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The 'ABM is dead' sentiment isn't a rejection of account-based marketing, but a reaction to hyper-focused strategies that only target in-market buyers. This narrow approach ignores the 90% of the potential market that requires brand awareness, creating a weak upper funnel and hindering long-term growth.

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Don't mistake hyper-personalization for effectiveness. Running hundreds of tiny, account-specific campaigns is inefficient and hard to measure. A more successful approach is to group accounts by industry or shared pain points and run fewer, larger campaigns for better data and stronger engagement.

Treating Account-Based Marketing (ABM) as a standalone strategy is a mistake. It must be integrated with broader brand awareness and lead nurturing for the 90% of the market not currently buying. Without top-of-funnel activities, even targeted sales efforts will fall short.

ABM often fails because it's treated as a siloed marketing initiative. To be effective, it must be an "Account-Based Experience" (ABX) where marketing, sales, and operations are fully integrated to create a seamless, unified journey for the entire target account.

Many B2B marketers obsess over precisely targeting a small buying committee. This is a mistake. To achieve 'buyability' and de-risk the purchase, brands must be known across the entire organization, including finance and procurement. This means intentionally loosening targeting to build broad brand recognition.

The "Marketing" in ABM creates resistance from non-marketing teams, pigeonholing the initiative. Using broader terms like "Account-Based Strategy" or "Account-Based Engagement" repositions it as a company-wide GTM motion, dramatically improving adoption across sales, customer success, and leadership.

Instead of selling "one-to-one" or "one-to-few" ABM programs, focus on the client's specific business challenge. Frame the solution around solving that problem, which resonates with the C-suite who care about outcomes, not marketing jargon.

Citing LinkedIn's 95/5 rule, most of your target audience isn't ready to buy. Brand marketing should focus on this out-of-market majority with memorable, emotional content to build long-term affinity, rather than just serving product demos to the 5% who are actively buying.

A common strategic error is defaulting to ABM solely for new customer acquisition. This overlooks the immense, often untapped, potential for revenue growth within the existing customer base. The highest ROI for ABM frequently lies in driving upsell and cross-sell opportunities with current clients.

Many firms reduce Account-Based Marketing (ABM) to tactics like direct mail or targeted ads. True success requires treating ABM as a comprehensive go-to-market operating model. This means aligning the core sales process and strategy first, before implementing any technology or specific campaigns.

Spending on brand awareness outside your ideal customer profile does more than waste budget; it creates demand you cannot supply. This educates and warms up potential buyers, effectively teeing them up for your competitors to acquire, turning your marketing spend into their lead generation.

Backlash Against ABM Stems from Over-Targeting, Not the Concept Itself | RiffOn