A B2B SaaS company runs paid ads, generates leads, and passes them to sales. Sales qualify maybe 20%. The rest don’t fit. The revenue team spends the quarter chasing volume, and the pipeline still looks thin. The problem usually isn’t the number of leads. Most enterprise SaaS companies have enough traffic.Â
The problem is that broad-reach campaigns don’t distinguish between the 200 accounts most likely to close a deal this year and the thousands that technically match a demographic filter. Account-based marketing solves that distinction by starting with the accounts worth pursuing, not ending with them.
Account-based marketing involves focusing on marketing and sales efforts on a list of specific targeted accounts, as opposed to targeting an open-ended audience. The approach entails identifying the best-fit accounts and creating marketing campaigns tailored towards these particular accounts, unlike the traditional method where the focus is on generating leads and then qualifying them.
Not all companies in your addressable market are equally worth pursuing. Some match your ICP precisely, have the budget for your deal size, and face the specific problem your product solves right now. ABM puts resources on those accounts. Broad reach campaigns spread the same resources across everyone, including the 80% that won’t buy this fiscal year.
ABM doesn’t run the same way for every account. Resources, personalization, and expected return all vary by account size and strategic priority. Below is how the three standard models work:
ABM Model | Target Accounts | Personalization Level | Best For |
One-to-one | 5 to 15 named accounts | Fully customized content and outreach | Highest-value strategic deals |
One-to-few | 20 to 100 accounts by industry or use case | Segment-level by vertical or role | Mid-tier accounts with shared characteristics |
One-to-many | 500 to 5,000 accounts in programmatic ICP targeting | Light personalization through segmentation | Broad ICP coverage at account-level scale |
Most mature ABM programs run all three tiers together. Strategic accounts get fully customized treatment. Clustered accounts get segment messaging. The broader ICP list gets programmatic campaigns that still target by account rather than keyword.
The performance gap between ABM and broad reach comes down to fit and timing. Here is where the two approaches produce different outcomes:
Building an ABM program requires different inputs than demand generation. The following are the components that determine whether a campaign produces results:
Koda is an end-to-end B2B marketing agency working exclusively with technology companies looking to grow. The cornerstone of our enterprise pipeline initiatives is account-based marketing, which aligns all elements, including email, paid media, content, and outbound, into one unified strategy.
ABM will work better than broad reach in terms of enterprise software as a service since it begins with fit rather than ends with it. By focusing on the best leads through marketing and sales activities and having messaging appropriate to each member of the buying committee, a company achieves greater deal sizes and shortened sales cycles. When a tech company sells its product in deals bigger than $50,000 and has sales cycles longer than three months, only ABM can create pipelines that a broad reach cannot create.
Ready to build an ABM program that targets the right enterprise accounts and converts buying committees into pipeline? Contact Koda today, and let’s build an account-based marketing strategy matched to your accounts and deal economics.
ABM identifies high-fit target accounts first, then runs coordinated campaigns across paid media, email, and outreach to engage every stakeholder in the buying committee.
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Demand generation builds broad awareness and filters for fit later. ABM defines fit upfront and concentrates all marketing and sales resources toward a specific list of high-value accounts.
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One-to-one for strategic accounts, one-to-few for industry clusters, and one-to-many for broad ICP programmatic targeting. Most enterprise programs run all three simultaneously.
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Track account engagement rate, buying committee penetration, pipeline from target accounts, average contract value from ABM-sourced deals, and sales cycle length versus non-ABM pipeline.
One-to-one ABM typically requires $10,000 or more per account per quarter. One-to-few cluster programs run on $1,000 to $5,000 per cluster, and one-to-many scales with list size and channel mix.
Sadaf Tanzeem is the Senior Content Marketing Specialist at Koda. Passionate about marketing and storytelling, she believes words are more than just copy and numbers are more than just data—they are the shortest distance between a brand and the people it wants to reach. At Koda, she creates insightful, engaging, and value-driven content focused on technology, digital transformation, and business growth. Outside of work, Sadaf enjoys playing the guitar, reading books, and exploring hiking trails in the mountains.
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