What is a Target Account List? Definition + Examples
A target account list (TAL) is the named set of companies that a B2B revenue team agrees to actively pursue over a defined planning horizon. A TAL names each account with firmographic context, tier (one, two, or three), assigned account executive, and a justification for inclusion. The TAL is the operating spine of every account-based marketing and sales motion, replacing volume-based lead capture with disciplined named-account focus.
How a target account list works
The TAL is built from the ideal customer profile, then ranked by fit, intent, and prior engagement. Tier one is the small pursuit list (often 25 to 100 accounts) that gets one-to-one treatment. Tier two is the mid-priority cohort that gets one-to-few campaigns. Tier three is the broader fit set that gets one-to-many programs. The TAL is reviewed monthly and refreshed quarterly.
Examples of how teams use a TAL
- Marketing scopes paid media, content, and webinar invitations to TAL accounts only.
- Sales runs prospecting cadences against tier-one accounts with custom asset stacks.
- Customer success cross-references the TAL to coordinate executive intros from existing customers.
- Revenue operations reports pipeline coverage on the TAL, not on inbound volume.
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See the demo →Why a target account list matters
Without a TAL, every team optimises for its own funnel and the account is touched inconsistently. With a TAL, every channel and every team aligns to the same named list, which is the precondition for buying-committee orchestration and account-level attribution.
Related terms
For more, see how to build an ICP, account-based marketing, target account list, and buying committee.
FAQ
How big should a target account list be?
Tier one is typically 25 to 100 accounts per account executive, scaled to the team size. Total TAL across all tiers ranges from 200 to 2,000 for a mid-market team and up to 5,000 for a large enterprise team.
How often should the TAL be refreshed?
Review monthly to drop dead accounts and add hot ones. Refresh comprehensively each quarter against the latest ICP and the last 90 days of closed-won and closed-lost data.
Who owns the TAL?
Revenue operations owns the system; marketing and sales co-own the contents. The TAL must be a single record visible to every team, not a private spreadsheet inside one function. See target account list operations live, book a demo.
