How do you build a shared ABM playbook across teams that actually works?
You don’t need another template. You need alignment, clarity, and plays that don’t fall apart the second a lead crosses into someone else’s pipeline column.
This is how you build an ABM playbook that doesn’t just sit in Notion.
Why do most shared ABM playbooks quietly fail?
Because they’re made in silos. Or worse, as a handoff doc. Marketing creates the plan, Sales gets a quick walkthrough, RevOps is pulled in when something breaks… and everyone’s surprised when nothing sticks.
You’ll hear things like:
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- “We’re targeting the same accounts, but our messaging doesn’t match.”
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- “I didn’t even know we were running that campaign.”
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- “They booked a meeting, but it was the wrong person entirely.”
That’s not an ABM problem. That’s a team alignment problem disguised as a process gap.
What goes into an ABM playbook that actually works?
Skip the fluff. Your playbook needs to be tactical, specific, and brutally honest. Here’s what that looks like:
1. Account segmentation criteria
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- Clear tiers (1:1, 1:few, 1:many) with reasons why
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- ICP fit + buying intent + strategic value
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- Ownership: who’s sourcing, who’s validating, who’s approving
2. Roles and responsibilities
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- Marketing: owns awareness and engagement plays
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- Sales: owns conversations and deal movement
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- RevOps: owns data, tools, routing, and reporting
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- Everyone: owns shared accountability to pipeline and revenue
3. Key plays by segment
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- Personalized outreach sequences
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- Targeted content journeys
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- Events, webinars, and deal-stage accelerators
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- Warm handoffs (who says what and when)
4. Tech + data infrastructure
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- How signals get captured and passed
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- What triggers action (e.g., campaign engagement, job change)
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- Where things get tracked and flagged
5. Success metrics
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- Pipeline by segment and channel
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- Engagement by persona and stage
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- Velocity, win rates, and expansion triggers
It’s not just a doc. It’s a live system.
Who actually owns the ABM playbook?
This one’s simple: marketing drives it, but everyone owns it.
Marketing typically creates the first version. But the second it’s locked without Sales and RevOps input, it’s dead in the water. You need:
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- Sales feedback on messaging, channels, and timing
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- RevOps sanity checks on what’s feasible to track or automate
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- Leadership alignment on segment focus and goals
The best versions come from co-creation, not delegation.
How do you keep the ABM playbook relevant as you scale?
Most companies build it once and forget it. Or worse, they let it get so bloated no one reads it. You’ve got to treat it like a product.
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- Set a quarterly review rhythm. Invite Sales, Marketing, and RevOps leads to gut-check what’s still working and what needs to evolve.
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- Add learnings and wins. If a rep cracked into a cold account with a new angle, document it. If a campaign flopped, capture that too. Make it real.
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- Keep it tight. One live document. Clean, skimmable, and accessible. Nobody wants to dig through 30 slides.
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- Reinforce it in onboarding. New reps and marketers should see the playbook not as a nice-to-have, but as the way we do ABM here.
TL;DR
An ABM playbook is useless unless everyone’s using it, shaping it, and owning their part. Build it together, pressure-test it often, and treat it like a live product… not a one-and-done strategy doc.
Need a sanity check on your current ABM playbook or want help building one that actually works across teams?
Book a call with me here