Account-based marketing isn’t just about running campaigns—it’s about proving they work. The best ABM professionals master both the art of storytelling and the science of measurement. Get this balance right, and you’ll transform how your organisation views marketing’s contribution to growth.
Why both sides matter
Think of ABM reporting as a coin with two equally valuable sides. The art involves knowing what to say, to whom, and when—essentially, the communication and storytelling that brings data to life. The science means surfacing the right evidence through metrics that track genuine progress towards business outcomes.
Here’s the crucial bit: ABM reporting isn’t about counting activities. It’s about demonstrating the movement and progression of accounts. Nobody cares if you sent 50 emails this week—they care whether those emails are moving the needle.
Six steps to master ABM reporting
- Own your narrative
Never leave your data open to interpretation. If you don’t tell people what your numbers mean, they’ll make up their own story—and it probably won’t be the one you want. Shape the narrative for your entire ABM programme, your region, and individual accounts. Take time to explain what you want stakeholders to understand, rather than dumping screenshots and hoping for the best.
- Get crystal clear on outcomes
Define what you’re trying to achieve and how you’ll measure it. Then remind stakeholders regularly. For example: “We’ve agreed to start new conversations with buyers in procurement to help cross-sell our solutions.” When everyone’s aligned on the outcome, your reporting becomes meaningful rather than just noise.
- Report on collaborative progress
Once you’ve deployed your tactics, focus conversations on progress towards those agreed outcomes. Start by sharing marketing’s contribution: “In the first four weeks, we’ve seen a 10% uplift in interactions with this buying group.” This earns you the right to ask each account team member about their progress in return. It’s a brilliant way to keep everyone focused on the same goal.
- Balance leading and lagging indicators
Understand that relationships and reputation (leading indicators) fuel revenue (lagging indicator). If people don’t know who you are or don’t trust you, they won’t buy from you. Get the leading indicators right first—the revenue will follow. Remember, most sales teams need 3x pipeline to hit their numbers, so work backwards from that target.
- Less is more with activities
Yes, sometimes you need to discuss specific tactics, but resist the urge to drone on about every campaign detail. Account teams switch off when marketers get lost in the weeds of individual activities. Share what matters, not everything.
- Practise your weaker side
Love diving into spreadsheets but struggle with presentations? Practise your elevator pitch. More comfortable with storytelling but intimidated by data? Spend time understanding the numbers. Both skills are essential.
The bottom line
At its core, ABM reporting is about demonstrating progress towards outcomes, not just counting tasks. Master this, and you’ll find yourself having very different conversations with accounts teams and business leaders.
Picture this scenario: you bump into your sales director in the lift. Instead of just saying hello, you’re ready with: “Brilliant timing—I’ve just reviewed our ABM data. We’ve got 4x pipeline across all ABM accounts, so we’re pivoting our approach towards deal acceleration activities.”
That 30-second exchange communicates that you’ve over-delivered (3x pipeline is typical), understand the business context, and that you’re proactively adjusting your strategy. It’s the perfect blend of art and science—and exactly the kind of conversation that elevates marketing’s strategic role in the organisation.
When you nail both sides of the ABM reporting coin, you transform from someone who sends emails to someone who drives revenue. That’s when the magic happens.