Published on 23rd March 2026
This insights post is a summary of the blog post published by Mahlab. View the full insight at: Precision over volume: Rethinking ABM in a noisy market.
Account-based marketing (ABM) is reasserting its relevance in 2025. It is not because it’s new, but because it offers something increasingly rare in the current fragmented marketing landscape: focus.
While AI and automation have strengthened ABM capabilities, the strategy’s effectiveness depends on combining technology with deep customer understanding and cross-functional alignment.
Rather than spreading effort across broad segments, ABM cuts through noise by concentrating resources on high-value accounts. In a market where an estimated 402.74 million terabytes of data are created daily and customers face templated AI-generated outreach, ABM’s precision targeting can create genuine relevance.
In addition, the approach aligns marketing activity directly to revenue priorities. According to a recent Forbes article, 70% of marketers implementing ABM and 64.1% reporting revenue growth as a result.
AI has accelerated ABM by enabling faster account identification, real-time personalization, and pattern recognition at scale. AI-driven tools surface engagement signals, anticipate intent, and tailor experiences with greater efficiency than manual processes.
IBM recently reported tripling its account identification and doubling top-tier engagement through AI-powered personalization. However, AI strengthens ABM execution but doesn’t replace strategic judgment about which accounts matter and why.
The primary risk is treating data and automation as substitutes for genuine insight. When campaigns rely purely on behavioral signals without understanding customer priorities, pressures, and context, they become highly precise in targeting yet generic in impact.
Intent data can tell you who engaged and what they downloaded, but it won’t reveal what success looks like for stakeholders internally, the political dynamics shaping buying groups, or the commercial pressures behind inquiries.
Deep curiosity means moving beyond surface-level metrics to understand target accounts properly—their strategy, market context, leadership priorities, and pain points. This approach requires investing time to understand the commercial reality accounts are operating in, enabling engagement that addresses issues that actually matter to them rather than simply reaching the right audience. Deep curiosity is what differentiates effective ABM from data-driven targeting without strategic foundation.
To get more insight on how marketing and sales align in ABM programs and what role AI plays in ABM, read the full analysis at Precision over volume: Rethinking ABM in a noisy market.
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