When your selected target accounts are not engaging with your marketing efforts, it could be a sign something's off. You can access this by looking at event signups, clicks on your ABM ads, gift claims, email open rates, and personalized content consumption and interaction patterns.
Have you compared your MQA (Marketing Qualified Account) conversion rate with pre-ABM efforts? If your post-ABM MQA conversion rate is not improving and you don't seem to be creating more MQAs within target accounts, you might need to optimize your strategy.
How are your key ABM accounts progressing through the sales stages? Is your team closing deals at a higher speed? If you answered "no", then it's time to shake things up.
Now that you’ve identified the symptoms, it’s time to find the causes and return your ABM strategy to health.
Here at Reachdesk, one of our favorite things about ABM is how it hinges on seamless collaboration – between Sales and Marketing, but also across the entire go-to-market (GTM) team. Team alignment is one of the main pillars of allbound engagement, so it’s something particularly close to our hearts.
Studies show companies with healthy levels of alignment grow 19% faster and enjoy 15% more profitability, and if this is something you’re actively looking to improve, ABM is the perfect way to make it a priority.
But getting Sales and Marketing on the same page isn’t easy, especially when they have different perspectives, motivations, and expectations. According to research from LinkedIn, 90% of sales and marketing professionals believe their teams are misaligned across strategy, process, content, and culture.
Establishing shared targets, KPIs and processes is key to leveling up expectations and building a strong partnership from the get-go. So don’t forget to:
Schedule regular meetings with your Sales team to share updates, performance data, and any new insights. Make sure your teams are working from the same dashboards and reports in your CRM platform.
Your team needs to be made aware of activity from their accounts, so they’re able to follow up and create a leaner buying process. To guarantee this happens, you should:
When executed correctly, ABM allows you to direct your team’s time, energy, and resources precisely where they need to be – generating pipeline, increasing efficiency, and maximizing ROI.
Of course, all this depends on the quality of your target account list. If it’s not up to standard, your chances of connecting with high-value accounts that have a genuine need for your solution will be significantly affected.
Alignment with Sales is crucial when you work on identifying the accounts your teams will target. You don't want your team to choose accounts at random, but you also don't want to dictate which ones they'll work on. So, to achieve alignment and consensus, instead of selecting accounts, Marketing should define criteria for accounts to be included in campaigns, and let Sales choose specific accounts that match said criteria. This guarantees that you target the right accounts, at the right stage, with the right messaging.
Your criteria can be based on:
Once you’ve defined guardrails and allowed your sales team to select accounts that match the defined criteria, you’ll be left with a strong list that’s not quite as targeted as you need. This is where tiering comes in.
You should bucket accounts into tiers, based on their attributes. Your highest priority tier will receive the most investment and attention, while your lowest priority one will get more general and automated outreach. This allows you to focus your efforts where they’re most needed.
ABM strategies aren’t just complex to build, plan, and execute. They're also complex to measure. Proving the impact of an ABM strategy, that targets accounts with long sales cycles and leverages multiple touchpoints, without sourced attribution can be difficult.
However, to secure budget and engage the entire GTM leadership, you need to be able to tell a compelling ABM story.
Highly personalized campaigns will usually require specific key performance indicators (KPIs), depending on their goals (e.g. customer retention vs net new revenue). But the following metrics are fairly universal and important to look for when measuring the success of any campaign…
ABM is a juggling act with many different components that need your full attention. With some practice and tweaking, it can be hugely rewarding. In the meantime, it’s important not to feel discouraged when the initial results don’t immediately reflect the hard work you’ve put in.
Take a step back and look at the pillars of your ABM strategy. Make sure your target account lists are accurate, your sales and marketing teams are aligned, your content is relevant, and your success metrics are telling the full story. From there, you can put the pieces of your ABM strategy together into something better and stronger than what came before.
To learn more about how to take your ABM strategy to the next level, take a look at our direct mail-powered ABM guide!