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ABM that works in 2026: a tight playbook for Series B SaaS teams

February 21, 2026 | 8 min read

Reyansh (Lead, B2B Growth)

Reyansh (Lead, B2B Growth)

Content Writer at Dcrayons

ABM that works in 2026: a tight playbook for Series B SaaS teams

Account-based marketing for Series B SaaS teams in 2026 looks nothing like the 2022 playbook. AI-cleared signals replace gut-feel target lists, sales + marketing work off a single account score, and the budget allocation is decided by predicted pipeline. not industry vertical. Here is the tight playbook Dcrayons runs for Series B SaaS clients with 30 to 80 named accounts in scope.

The 2026 ABM thesis

ABM works when three things are true:

  • Average contract value (ACV) is high enough to justify per-account spend (typically Rs 8 lakhs ACV minimum, or USD 12,000).
  • The buying committee has 4 plus stakeholders.
  • The sales cycle is 60 plus days.

If any of the three fails, ABM is the wrong motion. Pivot to PLG + content.

Step 1: the account selection model

Old ABM started with a sales-supplied list. New ABM starts with a predictive model trained on your closed-won deals:

  • Inputs: firmographics (size, geography, vertical), technographics (current stack), intent signals (G2 page visits, Bombora-style topic surge, your own website behaviour).
  • Output: a 0-100 score per account in your TAM.
  • Cut: the top 30 to 80 accounts become Tier 1. The next 200 to 400 become Tier 2. The rest stay in inbound.

Step 2: the buying-committee map

For each Tier 1 account, map the buying committee:

  • Decision maker (usually the budget owner. VP, C-suite).
  • Economic buyer (often Finance or COO).
  • Champion (the manager who will defend the deal internally).
  • End users (3 to 8 individual contributors).
  • Blockers (Procurement, Legal, IT Security).

Each role gets different content + outreach.

Step 3: the play library

Each Tier 1 account runs through a 60-day play sequence. The plays:

  1. Day 1 to 7: Programmatic display on the buying committee (LinkedIn matched audiences + targeted display). Goal: ad recall +12 to +18 points.
  2. Day 8 to 14: Personalised content delivery. one industry-specific report + one customer story from a comparable account.
  3. Day 15 to 30: Sales engagement. 6 to 9 touches per stakeholder (LinkedIn, email, optional phone).
  4. Day 31 to 45: Executive briefing offer (free 30-min session with your CTO/CRO on the prospect's specific use case).
  5. Day 46 to 60: Closed-loop measurement. meetings booked, opportunity created, conversion to pipeline.

Step 4: the content matrix

You need a content matrix sized for the committee:

  • One pillar piece per vertical (the "state of X in 2026" report).
  • One ROI calculator (tied to your pricing + their TAM math).
  • 3 to 5 customer stories per vertical, matched to ACV tier.
  • One executive-grade landing page per Tier 1 account (yes, per account. generated from a template + 4 to 6 dynamic fields).

Step 5: the measurement architecture

ABM dies without measurement. The CFO-readable metrics:

  • Account engagement score (movement from baseline, by stakeholder).
  • Meetings booked per account.
  • Pipeline created per account (qualified opportunity).
  • Closed-won per cohort (the 30/80/etc cohort over 6 months).
  • Pipeline velocity (days from first touch to closed-won).

If your CRM and marketing automation cannot stitch these by account, fix that first. it gates everything else.

The economics that have to work

Typical Series B SaaS ABM economics:

  • Per-account program cost: Rs 35,000 to Rs 80,000 over 60 days (display + content + sales engagement).
  • Target meeting conversion: 18 to 28 percent of Tier 1 accounts book a meeting in 60 days.
  • Target pipeline conversion: 35 to 50 percent of meetings turn into qualified pipeline.
  • Target close rate: 18 to 25 percent of pipeline closes in 6 to 9 months.

Doing the math: 60 Tier-1 accounts at 22 percent meeting-conversion + 42 percent pipeline-conversion + 22 percent close-rate at Rs 18 lakhs ACV = Rs 1.10 crore in revenue from Rs 36 lakhs of program spend. Payback inside 12 months.

Step 6: the sales + marketing operating cadence

ABM without sales alignment is just expensive marketing. The cadence that works:

  • Weekly Tier-1 account review (sales + marketing together, 30 min).
  • Monthly pipeline + meetings readout.
  • Quarterly cohort + program ROI review (with the CRO and CMO).

The 3 most common Series B ABM failures

  1. Account list is too long. Series B teams often try 200 plus Tier-1 accounts. nothing gets personalisation. 30 to 80 is the right scope.
  2. Content matrix incomplete. Teams ship 2 pieces and expect 10-touch ABM to work. Build the matrix in week 1.
  3. Sales not aligned on the play sequence. Marketing runs days 1 to 14; sales takes day 15. If sales does not touch on day 15 the program collapses.

How Dcrayons stands up the program

Typical Dcrayons Series B ABM engagement: 12 weeks to first measurable pipeline, Rs 9 to 15 lakhs per month, mutual kill-switch at day-90. Account selection + buying-committee map + play library + measurement architecture all ship in the first 30 days.

Tagsabmb2b-saasdemand-generationsales-marketing-alignment
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