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How Do You Measure Physical ABM?

How Do You Measure Physical ABM?

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How Do You Measure Physical ABM?
4:54

A few weeks ago, I wrote about why physical ABM works so well in recruitment.

If you missed that piece, you can read it here.

The feedback we had afterwards was interesting.

Most people didn’t challenge the idea. They’ve experienced it themselves. Something physical cuts through in a way digital often doesn’t.

The real question people asked was: “How do you measure whether it’s working?”

Fair question.

Because ABM isn’t like traditional marketing. You’re not sending 10,000 emails and counting clicks. You’re targeting 20, 50 or maybe 100 specific accounts - which means the metrics need to change.

Here are the ones that actually matter.


1. Target Account Reach

Start with the basics.

Did your campaign actually reach the people you wanted to reach?

In ABM, success isn’t about volume. It’s about coverage of the right accounts. If you identified 50 target companies for a physical campaign, you should be able to answer questions like:

  • How many received the pack?
  • How many decision-makers did we reach?
  • Which accounts did we successfully land in?

Even simple CRM tracking helps here. If your recruiters know which accounts received which campaign, they can reference it in outreach.

“Did you receive the guide we sent over last week?” - That’s already a better starting point than a cold call.


2. Account Engagement

The next question is: Did those accounts actually engage?

Engagement might look like:

  • A reply to the follow-up email
  • A LinkedIn connection request
  • A comment on a post referencing the report
  • A conversation started at an event
  • A meeting booked

ABM engagement is often multi-touch. Someone might receive a printed guide, then visit your website, then comment on LinkedIn, then agree to a meeting. It’s rarely one interaction. But if engagement is rising across your target accounts, you know the campaign is landing.


3. Conversations With the Right Companies

This is where recruitment businesses should focus. Forget vanity metrics!

The real question is: Are we having more conversations with the companies we actually want to work with?

Good ABM campaigns create natural reasons to talk to clients. For example:

“Did you see the market report we sent you?”

“We’re running a roundtable based on that research.”

“We’ve just released the next part of the survey.”

These aren’t sales messages.

They’re conversation starters. If your recruiters suddenly have 10 meaningful conversations with target accounts, that’s a win.


4. Pipeline Influence

This is where things start to get commercial. Which opportunities were influenced by the campaign? Did a company that received your printed report:

  • Book a meeting?
  • Ask about market insight?
  • Request candidate profiles?
  • Open a role?

Modern CRM systems make this easier to track than people think. If accounts that received your ABM campaign start appearing in your pipeline, you can attribute influence. Marketing helped open the door. Sales helped close it. That’s exactly how it should work.


5. Deal Size and Sales Cycle

One of the hidden benefits of ABM is that it often improves deal quality. Why?

Because you’re focusing on bigger, better-fit companies. Two things tend to happen:

  • Deals get larger
  • Sales cycles get shorter

Why do they get shorter? Because when recruiters reach out, the client already knows who they are. They’ve seen the report. They’ve read the insights. They recognise the brand and so that familiarity speeds everything up.


6. Relationship Depth

This is the part most dashboards miss. ABM isn’t just about the pipeline. It’s also about relationships inside target accounts.

Are you connecting with:

  • Hiring managers
  • HR leaders
  • Department heads
  • Senior decision makers

If your campaign gets shared internally inside a company, that’s a huge signal. One guide sent to one person can suddenly reach five stakeholders. And that’s exactly how recruitment deals often happen.


The Metric That Matters Most

At Marmalade we track a lot of things. Engagement. Pipeline. Content downloads. Meetings booked.

But if you simplify it down, ABM success usually comes back to one question: Are we creating more meaningful touchpoints with the right companies?

Because recruitment isn’t a volume game. It’s a relationship game. Physical ABM works because it creates those moments. Something lands on a desk. Someone reads it. Someone remembers your name. And when the hiring need appears, your business is already in the conversation.


If you’re thinking about running a physical ABM campaign, printed reports, market insights, or desk-drop guides, start with the question above. How will we measure the conversations it creates? Because in recruitment, that’s where the real ROI sits.

Get in touch with us today to talk more about your ABM strategy.

 

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