Personalization Opportunities in Account Based Marketing
Did you know that 80 percent of B2B buying decisions are based on a buyer’s direct or indirect customer experience, and only 20 percent is based on the price or the actual offering?
That’s quite a ratio, and helps support the case for adopting an account based marketing (ABM) strategy that leverages personalization tools and tactics to not only drastically improve the customer experience throughout the sales process, but do wonders to your bottom line.
After all, an ITSMA and ABM Leadership Alliance study found that in 2019, 71 percent of companies saw greater ROI within their ABM efforts versus their traditional marketing strategies.
B2B businesses are taking notice, with the same study finding 73 percent of marketers planning to increase their ABM budgets in 2020. Kudos to them! But ABM is only as effective as the strategy you set in place and the high quality sales content required to keep B2B buyers engaged. That’s where ABM finds its perfect match in personalization.
But let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
What is Account Based Marketing (ABM)?
Account based marketing is a hyper focused marketing strategy that allows sales and marketing teams to target individual prospects as if they exist in their own unique market. It’s especially useful for B2B marketers targeting businesses who have multiple stakeholders involved in the buying decision process. Marketing teams are empowered to create content, hold events or develop campaigns that are personally relevant to not only the business, but the individual stakeholders themselves.Developing an Account Based Marketing Strategy
Developing an ABM strategy starts with researching and selecting your target accounts so their wants, needs and pain points are in alignment with your business goals and product or service offerings. This will help alleviate confusion between often abridged sales and marketing teams on what accounts to prioritize, which to nurture or those even worth your time. You’ll also want to determine which media channels will most effectively reach stakeholders within your accounts. Once your target accounts are selected, it’s time to segment based on whatever strategy you established. You’ll most definitely want to segment by what department stakeholders reside in at their company, but many ABM tools in customer relationship management (CRM) software and marketing automation platforms enable you to segment even down to job title, buying influence, technology that’s used at the company, and more.Leveraging Personalization in Account Based Marketing
Targeting individual stakeholders at a company opens up an abundance of opportunity to leverage personalization tools and tactics into your overall ABM strategy. Let’s lead with an example. So you’ve got your target accounts selected and you’ve begun researching those accounts. Great! Your sales and marketing teams collaborate to fill in data gaps for prospects’ firmographic data (that includes things like industry, company size, location, or even market influence and the likelihood of repeat purchase). You know who you’re going after, and you know the various stakeholders in the buying decision, or at the very least, other influencers within that business. Turns out, you’ve got an entire executive committee to persuade into purchasing your product or service, and they all represent different departments who have differing wants, needs and pain points at the company. Through personalization, you’re fully empowered to reach each of these individual stakeholders with content and messaging that’s the most applicable to them, and speak to their concerns directly.Personalizing Content and Messaging For B2B Buying Decision Makers
In B2B buying decisions, there are a few different types of influencers you’ll come in contact with. They include but are not limited to:- Financial influencers: often the person(s) with the final say in the purchasing decision.
- User influencers: the people at the company who will use and be affected most by your product or service.
- Gatekeepers: the people who qualify that you’re the right fit for their business.
- Sponsors: an internal ally who advocates for your purchasing decision to other influencers.