> ## Documentation Index
> Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.linkinlist.com/llms.txt
> Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

# Account-Based Outreach for High-Value Target Accounts

> Run coordinated, role-specific outreach campaigns across LinkedIn, Email, WhatsApp, and Meta Ads to land enterprise deals and strategic partnerships.

Account-based marketing (ABM) outreach flips the standard lead-by-lead approach on its head. Instead of reaching out to individuals and hoping to find the right person, you map the entire buying committee at a target account, enroll each stakeholder in a role-specific campaign, and coordinate your timing — across LinkedIn, Email, WhatsApp, and Meta Ads — so every decision-maker and influencer hears from you through the most effective channel, all in the same week. This guide shows you how to build and run ABM campaigns in LinkInList for enterprise deals, strategic partnerships, and any opportunity where a single champion isn't enough.

## What ABM outreach is — and when to use it

In ABM outreach, the account is the unit of focus, not the individual lead. You identify a set of high-value target companies, map the relevant stakeholders inside each one, and run coordinated multi-channel campaigns designed to build consensus across the buying group.

<CardGroup cols={2}>
  <Card title="Use ABM when..." icon="check">
    * Deal size is large enough to justify personalized effort per account
    * Sales cycles are long and involve multiple decision-makers
    * You're pursuing strategic partnerships or enterprise contracts
    * You have a named account list from your sales team
  </Card>

  <Card title="Skip ABM when..." icon="xmark">
    * You're targeting SMBs where one person makes the call
    * Deal size doesn't justify multi-contact coordination
    * You don't have enough company-specific information to personalize per role
  </Card>
</CardGroup>

## Step 1: Map the account

Before you send a single message, build a stakeholder map for each target account. Every buying committee has three types of contacts — and each one needs a completely different message delivered on the right channel.

| Role               | Who they are                                                                   | What they care about                                    |
| ------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | ------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Champion**       | The person who will use your product day-to-day and advocate for it internally | Ease of use, saves time, makes their team look good     |
| **Influencer**     | Technical or functional evaluator who assesses fit                             | Integrations, security, compliance, implementation lift |
| **Decision-Maker** | Budget owner who signs off on the purchase                                     | ROI, risk reduction, payback period, vendor credibility |

For each target account, identify at least one person in each role. Use LinkedIn to find them — search the company, filter by relevant job titles, and note their name and role type before you import.

## Step 2: Build your lead list

<Steps>
  ### Search for all relevant contacts at the target company

  In Sales Navigator, use the **Account** filter to scope your search to the target company. Then filter by the job titles or seniority levels that correspond to Champion, Influencer, and Decision-Maker roles for your product.

  ### Export and tag by role

  Export the contacts as a CSV. Before importing into LinkInList, add a `Role` column with values `Champion`, `Influencer`, or `Decision-Maker` for each contact. This column will become a tag in LinkInList.

  ### Import into LinkInList

  Go to **Leads → Import → CSV Upload**. Map the `Role` column to the **Tag** field during import. Once imported, each contact carries their role tag, making it easy to segment them into the right campaigns.
</Steps>

## Step 3: Create role-specific campaigns

Create three separate campaigns — one per role type. Name them clearly:

* `[Account Name] — Champions`
* `[Account Name] — Influencers`
* `[Account Name] — Decision-Makers`

This keeps reporting clean and lets you tailor both the sequence structure and the primary channel per role. Champions respond well to a longer LinkedIn nurture; Decision-Makers are best reached with a direct Email or WhatsApp approach early in the sequence.

## Step 4: Choose channels per role

Assigning the right channel to each role is as important as the message itself. Use this as your starting framework:

| Role               | Primary channel | Secondary channel         | Rationale                                                                          |
| ------------------ | --------------- | ------------------------- | ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| **Champion**       | LinkedIn        | WhatsApp (warm follow-up) | Champions are active on LinkedIn; WhatsApp works well once they've engaged         |
| **Influencer**     | LinkedIn        | Email                     | Influencers often prefer asynchronous, detailed communication                      |
| **Decision-Maker** | Email           | WhatsApp                  | Decision-Makers check email over LinkedIn; WhatsApp signals urgency and stands out |

<Note>
  These are starting points — adjust based on what you know about the account.
  If a Decision-Maker is highly active on LinkedIn, lead with LinkedIn first.
</Note>

## Step 5: Tailor messaging per role and channel

The same product pitch sent to all three roles will underperform with all three. Each role evaluates your product through a different lens — meet them there on the right channel.

### Champion messaging (LinkedIn — first touch)

Champions are your internal advocates. They care about making their own work easier and making their team look good. Lead with the day-to-day experience.

```text theme={null}
Hey {{first_name}},

I noticed your team at {{company}} is focused on [relevant function].
We work with [similar role] at companies like [reference customers]
to [specific daily workflow improvement] — most say they get [X hours]
back per week.

Curious whether that kind of efficiency is something you're actively
looking for, or not a priority right now?

[Your name]
```

**WhatsApp warm follow-up for Champions** (after a positive LinkedIn reply):

```text theme={null}
Hey {{first_name}}, [Your name] here from LinkedIn. Great to connect!
Just wanted to follow up here in case it's easier. Happy to send over
a quick overview or jump on a 15-minute call — whatever works best.
```

### Influencer messaging (LinkedIn — first touch)

Influencers evaluate technical and functional fit. They want to know it will work with what they already have, and that it won't create new problems.

```text theme={null}
Hey {{first_name}},

Reaching out because {{company}} came up as a potential fit for
[product] — specifically for the [relevant team/function].

We integrate natively with [their likely tech stack tools], and
our security setup is [relevant credential — SOC 2, GDPR, etc.].
I can share our technical documentation or set up a quick call
with our solutions team if that's useful.

[Your name]
```

### Decision-Maker messaging (Email — first touch)

Decision-Makers are evaluating risk and return. They're not interested in features — they want to know what it costs, what it delivers, and what happens if it doesn't work. Email gives them space to review at their own pace.

```text theme={null}
Subject: [X]-minute ROI breakdown for {{company}}, {{first_name}}

Hi {{first_name}},

I'll keep this brief — I know your time is valuable. We work
with [title peers] at [comparable companies] to [core business
outcome]. Average payback period is [X months], and most customers
see [result] within [timeframe].

I'd like to show you a 10-minute ROI breakdown specific to
{{company}}'s situation. Would that be worth 15 minutes of
your time this week?

[Your name]
```

**WhatsApp follow-up for Decision-Makers** (if no email reply after 3–4 days):

```text theme={null}
Hi {{first_name}}, [Your name] here — sent you an email earlier this
week about [topic]. Didn't want it to get lost. Would a 10-minute call
work? Happy to fit around your schedule.
```

<Tip>
  Send Decision-Makers a personalized AI voice note via WhatsApp as their
  second touch instead of a text message. Decision-Makers receive fewer
  direct messages than individual contributors, so a voice note stands out
  significantly — and the personal tone signals that this isn't automated
  mass outreach. LinkInList generates a 30-second voice note using your AI
  voice clone, personalized with the lead's name and company.
</Tip>

## Step 6: Use Meta Ads to keep your brand visible

While your outreach sequences run, activate a **Meta Ads retargeting campaign** to keep the target account's team seeing your brand across Facebook and Instagram. This reinforces your messages passively — when a Decision-Maker receives your email and then sees your ad in their feed that same day, your brand feels larger and more credible.

To set this up:

1. Export your ABM contact list (including personal and work emails) from LinkInList via **Leads → Export**.
2. Upload the list as a **Custom Audience** in Meta Ads Manager.
3. Run a simple awareness campaign — a short video, a customer testimonial, or a concise value-proposition ad targeted to that audience.
4. Keep the ad budget modest: this is brand reinforcement, not a conversion campaign. Even a small daily spend creates meaningful touchpoints for a focused account list.

<Info>
  Meta Ads retargeting works best for ABM accounts where you have at least
  5–10 contacts, since Meta requires a minimum audience size to serve ads
  reliably. For very small target lists, combine multiple accounts into a
  single audience.
</Info>

## Step 7: Coordinate your timing

Timing coordination is what separates ABM from regular multi-contact outreach. If your Champion gets a LinkedIn message in week one, your Decision-Maker gets an email in week four, and your Influencer never hears from you at all, there's no internal momentum.

Launch all three role campaigns for a given account within the **same week**, and activate your Meta Ads audience at the same time. This creates simultaneous awareness across the buying group and in their social feeds — when your Champion mentions your name in a meeting, the Decision-Maker already recognises your brand.

<Note>
  You don't need to send all three contacts on the same day. Launching
  within the same 5-day window is enough to create overlap. Use
  LinkInList's campaign scheduling to stagger by 1–2 days if you prefer
  a phased approach.
</Note>

## Step 8: Leverage internal champions

Once a Champion replies positively — even just expressing interest — you have an internal ally. Use that momentum immediately.

After their positive reply surfaces in your Unified Inbox, respond with a reply that confirms value and gently asks for an introduction:

```text theme={null}
Glad it resonates, {{first_name}}! One question — is there anyone
else on your team who'd benefit from seeing this? Even a quick intro
to [Decision-Maker title] would help me make sure I'm showing the
right people the right things.
```

A warm internal referral from your Champion will get a response from a Decision-Maker in hours. Cold outreach from you alone may take weeks.

## Tracking ABM progress in LinkInList

Use the **Tags** system to track each contact's role and account status in one place.

<Steps>
  ### Apply account and role tags on import

  When you import your ABM contacts, assign two tags per lead: their **account name** (e.g., `Acme Corp`) and their **role** (e.g., `Decision-Maker`). This lets you filter your entire lead list by account at any time.

  ### Use the Leads tab to monitor account coverage

  Filter **Leads → Tags → \[Account Name]** to see all contacts at a given account in one view — their campaign status, reply status, and intent score side by side.

  ### Track progression with custom status tags

  As contacts move through the buying process, add progression tags: `ABM-Replied`, `ABM-Meeting Booked`, `ABM-Closed`. This gives your sales team a clear pipeline view per account without needing a separate CRM view.
</Steps>

<CardGroup cols={2}>
  <Card title="Champions" icon="users">
    Track reply status and use their engagement to time your Decision-Maker outreach. A Champion who replies is your signal to escalate — follow up via WhatsApp to keep momentum going.
  </Card>

  <Card title="Decision-Makers" icon="signature">
    Monitor intent score closely. When a DM's score crosses into Hot, prioritize a manual, highly personalized reach-out the same day — by Email or WhatsApp for maximum impact.
  </Card>
</CardGroup>

<Warning>
  Avoid enrolling the same contact in both a standard campaign and an ABM
  campaign simultaneously. If a Decision-Maker is already in a generic
  outreach sequence, remove them before enrolling them in your ABM campaign
  — mixed messaging at the same account will undermine both efforts.
</Warning>
