accurate accounts, team, time, and cloud solutions. It starts with a CRM to collect and manage customer data. A strong understanding of your top accounts' data allows you to create the personalized experiences that define ABM.
Technology tools like marketing automation and artificial intelligence can help you automate many ABM processes, including identifying accounts and engaging buyers. With seamless automation and AI, your teams may find it easier to align your ABM efforts and grow relationships with high-value accounts.
Collaborate with other teams on ABM.
Even though the "M" in ABM stands for "marketing," ABM should never be just a marketing strategy. While marketing teams may ultimately own ABM, it impacts every other team interacting with high-value target accounts.
These teams need to be consulted and kept in the loop about ABM from the beginning, as it may change how they approach certain accounts. Sales, service, support, and more need to be aware of which accounts are included in your ABM efforts, and they need access to data and tools that can help them create successful interactions with those accounts.
To get all your teams on the same page:
- Train everyone on managing leads for ABM and teach them how to talk to high-value accounts similarly. This education will create more consistency and unification across every step of the ABM customer journey.
- Build open, cross-team communication into everyone's workflows, giving all teams access to email and chat tools that allow them to collaborate and share critical insights about top accounts.
- Use your CRM to build shared lists of ABM accounts that all teams can easily access. This will prevent people from wasting time searching for the information they need to identify, target, and engage the best accounts.
Set goals to crawl and then walk before you run.
You don't need to jump in with both feet immediately to succeed with ABM. The best ABM programs are built slowly and carefully, with a growing investment of time and effort. It is important to set goals and establish your ABM program at a pace that works well for your teams and your target accounts.
Start small, at a slow crawl, by creating a pilot campaign for a potential list of high-value accounts. You can work with other sales and customer service teams to determine key characteristics shared among your best target accounts. Then, together, you can study your customers' pain points and tailor your messaging to address their problems.
If your slow crawl (your pilot program) results are encouraging, you can graduate to walking: personalizing content for every account through data. But first, do a debrief with your team and try to answer questions like:
- What kind of customization had the most impact?
- Did accounts respond better to one type of outreach over another?
You can apply these learnings when scaling up. For example, create personas based on what you learned in the pilot program and sort key accounts into those personas.
Focus on your current client base. Now, you can use the data in your CRM to personalize your cross-channel messaging to these accounts, including direct mail campaigns, ads, social media, and the web.
Finally, if your ABM program is going smoothly, you can speed up to a run by implementing additional analytics and AI to boost your efficiency. By this point, your pilot campaigns should have evolved into complete ABM programs, filled with personalized messaging leading to excellent engagement with key accounts.
Adding advanced analytics and AI to your ABM mix can take things to the next level. For example, AI-powered behavior scoring can review prospects' behavioral patterns and assign scores prioritizing accounts for nurturing and sales engagement. Insights from behavior scoring have helped companies set criteria and develop touchpoints that have led to as much as a 2,500% ROI.
Adding AI to your ABM mix not only improves results but also makes things easier on marketing teams. It prioritizes the best leads without extra analysis, freeing up time (and energy) for the team to think deeper and more creatively about strategy.