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Account-based marketing

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Account-based marketing (ABM), also known as key account marketing, is a strategic approach to business marketing based on account awareness in which an organization considers and communicates with individual prospect or customer accounts as markets of one. Account-based marketing is typically employed in enterprise-level sales organizations.

Background and differences with traditional business marketing

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In the marketing of complex business propositions, account-based marketing plays a key role in expanding business within existing customer accounts (where, for example, wider industry marketing would not be targeted enough to appeal to an existing customer). In scenarios where the initial sale has taken several months, it is reported that account-based marketing delivers an increase in the long-term value of the customer.[1] ABM can also be applied to key prospect accounts in support of the first sale. For example, Northrop Grumman employed ABM to aid in the completion of a successful $2 billion deal.[2]

The roles of sales and marketing teams

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ABM is an example of the alignment of sales and marketing teams.[3] In the aligned model, organizations able to unite tactical marketing efforts with defined sales goals and use feedback from sales to identify new potential markets. For ABM to succeed, joint working relationship with sales is essential and marketing needs to be measuring and optimizing based on accounts.[citation needed] ABM is targeted at accounts (or companies as a whole) as opposed to inbound marketing, which is targeted at leads (or people within these companies). The need for sales and marketing alignment also comes from the fact that there is an inherent disconnect between marketers, who market to people, and sales people, who sell to companies (or structured groups of people).

Marketing will also take an increased role in developing intelligence on key accounts – as proposed by Peppers and Rogers (1993): “When two marketers are competing for the same customer’s business, all other things being equal, the marketer with the greatest scope of information about that particular customer […] will be the more efficient competitor.[4]

Choosing the key account

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Key accounts are accounts that are identified within organizations as being a focus for account-based marketing. Not all accounts meet the requirements to be designated as a strategic or key account and organizations need to be careful about which accounts to focus on for their account-based marketing efforts or risk losing a valuable client. When choosing, organizations should look at revenue history, account history, margins and profitability as well as the viability that the client in question would be interested in a long-term relationship. Lastly, asking what the client and the company have in common helps in solidifying the approach that the client cannot find this kind of service anywhere else. To select the companies that bring you the highest profits you can apply the Pareto Principle.[5]

There are also some red flags that help recognize that a relationship with a key account is about to change:[6]

  • Business that regularly would have come to the company goes elsewhere
  • A re-organization within the company forces a change in relationship
  • Both involved companies aren't seeing ROI from the relationship
  • Mutual goals are not achieved

References

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  1. ^ "Account-based marketing: How it can help your company improve demand, awareness and profitability". Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2008-08-14.
  2. ^ How Northrop Grumman Used Account-Based Marketing to Win a $2B Deal
  3. ^ Kotler, Rackham and Krishnaswamy; Ending the War Between Sales and Marketing (2006) Harvard Business Review
  4. ^ Peppers and Rogers; The One-to-One Future (1993); Page 140
  5. ^ Koch, Richard (2011-11-09). The 80/20 Principle, Third Edition: The Secret to Achieving More with Less. Crown. ISBN 978-0-385-52831-3.
  6. ^ "Fast Forward: Choosing and Working With Strategic Accounts". Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-30. Retrieved 2009-02-11.