00:00:00 Intro & Welcome

The podcast opens with a warm welcome to Anna Shimes from Infl. The host and Anna exchange greetings and set the stage for a deep dive into her marketing background, ABM experience, and insights on account-based marketing strategies.

00:01:30 Anna’s Background & ABM Start

Anna shares her seven-year marketing journey, beginning in B2C and transitioning to B2B five years ago. She emphasizes her passion for creating engaging, easy-to-consume ads even in B2B contexts. Her ABM journey began immediately upon entering B2B at a startup called Shelf, where she helped build ABM from scratch with a small team focused on enterprise prospects and aggressive growth targets, successfully hitting their Series B goals.

00:04:00 Content Distribution Challenges

Anna explains the frustrations she faced in her prior role, where marketing content had to be distributed via sales, limiting control over delivery and volume. She highlights the problem of wasted content due to restricted channels like limited emails and calls. This challenge motivated her move to Infl, whose person-based advertising platform empowered her to control content distribution directly to decision-makers.

00:06:00 Aligning Marketing & Sales

A critical discussion on the necessity of alignment between marketing, sales, and customer success to ensure ABM success. Anna stresses that all teams must share the same success criteria to avoid siloed measurement (e.g., marketing focusing only on leads, sales on closed deals). She advocates for marketing to bring the right prospects likely to convert and become satisfied customers driving referrals and upsells.

00:09:00 Targeting Right Buyers & Feedback

Anna emphasizes the importance of deeply understanding sales’ needs by asking who they want marketing to target, beyond superficial content requests. She shares how she listens to sales calls and reviews closed-lost opportunities meticulously to refine audience targeting, removing unqualified prospects to avoid wasting sales time and ad budget.

00:12:00 Team Setup & Channel Tests

Anna describes her early-stage startup team setup involving content marketing, digital marketing, design, partnerships, and sales roles. They aligned on enterprise ICPs and leveraged partnerships and webinars during COVID times. She recounts a costly mistake with content syndication that generated many unqualified leads, wasting sales resources and damaging trust between marketing and sales.

00:15:00 Trust Issues & Pipeline Impact

The conversation highlights how inconsistent sales follow-up on marketing’s nurtured accounts can kill pipeline growth. Anna shares a story where marketing invested heavily in nurturing high-intent enterprise accounts, but sales didn’t fully engage, causing lost revenue opportunities. She stresses that marketing must deliver what sales values to build trust and pipeline impact.

00:17:00 Demand Gen vs ABM Focus

Anna explains that demand generation and ABM efforts can coexist but differ in approach. One-to-one ABM programs, though ideal, are often resource-intensive luxuries. Most companies focus on one-to-few campaigns, personalizing outreach at scale using data signals like content engagement and website interactions. She notes one-to-many is typically broader, less personalized demand generation or “spray and pray.”

00:20:00 Account Segmentation & Signals

Anna discusses segmenting ABM accounts based on ICP size, resources, and intent signals such as competitor usage, hiring activity, or prior relationships. She shares examples like re-engaging past champions and closed-lost accounts at opportune times by tracking budget cycles. She stresses the importance of constant data research and clustering to personalize messaging effectively.

00:23:00 CRM & Past Champions

Anna emphasizes the importance of a well-structured CRM to track account roles, champions, and changes over time. She highlights collaboration with customer success to assign account roles and update records regularly. Tools like AudienceScope or external vendors can automate tracking, but strong internal processes are essential to enable targeted ABM campaigns and funnel re-engagement.

00:26:00 Messaging & Intent Data

Anna outlines her approach to messaging: she presents core value propositions broadly and then uses Infl’s platform to monitor prospect engagement levels. Based on content consumption depth—such as report downloads or time spent—she tailors follow-ups, distinguishing between casual interest and high buying intent, optimizing the nurture and outreach cadence.

00:28:30 Startup vs Enterprise Tactics

Anna contrasts selling to startups versus large enterprises. Startups tend to have short sales cycles, with CEOs often as decision-makers, requiring direct and fast engagement. Enterprises have long, complex procurement processes involving many personas and buying committee members, necessitating varied content and longer nurturing timelines. These require completely different ABM programs and expectations.

00:30:00 Prioritizing ABM Programs & Close

Anna advises that prioritization depends on ICP and business goals: if SMBs fit your ICP and offer faster closes, focus there for volume and speed; if your business depends on enterprises, invest in building robust, long-term ABM programs. Both can run simultaneously if resources allow, but strategic focus should align with company objectives. The episode ends with thanks and appreciation for Anna’s practical insights.

Profile Anna Tsymbalist Head of ABM at Influ2 LinkedIn

Anna Tsymbalist is the Head of ABM at Influ2, where she leads precision-driven, contact-level ABM programs for global enterprise accounts. She is widely recognized for scaling data-led ABM motions that helped Influ2 achieve over 120% growth in ABM-influenced revenue. Her work focuses on building measurable, multi-channel programs that tie marketing engagement directly to pipeline impact.

Show Notes-

In this episode, we sat down with Anna Tsymbalist to talk about what ABM actually looks like when you’re trying to drive revenue, not just run campaigns for the sake of activity.

This conversation goes into:
-Why most ABM programs look good in dashboards but don’t move pipeline.
-How to tighten the Sales + Marketing loop (without adding more process).
-Personalization that’s practical, not performative.
-The small things that change deal momentum but rarely get discussed.

Nothing exaggerated. No “10x secrets.”
Just two people who’ve spent enough time in ABM to know what matters and what’s noise.