7 Easy Ways to Measure and Optimize Your Account-Based Marketing Campaigns

Radhika Sivadi

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Measuring and Optimizing Account Based Marketing

If you’ve stuck with us throughout the length of our Account-based Marketing 101 series, then by now you’ve learned about the history of ABM, the benefits of an ABM strategy, aligning your sales and marketing teams, and five must-try ABM strategies. But after all of that, how do you measure whether or not your account-based marketing efforts are successful?

In the last post in our series, we would like to walk through one of the most important parts of account-based marketing and advertising: measurement and optimization.

While many traditional marketing strategies don’t allow you to optimize until after a campaign has run its course, advertising at the account level gives you the ability to optimize your campaigns on the fly using A/B testing. See which advertising creative and marketing messages are falling flat with your target audience as the campaign runs, and swap out copy or ads that aren’t performing in real time.

Tip: In order to make sure switches happen seamlessly, have alternate messaging and creative ready to go.

An important part of the optimization process is gathering feedback from your sales team, which should happen continuously as you run your ABM campaigns. Ask your sales team if they have had better success penetrating key accounts, and see if there’s anything you could be doing to better support their goals.

Measuring the success of your account-based marketing campaigns is a lot like measuring the success of any other marketing campaign, except this time, you’re restricting your measurements to key accounts.

Your metrics will depend on your business goals and the type of campaign you’re running, but the list below provides a number of measures to start with:

1. Interactions with Ads

Is your target audience clicking on your ads? Keep an eye on your engagement stats to see how well your advertising is resonating across devices, personas, sales stages, and the different campaigns you may be running. Keep in mind that the goal here is to see how your ads are performing within your target audience.

2. Conversion Metrics

Is your target audience taking the desired action, i.e clicking through your ad and filling out a form, requesting a product demo, or visiting your website? Your conversion metrics can help pinpoint important areas for optimization. For instance, if your conversion rates are low, your messaging may not accurately reflect the offer presented on your landing page or on your website.

Note that these metrics may change depending on the type of campaign you’re running. While website engagement may be a significant measurement for an ABM campaign aimed at engaging leads after an event, a campaign that aims to “reawaken the dead” will be looking more at the number of leads who take an action, period — even if that just means clicking on an ad.

3. Overall Engagement

The goal of an account-based marketing campaign is to increase engagement with your brand (and ultimately, with your sales team) within target accounts. Measuring prospect activity levels and engagement with your website can help determine whether or not your campaigns are really reaching their mark.

4. Reach

Account-based marketing can be an important awareness-generating tool within your key accounts. Better understand your success by tracking new contacts reached and generated from your ABM campaigns.

5. Return on Investment

Like with any marketing campaign, you want to see a positive impact on your bottom line. Are you getting more out of your ABM campaigns that what you’re putting in? Be sure to constantly optimize your campaigns in order to ensure the highest return on investment possible.

6. Sales Cycle Length

By exposing your target audience to personalized messages that are targeted by account, you can shorten the awareness and research phase of the buyer’s journey, thereby reducing the length of the sales cycle. Keep an eye on your sales cycle length to gauge the impact of your ABM campaigns.

7. Customer Retention

Account-based marketing isn’t only for generating new business. It can also be an important tool for customer retention (and even for upsells and cross-sells). Monitor retention rates among the accounts that are being targeted with account-based messaging to see if there are any significant changes in customer churn.

Using any combination of the above metrics — and optimizing based on your results — will help you build the most impactful ABM campaigns possible.

This article was syndicated from Business 2 Community: 7 Easy Ways to Measure and Optimize Your Account-Based Marketing Campaigns

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Radhika Sivadi