3 Ways Generative AI Will Help Marketers Connect With Customers
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Picture it: You’re standing in front of an arcade crane game, only a few quarters in your hand. With limited resources, you need a strategy that balances risks and odds. Do you go after the easy-grab item, or do you try your hand at the one you really want? Almost no one else has succeeded at getting it. And just imagine the reputation that comes with the golden grab: Arcane Crane Game Master. You decide to go for it…
This is what account-based selling (ABS) is like. You’re targeting those big fish accounts — the ones every rep dreams of landing. Read on to learn how to grow your business with account-based selling.
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Account-based selling (ABS) is a sales approach that prioritizes building relationships with high-value account holders so you can quickly close big deals. It’s a more targeted approach to selling; instead of fishing with a net, you use a spear.
To make this possible, account-based sellers give target buyers a lot of their attention, and customize their strategy to fit individual accounts.
The main benefit of account-based selling is the control you have over your customer base. With a narrower focus, your team can concentrate on creating a long-term plan to win over high-value clients.
Other benefits include:
ABS is more collaborative than lead generation. It’s an all-hands-on-deck approach to sales where your entire team participates in outreach.
Marketing is usually the first touchpoint; through targeted campaigns, prospective buyers are pulled in via digital ads, physical promotions, webinars, and other marketing materials. Once a lead is landed, sellers collaborate with marketers to learn about them based on their engagement with marketing campaigns. This is supplemented with collaboration across service, finance, IT, and any other relevant teams as the seller works to find high-value solutions and resources that will compel target accounts to close.
This multi-channel, cross-functional approach ensures that your team isn’t just reaching out to one person in one way. Rather, you’re targeting multiple stakeholders to get buy-in across a buyer’s company or organization.
Your customized outreach strategy should:
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Before you can start strategizing, you have to narrow down the playing field and prioritize which accounts to target and why. Here are four best practices to follow to launch a successful ABS strategy:
Understanding who your customers are and how to communicate with them is the first step in your ABS strategy. An Ideal Customer Profile (ICP) identifies and defines your most valuable customer.
It also indicates who is most likely to buy your products or services so you know who to target. Building an ICP or buyer persona starts with data. Cover the basics, including size, location, demographics, and industry. Then consider these questions to dive deeper:
The key with ABS is to identify high-value accounts, accounts that have the potential to generate significant profits for your organization, and utilize all your teams to help you land them. CRM software with AI-powered insights can help here; it can surface insights based on past customers and public data to deliver recommendations for high-value accounts worth going after.
Since ABS is a collaborative approach, your sales team must work directly with marketing, service, finance, IT, and any other relevant teams to deliver a consistent message to your prospects. For instance, your marketing team should develop the early messaging strategy, but sales should be involved in reviewing and approving so they can create a pitch that aligns.
This means these teams should be in regular communication about goals, including all aspects of customer outreach, like sales calls, emails, and social media. A collaboration platform, built directly into your CRM, not only helps facilitate marketing and sales alignment but also contributes to revenue growth and stronger relationships by streamlining processes, personalizing customer journeys, and tracking progress.
This is where your research skills can pay off. Mine sites like LinkedIn to find important stakeholders for the accounts you want to target. Your connections on social media sites also may reveal opportunities to network. Contact management tools within your CRM software can help you keep track of outreach. You can also organize contacts and track outreach using your CRM.
Tracking engagement will help you understand which approaches are most effective when reaching out to prospects. Again, CRM software to the rescue; it can help your team keep track of every email, phone call, and meeting that takes place and how this outreach is performing. With this information, you can adjust your outreach to ensure maximum, consistent engagement until close.
If you want your ABS strategy to produce results, it has to be personalized. But you don’t have to dive into the deep end with personalization right away. Get your feet wet with some low-effort prospecting on a few common channels:
In account-based selling, everything you do should be tailored to your prospect. That includes your email campaigns.
Provide relevant and engaging content to your prospects with customized email sequences. These “drip” communications nurture your leads with information that proves you’re the best solution for them. This strategy lends itself well to automation to make your workflow more efficient.
In an increasingly online world, direct mail can make your company stand out, especially if it’s personalized. Incorporate the prospect’s name, company, and pain points into the copy. Then offer up your solution as a way ahead.
The best way to build a list of mailing addresses is by collecting them directly from your prospects. Surveys, contests, and giveaways are simple ways to collect contact information. You can also purchase the names and addresses of prospects from brokers, but be aware that it’s not always the best approach when searching for high-quality leads; I’ve seen too many of these fall flat because they don’t fit an ICP.
In our digital-first world, social media is one of the most important channels for targeted outreach. Once you’ve identified your target prospects, you can use social media to quickly gather information about their business goals and challenges. Using that data, you can send personalized messages, create hyper-specific ads, or write and share content that will instantly resonate with them. This personalized approach will help you convert prospects into paying customers faster.
Don’t neglect your website. Personalization technology can create a unique experience for visitors and present opportunities for your sales team to follow up with prospects. Create personalized landing pages that use cached or “cookied”information to increase conversations with your customers. Talk to your IT team to see what’s possible here.
A less tech-savvy approach: Maintain and update posts on your blog, and make sure that you’re offering content that is relevant to your specific buyer persona. About 87% of companies see a lift of at least 5% in key metrics, including conversion rates, average order value (AOV), and lifetime value (LTV), when they employ personalization, according to VB Insight.
Once your ABS strategy is in full swing, it’s important to track your campaign success. Measuring key performance indicators (KPIs) can help your organization gain insights into the effectiveness of your ABS strategy. With this information, you can adjust your approach for better success.
Here are some important KPIs to track:
Account-based selling requires a lot of planning, preparation, and research. But the investment in building meaningful relationships with high-value customers is well worth the effort when it pays off. The rewards include improved customer loyalty, higher conversion rates, and revenue growth.
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