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Account-Based Marketing: A Practical Guide

Geschreven door Tom Staelens | 18-dec-2025 7:30:00
 

In many B2B markets, growth doesn’t come from generating more leads. It comes from winning the right ones. When sales cycles are long, deal sizes are large, and multiple stakeholders are involved, traditional lead-based marketing can feel inefficient and disconnected from revenue. This is where Account-Based Marketing (ABM) becomes especially powerful.

What is Account-Based Marketing?

Account-Based Marketing (ABM) is a strategic approach in which marketing and sales work together to target a defined set of high-value accounts and treat each account as a “market of one.”

Instead of casting a wide net to generate as many leads as possible, ABM focuses on:

  • Identifying companies that are a strong fit for your product or service

  • Understanding the decision-makers and influencers within those companies

  • Delivering highly personalized messaging and campaigns tailored to each account

In short, ABM flips the traditional funnel. You start with accounts first, then build awareness, engagement, and demand within those accounts.

How ABM differs from traditional B2B marketing

Traditional B2B marketing often emphasizes:

  • High lead volume

  • Broad campaigns

  • Sales-qualified leads (SQLs) handed off to sales

ABM, on the other hand, emphasizes:

  • A smaller number of high-value accounts

  • Personalized, account-specific campaigns

  • Shared ownership of accounts between sales and marketing

The goal is not more leads, but better revenue outcomes. The problem with just generating more leads is that you still end up spending a lot of time on leads that don’t become clients. Especially in long sales cycles, this has a significant impact on your revenue generation.

Why ABM is useful for B2B companies

Account-based marketing is particularly effective for B2B organizations with complex buying processes. Here’s why it can be so valuable.

Better alignment between sales and marketing

ABM requires sales and marketing to agree on:

  • Which accounts matter the most

  • What success looks like

  • How to engage each account

This shared focus reduces friction, improves communication, and ensures both teams are working toward the same revenue goals. For more about this, read our blog about 4 steps to reach sales and marketing alignment.

Higher ROI on marketing efforts

By concentrating resources on accounts with the highest revenue potential, ABM helps avoid wasted spend on low-quality leads. Marketing budgets are used more efficiently, often resulting in:

  • Higher deal sizes

  • Better conversion rates

  • Faster sales cycles

Reducing a sales cycle may seem like a small change, but multiply this by the number of deals you work on for a 12-month period, and you’ll see the impact.

More relevant, personalized messaging

B2B buyers expect relevance. ABM enables you to tailor your messaging based on:

  • Industry challenges

  • Company size and maturity

  • Specific business objectives

  • The role of the person you are targeting

This personalization makes your outreach more compelling and increases engagement across stakeholders.

Stronger relationships with key accounts

ABM is not just about closing deals with new clients. It’s also about building long-term partnerships. By consistently delivering value and relevant insights, your organization can:

  • Improve trust with target accounts

  • Increase customer lifetime value (CLV)

  • Drive upsell and cross-sell opportunities

Gaining new clients costs a lot more time and energy than keeping the ones you already have and upselling or cross-selling to them. 

Some examples of Account-Based Marketing

1 - Enterprise SaaS company

An enterprise SaaS provider identifies 50 large companies that match its ideal customer profile (ICP). For each account, the marketing team:

  • Creates customized landing pages

  • Runs LinkedIn ads targeted only at employees of those companies

  • Develops case studies tailored to the account’s industry

Sales follows up with personalized demos focused on the account’s specific challenges.

2 - Professional services firm

A consulting firm targets mid-market manufacturing companies. Instead of creating generic content, they:

  • Publish industry-specific white papers

  • Host invite-only webinars for selected accounts

  • Send personalized email sequences referencing the company’s recent initiatives

This approach positions the firm as a trusted strategic advisor rather than a generic vendor.

3 - B2B technology vendor expanding existing accounts

If you thought ABM is only useful for acquiring new customers, you are wrong. A B2B technology vendor, for example, can use ABM to grow existing enterprise clients by:

  • Mapping additional departments and stakeholders

  • Creating targeted campaigns for new use cases (for existing clients)

  • Collaborating with account managers to expand adoption

When Account-Based marketing makes the most sense

So, does Account-Based Marketing make sense for you? It depends. ABM is especially effective when:

  • Deal values are high

  • Sales cycles are long

  • Multiple decision-makers are involved

  • The total addressable market is relatively small but valuable

For companies selling complex B2B solutions, ABM often delivers better results than volume-based marketing alone. Most companies will know exactly if this is the case for them. If you are on the fence, it might be worth giving it a try. And if you do give it a try, remember to focus on measuring those things that really matter

Account-Based Marketing is not a replacement for all your current marketing efforts. It’s a focused strategy designed to drive meaningful growth where it matters the most. For B2B companies selling high-value solutions, ABM offers a way to align teams, personalize engagement, and turn key accounts into long-term customers.

When executed well, ABM doesn’t just generate pipeline: it builds relationships that fuel sustainable revenue.