Join Ari Cignarale, CEO of Nomad, and Sarah McConnell as they dive into the state of ABM now that AI is on the table.
0:00
[MUSIC]
0:06
All right, hello everyone.
0:07
Welcome to Scaling Your ABM Strategies.
0:09
I'm Sarah McConnell, the VP of Demand Gen here at Qualified.
0:13
And today I'm joined by Ari Signorelli,
0:15
who's the CEO at Nomad Marketing.
0:17
Ari, welcome.
0:19
Hi, thank you so much for having me.
0:21
Pleasure to see you again.
0:22
Yeah, it's great to chat with you.
0:23
I'm so excited.
0:24
ABM is always one of my favorite topics to talk about.
0:26
And I know you are such an expert on this topic.
0:29
So I'm really excited to dig in and give everyone that's
0:32
listening to this some useful tips and pointers
0:35
for their ABM strategy in the age of AI especially.
0:40
So, Ari, my first question for you is,
0:42
clients can sometimes be struggling when
0:44
it comes to establishing and scaling ABM motions.
0:47
Do you see ABM as a status quo for BDB marketers right now?
0:51
Or where do you think BDB companies are at in their adoption
0:53
cycles of ABM?
0:56
Yeah, great question.
0:57
So it's been a few years just since we opened up
1:02
the trade show conference circuit.
1:05
And I think in like 2022, 2023, demand base, 6 cents
1:12
were really intriblio.
1:13
Like we're really like doing these big pushes
1:15
on getting people by ABM.
1:17
They kept saying ABM is the new thing.
1:20
But I think up until this year, the adoption of ABM,
1:24
truly adopting it, it's just beginning.
1:27
We're just scratching the surface,
1:28
although everyone's been buying the products.
1:31
I don't necessarily know if they're truly leveraging it
1:35
because there wasn't really a plan in place.
1:37
I think because it requires planning and resources
1:43
in a team, the platform doesn't just do it for you.
1:46
You really need to write it.
1:48
The platform cannot solve it.
1:49
They can help you.
1:50
But you actually have to work with your marketing team
1:52
and come up with a full ABM strategy.
1:55
Therefore, buying the platform, for me,
1:59
is a waste of ROI until you really
2:01
have your docs in a row and you're ready to go.
2:03
In terms of adoption, because of that,
2:05
I've noticed the enterprise companies are really moving on it
2:10
because they have more internal resources.
2:13
They have a larger marketing team.
2:14
They have more budget to buy these technologies and be ready
2:18
because there are a lot of elements that go into play
2:21
to do true account-based marketing.
2:24
In terms of mid-market, probably at 15%, 20% and SMB as well.
2:30
The desire to do it is there, but they just haven't made the plans
2:34
and use the resources they have and really sat down
2:38
and made the strategy so far.
2:40
It's very much, instead of crawl, walk, run,
2:45
it's like buying the really expensive platform
2:47
and then like--
2:49
Figure it out.
2:49
--spend your wheels, maybe implement it, maybe not.
2:53
I feel like I've spoken to a lot of my clients
2:55
in the sales cycle where we have a sixth sense.
2:57
I'm like, OK, cool.
2:58
Who implemented it and who's using it?
3:00
And they're like, oh, we're not there yet.
3:02
So my methodology is get your ducks in a row,
3:05
start building the strategy, and then maybe invest
3:07
in that technology.
3:09
That is such a good point.
3:10
And as someone who has bought an ABM products
3:12
before we had our ducks in a row or a plan in place,
3:15
I have been in the shoes of your clients
3:17
where if they really wanted ABM and we
3:19
like bottle the things that we needed and then we're like,
3:21
oh, shoot, we don't have the resources or the strategy
3:24
in place to do anything with this.
3:26
So I love that.
3:27
Now, in your experience, you kind of
3:29
mentioned having your plan in place,
3:31
what do you think teams are missing or what--
3:33
like, what's going on?
3:34
What are they missing when they're setting up their strategies
3:36
that you would recommend they thinking about now
3:38
before purchasing any of those ABM products?
3:42
Of course.
3:43
And I know this is in our other question,
3:45
but maybe we just talk about it now is--
3:48
talk about-- look at your technology.
3:49
Look at your tech stack.
3:50
And then look at your staff.
3:52
So in your tech stack, you meet the contacts.
3:54
And you meet the database.
3:55
You probably need a clean CRM.
3:57
So I'm probably going to talk in the Salesforce
3:59
because that's probably-- if we're talking about ABM,
4:01
chances are you're using Salesforce.
4:03
But are your--
4:06
stop using leads, right?
4:07
It helps me account-based marketing.
4:08
When you're using leads in Salesforce,
4:10
that means company name, not account.
4:12
So clean up your Salesforce instance.
4:15
Have all of your contacts in the account.
4:17
Look at-- identify the buyers, identify the titles,
4:21
get their information, emails.
4:23
Have that in place, which I guess that means you need a Zoom
4:27
info or an Apollo or WISA where you can get all of the information
4:32
and that it's current.
4:33
Turnover is really high right now.
4:35
So you need to be sure that your database is up and running
4:38
and very clean so you can start executing.
4:41
That's definitely one of the things,
4:43
like to get the duck and a row.
4:44
Second duck content is your marketing team writing the content.
4:50
That's going to be really useful because the key part
4:53
of account-based marketing is giving them the content
4:57
and identifying their influence for their business need
5:00
and also going across all of the buying grips, right?
5:04
So if you have a product that is--
5:06
we're both sales and marketing-- tailor your content to that
5:11
and how your product can help a salesperson
5:14
rather than how your product can leverage within a CMO
5:18
or the marketing organization.
5:19
Really tailor that content for a person.
5:22
That's going to take some time.
5:23
Content takes time getting good copywriters that
5:25
understand your business or identifying who on your team
5:29
is the content writer amongst their other roles.
5:31
So having that duck and a row also really
5:33
makes a lot of difference because say you have that intent data
5:39
and you know they're ready but you don't have any content to give
5:43
them or you only have one pronged case study or one pronged
5:48
pain point to always talk about, that's not going to be ABM.
5:51
You've got to be ready to talk about all things that make
5:53
sense for that business and for that specific buyer.
5:58
Last but not least, understand your team and your staff.
6:02
Because AI and ABM and all these require an orchestrator,
6:07
you need someone that is identified as the tool user
6:11
and helps build all this out.
6:13
This requires a lot of process.
6:15
This requires that clean sales force, that big strategic marketing
6:21
initiatives.
6:21
So you need to have someone that is owning this project,
6:24
not just every-- all bought out like cooks in the kitchen,
6:27
right?
6:28
Then we'll never get it done.
6:29
And then we'll never really have a timeline
6:31
to when this is going to work.
6:33
So have clear ownership, have clear deadlines.
6:35
Really spend that time with your marketing team
6:38
to understand who's doing it.
6:40
I've also had clients that before they sign on with Nomad,
6:43
they're like, yeah, we have the expense
6:45
or we have these ideas, but we don't actually
6:48
know how to build it.
6:50
So get someone on the marketing technology
6:53
to join your team or get a consultant like Nomad,
6:56
because that will help you execute it
6:58
and execute it or tap it.
7:00
Absolutely.
7:00
I feel like, again, as someone who
7:02
set up an ABM strategy before we were ready to,
7:04
that content piece, that second one you talked about
7:06
was so important because we did all the other things.
7:09
But then we realized we didn't have the content in place
7:11
yet to really offer personalized experiences.
7:13
Which, your point, it's not ABM then.
7:16
So I love all of those.
7:18
Now, you mentioned in one of your--
7:20
I think the third duck, you talked about intent.
7:22
And I feel like intent selling is becoming more commonly
7:25
talked about--
7:26
can you tell me a little bit about why intent is so important
7:29
when you're doing account selection for ABM?
7:31
Yes.
7:32
So intent means that your buyers are on the sites,
7:37
they're researching, they're ready to buy.
7:40
Usually, you're not casually researching and really
7:44
perusing and educating yourself if you're not really
7:46
considering that you need whatever you're selling.
7:49
So any product that's in the market, for me,
7:54
it's go time on your sales and marketing side,
7:58
because they're signaling that they're interested.
8:01
I had a sales--
8:05
I had a sales one time when I was sitting in one
8:07
of their meetings saying, time kills deals.
8:09
And it's true.
8:10
You need that momentum.
8:11
You need to go.
8:12
And chances are also that your competitor is doing intent
8:16
data at ABM right now because it is the buzziest thing.
8:19
So you've got to beat them to it.
8:21
You've got to really get aggressive
8:23
and start hitting them with the content
8:25
and really keeping that momentum going
8:27
because they are looking.
8:28
So what's better than getting all this information popping up
8:32
when you're signaling that you're interested?
8:35
It's the same thing for me.
8:36
On the B2C side, when I'm an Instagram
8:38
and I click a really cool skincare company,
8:41
and next thing you know, I'm getting all these really cool
8:44
creams and anti-aging properties that are showing up.
8:48
And guess what?
8:49
I did click buy because I was looking for it anyways.
8:53
So I think if you remember your personal buying experience
8:57
and how that relates to tech sales and tech ABM,
9:02
it's the same thing.
9:03
Build that momentum, get ready, and signaling means,
9:06
I'm interested.
9:08
I am laughing, Ari.
9:09
We are the same person because I am a marketers dream
9:12
in B2C because I've spent way too much money on skincare
9:14
that I did not mean, but I've given them
9:16
intent signals that I am interested in.
9:18
They spend the money to make sure that I buy.
9:21
So that was a perfect analogy.
9:23
Yeah, exactly.
9:24
It's a good one.
9:25
It just does.
9:25
And I mean, one time I foot her.
9:28
Next thing I know, I bought a film roller for my foot
9:30
because they saw and I was like, you're right.
9:32
My foot hurts right now.
9:34
I'm just better than we do what we need.
9:35
So thinking about data when you're talking about ABM strategies,
9:41
if you're a marketer or salesperson listening to this
9:44
and you're either running ABM or you're
9:46
thinking about running ABM and you are like, how do I measure this?
9:49
What's the data that you think you absolutely
9:51
need to be measuring?
9:52
And what do you think is data that you can kind of like,
9:54
it's a nice to have or it's fun, but you don't absolutely
9:56
have to have it?
9:58
It's interesting.
9:58
So I think one thing that people really
10:02
need to pump the brakes on is measuring the deal cycle
10:05
right now in the links because chances are ABM
10:08
means that you're going after the bigger accounts.
10:11
We're calling them whales.
10:12
That means like they're the big ones that you want.
10:15
They are going to take a while.
10:16
There are multiple people on the account
10:19
that you're going to be reaching out to and getting that buy in.
10:22
So one data point that I would like for people to just put on ice
10:26
right now is how long the deal cycle is taking.
10:30
Chances are the point of success within true whale hunting
10:35
will take a lot longer than what you're used to.
10:37
So that's one data point.
10:39
I want people to just put a pin, be patient,
10:43
try not to really set like, oh, wow, it's
10:45
like really changing our deal measurement
10:48
and like the timeline from sales rep opening all the way
10:52
to close one, close the last.
10:54
So that's one thing.
10:56
Another really interesting data point that is like complete
11:00
accounts, that really matters right now.
11:03
What we talked about, getting the right data into the accounts,
11:08
the accounts are complete.
11:09
Chances are the success of your ABM strategies
11:12
aren't going to be working.
11:15
And then obviously like marketing qualified accounts
11:18
versus sales qualified accounts are we aligned,
11:20
having that alignment, that's going
11:22
to be really crucial to you because we can't have the signals
11:26
and speaking to all of like speaking to the BDRs,
11:29
having them build up momentum, start sending everything out,
11:32
having these playbooks, if the sales team doesn't
11:35
agree that this is a qualified account.
11:36
So having that marketing sales aligned men is really important.
11:40
On the flush stuff, stop looking at email metrics.
11:44
Who cares?
11:45
I've never understood that.
11:46
Oh, are emails being opened?
11:48
Are they not?
11:48
This is so personalized.
11:49
Like you, you're not going to spray and pray.
11:52
This is like two one specific person.
11:54
Get rid of email metrics.
11:55
Doesn't matter here.
11:56
It's not general marketing.
11:58
This isn't an event either.
11:59
Like it's not like we're signing up people
12:01
to join an event.
12:02
That email metrics for me just don't really make sense.
12:05
Yeah.
12:07
That is super helpful.
12:08
I am curious, going back to the intent data a little bit,
12:12
do you have any plays or things that you recommend for teams
12:14
that have intent data and how they can get that in the hands
12:17
of their BDR teams in a way that makes their outbiting
12:19
experiences?
12:20
Did you kind of talk about that one-to-one experience?
12:22
So if they're using intent data, how can they
12:24
leverage that better to make sure those emails are more
12:28
personalized and just a better ABM experience?
12:32
Exactly.
12:33
I think enablement on BDRs could be one of the more important
12:37
aspects that a lot of teams forget.
12:40
They're not just general sales automation.
12:42
They are the first human touch from getting these signals,
12:47
getting marketing teams ready to start sending their marketing
12:51
emails, working on that retargeting.
12:53
But then also, like, BDRs are first.
12:55
That's the human contact.
12:57
So first off, give them playbooks.
13:00
Get them to know their data.
13:01
Get them to know where to access it.
13:04
And also give them recommendations
13:07
on who they should contact first.
13:08
They shouldn't be contacting a bunch of different people
13:11
at once, doing that spray and pride methodology.
13:14
But they should say, OK, if you're contacting,
13:17
the demand gen versus the CFO, they need to receive this
13:22
content.
13:23
Remember, talk about those pain points to that fit the job
13:27
level and the right job first.
13:29
So I think having playbooks for BDRs to understand what is
13:35
relevant for certain buyers really makes sense.
13:38
And then you can put that in a nice cadence and automation.
13:42
So the BDRs are feeling supported and enabled.
13:46
And they're really understanding when
13:48
to contact someone versus one feature of a platform
13:51
and one case study versus one to contact another buyer
13:55
versus the complete different use case and case study
13:59
and how that resonates with that buyer as well.
14:02
Totally.
14:02
I know from our end of qualifying,
14:04
we had to share a point of, like, there's
14:08
different content for different buyers
14:09
and giving them playbooks.
14:10
And we created a matrix that was, like,
14:12
OK, based on these particular levels and titles.
14:16
And it was just a giant matrix.
14:17
Like, here's their pain points.
14:19
Here's what their day to day looks like.
14:20
Here's some case studies.
14:22
Here's things you need to be thinking about.
14:23
So our BDRs could always go back and reference that matrix.
14:26
So I love having, like, playbooks or matrices,
14:28
something that helps those BDRs understand more beyond just,
14:32
like, oh, we sell to sales and marketing.
14:34
It's like, yeah, within sales and marketing,
14:35
there's a lot of nuance and variation.
14:37
Like, a marketing ops person cares very differently
14:39
about something than someone in demand gen
14:42
or product marketing.
14:42
So I could not agree more.
14:45
I've seen how much it can help to get those, like, playbooks
14:47
or matrices to your BDRs.
14:49
Yeah, and it's really interesting.
14:51
Sometimes people just look at a BDR just to send emails
14:54
and get meanings.
14:55
But there's so much more important to that.
14:57
If you leverage them, they can be that single touch that really
15:02
gets someone to jump on the phone versus a competitor's BDR.
15:07
That's just shooting stuff off.
15:08
That doesn't really resonate.
15:10
The more enabled a BDR is, the more successful everyone will be.
15:14
So really get them to buy it, teach them, give them content.
15:17
Don't just let them flounder.
15:19
There's so much more potential with the BDR
15:22
than a lot of companies use them for.
15:24
Absolutely.
15:26
OK, I'm going to shift gears a little bit because it is 2024.
15:29
And can you do any recording without using the word AI?
15:32
And I think the answer to that is no.
15:35
So, Ari, with your experience, where are you starting to see
15:40
AI pop up in ABM platforms?
15:41
Like, do ABM platforms have AI?
15:43
And if so, how is it being utilized within those platforms?
15:48
Woo, OK.
15:50
Within ABM platforms.
15:52
So I think it's really important to the chat bots.
15:55
That really matters, understanding
15:58
that you can better route in visitor to the right content
16:02
on the site.
16:03
So once again, what makes sense for someone in demand,
16:09
Jen, versus what makes sense for the sales manager,
16:12
although a lot of these platforms are full revenue
16:15
operations and they service both, understanding who's there,
16:19
who's visiting, can route them better to the right features,
16:23
the right things that they need to be seeing,
16:26
get that visibility.
16:27
So I think AI is really important there.
16:29
I also think it's really important to build that content
16:32
and website personalization.
16:34
Having that better user experience,
16:36
you do have the power right now to do that.
16:38
So using AI there, you end the chat bots.
16:41
I think it's a really perfect mix
16:43
to change that user experience.
16:45
So it's really tailored and catered to that.
16:48
Absolutely.
16:49
I know from our standpoint, I get to--
16:51
I'm really lucky.
16:52
We have a show called Go to Market AI
16:53
where I've gotten demos of a lot of AI products, which
16:56
is really fun.
16:57
And particularly with ABM platforms,
16:59
the thing I've found the most interesting is a lot of them
17:02
have had AI in their platform for a really long time.
17:04
And we just didn't know it because it's still chat GPT.
17:06
It just wasn't as top of mind for everyone,
17:09
but the predictive AI of telling you which accounts
17:11
are in market and ingesting all those intense signals
17:13
and being able to say, based on all of this data that we're
17:17
seeing, these are the accounts that we think
17:18
are going to be most likely to convert.
17:20
I feel like that's something that ABM platforms have
17:22
had AI for a very long time.
17:24
And it's just kind of in commonplace,
17:26
and we're so used to it now that we just
17:28
don't even really think of it as an AI feature.
17:30
But it is something that does have a predictive AI backbone
17:33
that we're seeing.
17:34
So now, if you are a marketer or a salesperson
17:40
and you were looking at any sort of platforms
17:42
and now that AI has come to be such a big thing,
17:46
how do you recommend people evaluate ABM tools?
17:48
Do you think they need to think about AI
17:50
as much when they're evaluating these ABM tools?
17:52
Or do you think it's just like a nice to have,
17:53
like what's your take on platform evaluation in this age of AI?
17:58
OK, there's a few things.
18:00
Well, first off, privacy.
18:04
Where does all of it live?
18:06
In terms of AI, I think that really matters.
18:09
Is it being open sourced?
18:11
I mean, I think that when you are evaluating this type of unique,
18:15
intricate type work, are we being respectful of privacy?
18:22
And are we being respectful of GDPR?
18:25
So I think that's one thing is truly understanding privacy.
18:28
And how is AI leveraging all the data?
18:35
Another thing, too, is the AI tool,
18:40
how is it learning your business?
18:41
Is it working?
18:42
Is it not working?
18:45
Could you be getting-- I remember they just
18:47
launched Google AI for when you search something.
18:51
And then I don't know if you saw all the news,
18:53
but all their searches, all their information,
18:55
when you were searching, something was wrong.
18:57
So it's like, how quickly is AI learning your business?
19:01
Does that really make sense right now?
19:03
Is it the right use for your company?
19:08
And then the second thing is, when you're doing all of this,
19:11
AI does need an orchestrator.
19:13
So make a plan before you buy.
19:16
AI is not set and forget.
19:18
So you really do need to have someone that has eyes on it,
19:21
that is operating AI, that they're really spending their time
19:26
training AI and making sure it's doing the right stuff
19:29
for your business.
19:31
And now that's kind of embedded on your site,
19:35
it does still need that operator,
19:37
or else things can run them up, and it doesn't actually give you
19:40
the ROI that you were hoping for.
19:42
Absolutely.
19:43
Now, the last thing about AI I want to chat about
19:45
is I think we've seen a lot of prevalence of what
19:48
generative AI, obviously, content.
19:50
That's such an easy use case for generative AI
19:52
is helping write content, both for sales and marketing.
19:56
So with the prevalence of AI generated content,
19:59
do you have any recommendations for people managing
20:02
a BDR team or an SDR team, and how they can still stand out
20:05
from a messaging perspective, particularly
20:07
because ABM is so targeted in this world where generating,
20:12
using generative AI to write emails,
20:13
is just so commonplace?
20:15
You know, this is a really, really good question
20:18
that I actually had a conversation with my co-founder
20:21
and my growth assistant about right before he joined was,
20:26
AI, although it can generate content,
20:28
it can't tell stories.
20:29
It's not there yet, that those stories are human and personal.
20:33
So I just, sometimes it doesn't resonate so much.
20:37
I think AI is really good at getting facts
20:40
and giving you really good grammar and good takes,
20:44
and maybe removing some of the fluff from your content
20:48
to make it more straightforward.
20:50
But it can't tell a story.
20:52
And another way I noticed it, although it's not marketing
20:56
content or sales content, but when I read applications
21:02
and I'm reading cover letters.
21:04
And they're, and I'm like, did you write this on chat GPT?
21:06
'Cause it really isn't that, like, it's not heartwarming.
21:10
And I don't see their experience in it.
21:12
They just plugged it, hey, write a cover letter
21:16
based on a resume.
21:17
But it's like, where is that human aspect?
21:20
I wanna read about your story.
21:21
I wanna know more about you before I hire you.
21:24
And I think, in a sense, AI doesn't have that nice human touch
21:30
that we're all still really craving.
21:32
Although we're in the age of AI,
21:34
we still need to communicate as humans and be humans.
21:37
And I think, like, not losing that touch is really important.
21:41
And then also the companies that keep that touch
21:44
versus the others, I think they will stand out
21:46
because reading emails, reading content,
21:50
now we have, because so much now is there,
21:53
because of AI, since it's really removed that timeframe
21:57
of how long it takes to turn around content,
22:00
so we're probably going to get flooded
22:01
with more content than we ever had before.
22:04
The ones that really do, like, having that AI orchestrator
22:07
and really embedding those storytelling aspects,
22:11
they're gonna stand out the most.
22:13
- I love that answer because, to your point,
22:16
AI's so good at ingesting massive amounts of data
22:19
and then being able to regurgitate that.
22:21
So when you ask questions about something
22:22
and you talked about, like, learning someone's business,
22:25
you can train AI on your unique business,
22:27
you can feed it your content,
22:29
and it will be able to ingest that
22:30
and then respond to questions really, really well,
22:33
but it doesn't have a personality necessary.
22:36
Like, it's not injecting that, like, storytelling,
22:38
so I do love the concept of, like, yeah,
22:42
we've heard a lot of using generative AI
22:43
to help you start, like, a first strap,
22:45
but you, as, like, the human need to be able to, like,
22:47
tell that narrative, tell that story
22:49
and sort of give it that personality
22:51
that you talked about cover letters,
22:52
you're probably not seeing in cover letters,
22:54
they're probably doing pretty, you're like,
22:56
"Hey, these all are starting to sound the exact same."
22:59
And there's a reason why for that.
23:00
- Yeah, I think it's so funny.
23:04
The amount of cover letters that I read
23:07
that kept calling Nomad using cutting-edge technology,
23:11
I was like, "Okay, all right, like, come on,
23:14
"it's not that cutting-edge, we're not like,
23:15
"cheering tancer with, like, robotics,
23:18
"like, we're, you know, marketing automation,
23:21
"platform, like, consultants, how cutting-edge is that?"
23:25
Like, I'm all for it, obviously, this is our industry
23:28
and we're talking about ABM and AI, but, like, damn,
23:31
cutting-edge is a really, really intense
23:33
and I was getting a lot of that in cover letters.
23:36
- That is, to me, I love that because it's such a, yes,
23:39
that is one of those, like, keyword giveaways where you're like,
23:42
"Shut GBT wrote this," or, like, "Generd if AI wrote this,
23:44
"because I know I also like a lot of things into, like,
23:46
"a chat GBT or, like, a generative AI content creator,"
23:50
and cutting-edge does seem to be, like,
23:52
a preferred terminology for it.
23:54
- Yeah, I know, it's like, is that really why
23:57
you want to join Nomad?
23:59
'Cause we're, like, adminning cutting-edge technology.
24:02
It's like, I don't know, I think there'd be, like,
24:03
way cooler places to join, like, I don't know, NASA or something.
24:07
(laughing)
24:08
- Yeah, from a comparison standpoint, like,
24:10
NASA is really unfair with cutting-edge.
24:12
(laughing)
24:14
- Okay, last question for you.
24:16
If we take AI out of the factor here,
24:19
like, obviously, it's here to say, we know that,
24:21
but what are some other trends that you're predicting
24:23
we're gonna see in the latter half of 2024,
24:26
really 2025, as it pertains to ABM?
24:29
- Good one.
24:31
So, I think, with all of the movement,
24:37
in vendor consolidation, ABM will only increase
24:41
because you will have to increase your buying groups, right?
24:44
Like, if, like, a really good one
24:48
that, like, a vendor consolidation would be, you know,
24:52
qualified.
24:54
You keep coming up with the new ways
24:58
to build your sales automation, right?
25:00
From what went to meeting scheduling,
25:02
then went to chatbots, then went to, you know,
25:06
bigger plays for everybody.
25:08
It wasn't just now, for the sales team,
25:11
it's also for the marketing team,
25:13
which means you have increased your buying group.
25:16
You're not just going after head of sales,
25:19
you're also going after CMOs.
25:21
That vendor consolidation will only increase
25:24
how many contacts you need in your account-based marketing.
25:28
So, I think that's gonna be really important
25:29
that we're gonna be seeing for companies across the board.
25:33
Another thing is deal velocity.
25:37
Right now, where a lot of people are going,
25:40
how can ABM increase our deal velocity?
25:44
Because right now, like, we talk about you need to be patient,
25:47
the deal cycle will be longer,
25:49
but is there anything that we can push through
25:52
to make it just a little bit faster?
25:53
I think part of, so it is that catch 22,
25:56
a full, very patient with ABM.
25:58
Once again, we're still very new,
26:00
we're still scratching the surface.
26:02
People are finally getting it right.
26:04
But will that then increase the deal velocity?
26:08
Like, when can will ABM be able to,
26:12
maybe it's the time between interested to open,
26:16
like, opportunity open?
26:18
That could help increase the deal velocity
26:20
versus opportunity open to close one close loss.
26:25
So, I think the deal velocity, if anything,
26:27
will be on before they open that opportunity,
26:31
like, how much time is it gonna take
26:33
to get that team to become an opportunity
26:37
within your organization,
26:39
you can really start getting them in front of sales
26:41
and working them.
26:42
Right now, I think that's where the deal velocity
26:44
is going to live versus on the other end,
26:48
because I do think, as we talked about earlier,
26:51
these are the whales that you're looking for,
26:53
chances are it's going to take a while,
26:55
you're gonna have a lot of buy-in from multiple groups,
26:58
so then that side will be longer as we expected,
27:03
it won't always be that instant success,
27:05
the way SaaS companies do experience with smaller accounts.
27:10
So, but, you know, maybe in 2025,
27:13
they're gonna try to come up with tactics,
27:15
really to use AI to trigger more content
27:18
that gets to all the buyers
27:19
and can really push those deals along.
27:22
Yeah, the vendor consolidation is so interesting,
27:24
because going all the way back to the beginning
27:26
of this conversation, when you talked about,
27:28
before launching anything ABM,
27:30
you have to have your content ready,
27:31
you've gotta have, like, your buyers,
27:33
you've gotta have your content,
27:34
is as products begin to expand,
27:36
and I'm sure if you're listening to this,
27:37
your team is probably no different,
27:39
your product is probably expanding into new areas,
27:41
which at your point opens up new buyer groups
27:43
that didn't exist before,
27:45
as there's a lot of legwork that goes into figuring out,
27:47
like, who's your new buying committee,
27:49
and who do you need to get into your CRM,
27:51
and creating a lot of content
27:52
based on where they're at in their buyers journey.
27:55
So, I really like that you made that point,
27:57
because I think for anyone that's listening to this,
27:59
if that feels like your product,
28:01
you should probably be working with your marketing team now
28:03
to be writing all that new content,
28:04
all these new buyer groups that are gonna go open up
28:07
and the enablement with your sales team
28:09
as that new buying committee starts to open up
28:12
as your product expands,
28:13
and there's a lot of this tech consolidation,
28:15
so that is a fantastic point.
28:17
- Yes, exactly.
28:21
Don't just expand your offerings
28:23
without understanding that you need to expand
28:26
who your buyer is as well.
28:27
- Absolutely.
28:28
Well, Eric, thank you so much for joining us
28:30
on Highplane Summit Summer Care.
28:32
It was so great to have you here to chat about ABM.
28:35
- Yes, thank you so much for having me.
28:38
(upbeat music)
28:40
(upbeat music)