We’re showing you exactly how packaging companies we’re working with are using account-based marketing (ABM) to increase market share, shorten sales cycles, and win more strategic accounts. Consider this a packaging professional’s blueprint for target account success.
Account-based marketing is a strategic approach that focuses marketing and sales resources on specific high-value accounts rather than broad market segments. This means targeting key accounts with personalized campaigns that address their unique packaging challenges, sustainability goals, and innovation needs.
Here’s an example of what that could look like for a packaging marketer:
If consumers in Brazil begin demanding smaller milk carton sizes to reduce food waste, packaging companies might use traditional marketing to broadly promote “flexible filling solutions” to all dairy manufacturers. Instead, an aseptic packaging provider could use account-based marketing to stand out and create a highly targeted campaign for Nestlé. This campaign could specifically address Nestlé’s need to fill multiple carton sizes (500ml, 750ml, and 1000ml) for their Molico and Ninho UHT milk brands on a single production line.
Unlike traditional marketing, ABM delivers:
Success in ABM starts with identifying the perfect packaging customer. Here are some ways you can start to categorize their characteristics:
Industry Focus:
Operational Characteristics:
Business Indicators:
Develop a tiered approach to account selection:
Tier 1: Strategic Accounts
Tier 2: Growth Accounts
Tier 3: Scale Accounts
Here’s where you’ll determine who you’ll be targeting. Identify and engage with those key stakeholders. They could be part of any of the following functions:
Technical Team
Commercial Team
Executive Level
Develop materials that showcase your packaging expertise:
Create content that drives packaging business decisions:
Invest in the right technology stack:
Coordinate your outreach across channels:
Track these critical metrics:
Measure your ABM investment returns:
Example solutions:
Example solutions:
Example solutions:
A: While traditional marketing might broadly promote your shrink sleeve capabilities to all beverage companies, ABM would create a targeted campaign specifically for Coca-Cola’s Southeast Asia expansion, addressing their specific need, sustainability, and localization requirements. This focused approach delivers personalized engagement at every level of their decision-making process.
A: The most successful ABM programs are funded at about 15-25% of the total marketing budget. For example, a flexible packaging manufacturer might allocate $200,000 annually to target 10 key CPG accounts, with roughly $20,000 per account for technical content development, prototype creation, and specialized testing programs.
A: You’ll start to see the needle move within 3-6 months. For example, you might notice increased participation in packaging innovation workshops or material qualification trials. Significant revenue impact typically occurs within 9-12 months, as seen in new packaging format adoptions or multi-year supply agreements.
A: Focus on account engagement scores, technical qualification rates, sales cycle duration, and contract values.
A: Start with a focused program targeting 3-5 key accounts and leverage digital automation tools for efficiency and AI tools to scale.
Want to change how your packaging company targets high-value prospects and land major accounts? We’re happy to help you get started. Get in touch.
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