ABM Program Launch Checklist: 90-Day Onboarding from Strategy to Execution

Jimit Mehta · May 1, 2026

ABM Program Launch Checklist: 90-Day Onboarding from Strategy to Execution

Launching an account-based marketing program is not a flip-of-a-switch move. It requires strategy alignment, technology setup, team training, and careful pilot execution. This checklist walks through a realistic 90-day onboarding timeline that takes an organization from "We want to do ABM" to "We have a repeatable ABM program running."

Phase 1: Foundation (Weeks 1-2)

Week 1: Strategic alignment and team kickoff

  • [ ] Define ABM goals: Does your organization want ABM for new logo acquisition, expansion into existing accounts, or both? Document the goal. Example: "Reduce sales cycle from 6 months to 4 months for mid-market accounts."

  • [ ] Get executive sponsorship: Secure commitment from VP of Sales and VP of Marketing (or CEO if smaller company). This isn't a footnote in a larger marketing initiative; it's a strategic shift.

  • [ ] Form steering committee: Assemble 6-8 people: VP Sales, VP Marketing, Sales Director, Marketing Director, Sales Ops, Marketing Ops, and one or two AEs and SDRs. This committee meets biweekly throughout the 90 days.

  • [ ] Clarify success metrics: What does winning look like? Options: average deal size increases, sales cycle shortens, win rate improves, AE quota attainment rises. Pick 2-3 metrics you'll track. (This is separate from operational metrics like "accounts engaged," though those matter too.)

  • [ ] Define roles: Who owns ABM strategy, execution, operations, and reporting? Designate a Program Manager (even if part-time) to orchestrate.

  • [ ] Schedule biweekly syncs: Block calendar for the committee to meet every other week through month 4.

Week 2: ICP refinement and target account list (TAL) creation

  • [ ] Audit ideal customer profile: Pull your 10-20 best customers. What do they have in common? (Industry, size, use case, geography, budget.)

  • [ ] Define ICP attributes: Create a document specifying must-haves (e.g., "mid-market SaaS, Series B+, $10M+ ARR, US-based") vs. nice-to-haves ("raised Series C in last 18 months").

  • [ ] Build target account list: Identify 200-500 companies that match your ICP. Use data from LinkedIn Sales Navigator, Apollo, Hunter, or ZoomInfo. Prioritize by intent signals if available.

  • [ ] Create account tiers: Segment TAL into 3 tiers: Tier 1 (strategic, pre-assign to AEs), Tier 2 (core, SDR focus), Tier 3 (nurture).

  • [ ] Validate TAL with sales: Show AEs the list. "Do we already know anyone at these companies? Are these companies we actually want?" Adjust based on feedback.

  • [ ] Load TAL into CRM: Upload the 200-500 account records into Salesforce or HubSpot as "ABM Prospects."

Phase 2: Technical Setup (Weeks 3-5)

Week 3: CRM configuration

  • [ ] Define custom fields: Create ABM-specific fields: Account Tier, ICP Fit Score, Intent Level, Buying Stage, Account Team, Last Intent Signal Date.

  • [ ] Set up record types (Salesforce): Create an Account record type "ABM Target" so you can report separately on ABM accounts vs. other prospects.

  • [ ] Enable field history tracking: Turn on field history for custom fields so you can audit changes later.

  • [ ] Create views and lists: Build Salesforce/HubSpot views for "Tier 1 Accounts," "Tier 2 - SDR Assigned," "Hot Intent in Last 7 Days."

  • [ ] Set up security: Define sharing rules so SDRs see their assigned accounts but not others' private accounts.

Week 4: Integration setup

  • [ ] Connect intent platform (if used): Link your intent data source (6sense, Demandbase, etc.) to your CRM via API or Zapier. Verify daily sync of intent scores.

  • [ ] Connect marketing automation: Link your email platform (HubSpot, Marketo, Pardot) to CRM so contacts and engagement data sync.

  • [ ] Connect sales engagement tool (if used): Link Outreach, SalesLoft, or similar to CRM so sales activities log automatically.

  • [ ] Set up analytics tracking: Install UTM parameter tracking on website and confirm form submissions sync to CRM.

  • [ ] Test end-to-end: Send a test email to a colleague from your email platform, confirm it logs to CRM. Create a test form submission, confirm it creates a Contact record.

Week 5: Reporting and dashboards

  • [ ] Build account dashboard: Create a dashboard in Salesforce/HubSpot showing: Accounts by Tier, Accounts by Buying Stage, Account Score distribution, Intent Signal trends.

  • [ ] Build pipeline dashboard: Show pipeline by account (sum of open opportunities by account), pipeline by account tier, average deal size by tier.

  • [ ] Identify baseline metrics: Before campaigns launch, capture the baseline: How many Tier 1/2 accounts currently have open opportunities? What's the average deal size today?

Phase 3: Go-to-Market Readiness (Weeks 6-8)

Week 6: Messaging and positioning

  • [ ] Define buyer personas: For your TAL, document the typical buyer personas: CMO, VP Marketing, VP Sales, VP Ops, etc. What does each persona care about?

  • [ ] Create messaging by persona: For each persona, write a 2-3 sentence positioning statement. Example (CMO): "Most CMOs struggle to demonstrate pipeline contribution. ABM helps you prove marketing impact on revenue."

  • [ ] Develop value props by vertical (if applicable): If you sell to multiple verticals (SaaS, healthcare, finance), tailor value prop for each. Different industries, different pain points.

  • [ ] Create 1-pager for sales team: One-page summary of ABM strategy, targets, messaging, and what sales should do differently.

Week 7: Campaign planning

  • [ ] Map customer journey: Sketch the buying journey from "awareness of problem" to "vendor selection" to "negotiation" to "close." This tells you what messaging is needed at each stage.

  • [ ] Define campaign 1 content: Plan the first campaign (e.g., "Top 50 Tier 2 accounts, email + LinkedIn + paid social outreach"). What content do you need? (Educational emails, comparison guide, webinar, case study?)

  • [ ] Build email sequences: Create 3-email outreach sequences by persona. Draft subject lines, bodies, and CTAs.

  • [ ] Design landing pages: Create 2-3 simple landing pages for campaign 1 (demo request, guide download, webinar signup).

  • [ ] Plan paid social (optional): If running LinkedIn ads, create 2-3 ad variations by persona. Set budget (suggest starting with 2-5K/month).

Week 8: Sales enablement

  • [ ] Create playbook: Document the ABM process for sales: Which accounts should SDRs work? How does SDR handoff to AE work? What's the call plan?

  • [ ] Train sales team: Conduct a 1-hour training covering ABM strategy, messaging, tools (CRM views, playbooks), and their role.

  • [ ] Assign accounts: Distribute Tier 1 accounts to AEs, Tier 2 accounts to SDRs. Document assignments in CRM.

  • [ ] Set expectations: Be clear with AEs: "You're not responsible for closing every Tier 1 account today. You're responsible for initiating conversations and moving accounts forward."

  • [ ] Create one-pager for AEs: Simple reference guide with prospect research framework, call openers, and common objections by persona.

Phase 4: Pilot Execution (Weeks 9-12)

Week 9: Campaign kickoff

  • [ ] Launch campaign 1: Send first email to Tier 2 SDR accounts. Tier 1 AEs initiate their own outreach. Paid social ads go live (if applicable).

  • [ ] Daily monitoring: Check email open rates, click rates, form submissions daily. Are they in line with expectations? (Healthy email open rates are typically 20-40% for ABM.)

  • [ ] Coordinate multi-channel: If running email + LinkedIn + ads, verify all channels are synced. Account should see coordinated messaging.

  • [ ] Log all activity: Ensure all outreach (calls, emails, ads) is logged in CRM so you have a complete account timeline.

Weeks 10-11: Early feedback and iteration

  • [ ] SDR performance: Review SDR progress weekly. How many accounts have they initiated contact with? Reply rate? Qualification rate?

  • [ ] Email performance: Segment performance by persona, subject line, and time-of-send. Which email templates are highest-performing? Iterate.

  • [ ] AE progress: Sync with AEs on Tier 1 accounts. Any conversations scheduled? Any early objections?

  • [ ] Pause and regroup: If a channel (email or ads) is underperforming, diagnose why. Is it the audience? The messaging? The timing?

  • [ ] Adjust if needed: If Tier 1 AE outreach is stalled, SDR can support by researching accounts and identifying first conversation opportunities.

Week 12: Month 1 retrospective

  • [ ] Review dashboard: Pull data from your reporting dashboard. How many Tier 1/2 accounts engaged? Conversion rate to meeting request?

  • [ ] Compare to baseline: Did opportunity count increase? Did account-to-opportunity conversion improve?

  • [ ] Collect feedback: Ask sales and marketing: What's working? What's not? What do you need?

  • [ ] Celebrate wins: Highlight early wins to the organization. "Account X moved from cold to qualified in 3 weeks" or "Average deal size increased from X to Y."

  • [ ] Plan campaign 2: Based on learnings, design the next campaign (might be second email sequence to same accounts, or expansion to more accounts).

Phase 5: Steady State (Months 4+)

  • [ ] Monthly reviews: At the start of each month, review: Accounts moved to opportunity, deals closed, revenue influenced by ABM accounts.

  • [ ] Quarterly business reviews: Present to executive team: ABM pipeline, conversion metrics, revenue impact, and next quarter's plan.

  • [ ] Continuous optimization: A/B test email templates, landing pages, and ad creative. Adjust email cadence based on reply rates.

  • [ ] Expand TAL: If program is working, expand from 200-500 accounts to 500-1,000, or add new segments (e.g., expansion ABM alongside new logo ABM).

  • [ ] Add new channels: Once core playbook is stable (email, LinkedIn, sales outreach), add paid social, webinars, events, or customer storytelling.

  • [ ] Align with customer success: For accounts that become customers, hand off to CS team with context so onboarding and expansion are smooth.

Skip the manual work

Abmatic AI runs targets, sequences, ads, meetings, and attribution autonomously. One platform replaces 9 tools.

See the demo →

Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Unclear goals: "We want to do ABM" without defining what success means. Define metrics before you start.

  • Misaligned teams: Sales doesn't agree on target accounts, or marketing and sales have different definitions of "qualified." Alignment meetings are critical.

  • Insufficient data: Your CRM is dirty (duplicates, bad data), or you don't have firmographic or intent data. Data cleanup (even partial) is worth the investment.

  • Too many accounts: Trying to run ABM on 2,000 accounts. Start with 200-500 and do it well; then expand.

  • Wrong metrics: Measuring email opens instead of pipeline progression. Measure what matters: accounts moving to opportunity, deals closing.

  • Impatience: Expecting results in 30 days. ABM is a 90+ day motion. Give it time.

Tech Stack Recommendations (Optional)

If building from scratch, consider:

  • CRM: Salesforce or HubSpot (both support ABM)
  • Marketing automation: HubSpot, Marketo, or Pardot (email sequencing, forms, landing pages)
  • Sales engagement: Outreach or SalesLoft (call logging, email sequences, team collaboration)
  • Intent platform: 6sense, Demandbase, or native Salesforce/HubSpot scoring (ABM account prioritization)
  • Account orchestration (optional): Abmatic AI (coordinates email, LinkedIn, ads, and calls at account level)

Start simple. Most teams launch with CRM + marketing automation. Add intent data and sales engagement as you scale.

Success Criteria at 90 Days

By end of Week 12, you should have:

  • [ ] Strategy documented and aligned with sales + marketing
  • [ ] 200-500 target accounts in CRM and segmented by tier
  • [ ] First campaign launched (email + LinkedIn + optionally paid social)
  • [ ] Baseline metrics captured (open rate, reply rate, meeting rate, pipeline influence)
  • [ ] Sales and marketing collaborating on shared account lists
  • [ ] Early learnings from campaign 1 informing campaign 2

You won't have perfect data or massive revenue attribution yet. But you'll have a repeatable process and early proof of concept.

Execution Checklist

Print this section and check off as you go:

Foundation - [ ] Goals defined and documented - [ ] Executive sponsor secured - [ ] Steering committee formed - [ ] Roles assigned - [ ] ICP and TAL built

Tech - [ ] Custom fields in CRM - [ ] Intent platform integrated - [ ] Marketing automation integrated - [ ] Dashboards built - [ ] Tracking implemented

GTM - [ ] Personas and messaging defined - [ ] Email sequences written - [ ] Landing pages built - [ ] Sales playbook created - [ ] Sales trained

Execution - [ ] Campaign 1 launched - [ ] Daily monitoring in place - [ ] Weekly SDR/AE check-ins - [ ] Month 1 retrospective completed

Conclusion

A 90-day ABM onboarding is realistic if you move sequentially: strategy first, tech second, then execution. Start with a small TAL (200-500 accounts), get early wins, then expand. Align your teams relentlessly; misalignment is the #1 reason ABM programs stall. And focus on pipeline progression, not vanity metrics. Done right, ABM becomes a repeatable engine for predictable growth.

Run ABM end-to-end on one platform.

Targets, sequences, ads, meeting routing, attribution. Abmatic AI runs all of it under one login. Skip the 9-tool stack.

Book a 30-min demo →

Related posts