I've been running a lean ABM experiment for eight weeks with a two-person marketing team. The combined tool spend: $269 per month. What surprised me wasn't the results — it was discovering how much of the enterprise ABM playbook you can replicate with general-purpose AI tools that were designed for entirely different jobs.
Every guide I found on AI tools for account-based marketing assumed a marketing operations team, a six-figure annual software budget, and a dedicated ABM manager. That's not wrong — enterprise platforms are genuinely powerful. But it left a real gap: what does a small B2B team actually do when they can't spend $3,000 a month on software?
That's what this article is about. Not the platinum ABM stack. The one that fits inside $300 a month — and why limiting yourself to that budget might actually produce better habits than the enterprise version.
What Is ABM in 2026?
Account-based marketing (ABM) is a B2B strategy that targets specific high-value companies rather than broad audiences, aligning marketing and sales effort on a defined account list.
Instead of casting a wide net and hoping the right companies find you, ABM works in reverse: decide which companies you want as customers, research them deeply, and build personalized outreach around their specific situation. The conversion rates are higher because the effort is concentrated. The sales cycles are shorter because marketing and sales are working the same list.
The friction has always been cost. Traditional ABM required intent data subscriptions, website personalization platforms, and usually a dedicated SDR team. AI tools don't eliminate that need at scale — but they compress the research and personalization layers enough to make ABM viable for teams of two or three.
For a broader view of how AI is reshaping B2B marketing, the complete guide to AI for marketing covers the full picture.
The $300 ABM Stack at a Glance
Before getting into how each tool works, here's what the full stack looks like:
| Tool | Primary ABM Use | Free Tier? | Paid From | Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clay | Account enrichment & list building | Yes (100 credits) | $149/mo | No native CRM sync on Starter plan |
| LinkedIn Sales Navigator | Account intelligence + buying signals | No (30-day trial) | $79.99/mo | No free tier; AI features are shallow |
| HubSpot Starter | Email sequences + contact tracking | Yes (limited) | $20/mo | No conditional sequence branching |
| ChatGPT Plus / Claude Pro | Research + personalized copy drafts | Yes (limited) | $20/mo | No account memory across sessions |
| Mutiny | Website personalization | No | ~$1,500/mo | Budget-prohibitive for most teams |
Total for the core four: $268.99/month. Mutiny is included for context — it's the next tier when you're ready to personalize your website for specific visiting accounts. For most teams reading this, it's not in the budget yet, and that's fine.
The Four-Tool ABM Stack: How Each Piece Works
Clay — Account Enrichment ($149/month)
Clay is where list-building happens. You start with a set of companies — a CSV from your CRM, a LinkedIn search, a list of companies that attended an industry event — and Clay enriches each one automatically: contact data, company size, recent funding rounds, LinkedIn posts from decision-makers, job openings that signal strategic priorities, and more.
What makes Clay different from a simple data tool is that it can run AI workflows across your entire list. You can write a Clay formula that pulls a company's recent LinkedIn posts and asks Claude or GPT-4 to summarize their current strategic priorities in one sentence. That summary becomes the personalization hook for your outreach.
For an ABM list of 15 accounts, you'll spend roughly 150–200 Clay credits per week. The $149/month Starter plan (3,000 monthly credits) covers this comfortably. The free tier's 100 credits is enough to test the enrichment workflow on 8–10 accounts before you commit.
The non-obvious thing I learned after a few weeks: Clay's most useful feature isn't any individual data source. It's waterfall enrichment — Clay tries multiple data providers in sequence until it finds a result. For niche B2B markets where Clearbit has no data, Clay often still pulls something from another source. That reliability matters more than the headline feature list.
LinkedIn Sales Navigator — Buying Signals ($79.99/month)
Sales Navigator gives you account-level intelligence that free LinkedIn doesn't: who recently joined a target company, who got promoted, which accounts have posted content that signals an active evaluation, and alerts when a decision-maker changes jobs or posts about a relevant topic.
For ABM specifically, the Account Hub is where most of the value lives. You save your 15 target accounts and get a live feed of activity: new VP-level hires, leadership posts about strategic initiatives, company updates that might signal a technology review. This is the signal layer — the raw material you hand to Claude for interpretation.
One honest limitation: Sales Navigator's AI features are still relatively shallow. The "relationship explorer" and "smart links" work, but they're not transformative. The tool's real value is the data quality and depth of the account feed, not the AI layer on top of it. If your entire account list is under 10 companies, LinkedIn Premium Business ($60/month) might be sufficient. Navigator earns its price when your list grows past 20 accounts and you need saved account feeds running in the background.
HubSpot Starter — Email Sequences ($20/month)
HubSpot Starter handles execution: email sequences, simple landing pages, and contact tracking. At $20/month for Marketing Hub Starter, it's not enterprise marketing automation — but for a lean ABM operation, it covers the essentials.
The specific feature that matters most for ABM is the ability to build manual sequences with timed follow-ups. You're not doing batch-and-blast. You're sending 5–10 highly researched emails per week, tracking opens and replies, and following up based on individual account behavior.
One limitation worth naming clearly: HubSpot Starter doesn't support conditional branching in sequences (that requires Professional, at $800/month). The "if they reply, do X; if they don't, do Y" logic has to be managed manually. For 15 accounts per week, this is entirely manageable. At 50 accounts, it becomes a real bottleneck — and at that point, you're probably due to upgrade.
For more on what AI can do specifically in email marketing, AI email marketing tools covers the options in more depth.
Claude Pro / ChatGPT Plus — Research and Personalized Copy ($20/month)
This is the tool most ABM guides overlook, which is odd because it's arguably the most important one in the lean stack.
The research phase of ABM — reading a company's website, recent press releases, CEO interviews, job postings, and LinkedIn activity to understand their current priorities — used to take 45–60 minutes per account. With Claude or ChatGPT, you can compress it to under 10 minutes.
The workflow is straightforward. Paste your raw research into Claude (recent LinkedIn posts, a paragraph from their jobs page, a news snippet about recent funding) and use a prompt like this:
"Based on these signals, what are the top 2–3 business priorities [Company Name] is likely focused on right now? Then suggest 2 ways that [your product/service] could be relevant to each priority. Keep each response to 2 sentences."
Review the output. Edit aggressively — remove anything generic or speculative. Keep the one insight that feels specific enough to prove you actually did the research. That's your personalization hook.
The reason this works better than most "personalized" cold emails is that Claude is responding to specific context you provided, not filling in a template. The resulting email sounds like it came from someone who spent time understanding the company — because, in a real sense, it did.
This is also where competitive intelligence feeds in naturally. If an account is currently using a competitor's product, Claude can help you frame your differentiation in their specific context. AI competitive analysis tools explains how to structure that research efficiently.
The Lean ABM Sprint: A Day-by-Day Breakdown
The $300 stack is only as useful as the system you build around it. Here's the weekly workflow that emerged from testing — I call it the Lean ABM Sprint.
Monday — Account selection and enrichment (Clay, 45 minutes)
Open your master account list and pick 5 accounts to activate this week. Not 15. Five. Run those five through Clay to refresh their data: recent LinkedIn posts from decision-makers, new hires, funding news, any signals that have changed since you last looked.
The account selection step is where most small teams go wrong. The temptation is to work 40 accounts simultaneously to maximize coverage. What actually happens is shallow, templated outreach on all of them and almost no replies. Five accounts per week, researched deeply and contacted genuinely, consistently outperforms forty accounts worked at the surface level.
Tuesday — Signal review and insight generation (LinkedIn Sales Navigator + Claude, 30 minutes)
Open Sales Navigator's Account Hub for your five target accounts. What changed in the past week? New leadership hire, a VP posting about a strategic initiative, a job posting that reveals a technology gap? Copy the relevant updates into a document.
Paste that document into Claude with a synthesis prompt: "Based on these signals from [Company], what is the most likely business priority they're focused on right now? Suggest 2 ways [your offering] could be relevant to that priority." Keep what's specific and discard what sounds generic.
Wednesday — Outreach drafting (Claude, 45 minutes)
Write one personalized email per account using Tuesday's insight. Use Claude to draft a first version — but rewrite the opening sentence yourself every time. The first sentence of an ABM email is the only one that proves you did the research. That's the sentence a decision-maker uses to decide whether to keep reading. It can't be fully outsourced.
Thursday — Sequence setup and send (HubSpot, 30 minutes)
Create contact records in HubSpot for the primary decision-maker at each account, add them to a simple two-step sequence (initial email, one follow-up in 5 days), and send. Set a reminder to check for replies on Monday.
Friday — Account health review (20 minutes)
Check replies, opens, and follow-up timing across all active accounts. Update account notes. Identify which accounts have shown engagement in the past 3–4 weeks and which have gone completely cold.
This last step is the one most teams skip, and it's critical. Remove accounts that have been unresponsive for 6+ weeks with no signal activity. A live list of 10 actively engaged accounts consistently outperforms a stale list of 50 names you haven't touched in months.
When to Upgrade to a Dedicated ABM Platform
The lean stack has real limits. You'll run into them when:
- Your active account list exceeds 50 companies and the manual coordination breaks down
- You want to personalize your website dynamically — showing different messaging to different accounts when they visit — which requires Mutiny or a similar platform (~$1,500/month)
- You need intent data at scale: knowing which accounts are actively researching your category across third-party sites, not just on LinkedIn
- You have a full-time ABM manager who can actually configure and operate Demandbase or 6sense without it absorbing their entire week
At that point, Demandbase and 6sense are the category leaders. Both are enterprise-priced and designed for teams with dedicated ABM operations experience. The $300 stack is a runway to that investment, not a permanent substitute.
One question that comes up often: how is ABM different from cold outreach? The distinction matters because they require different tools and different expectations. Cold outreach works a large pool of leads who fit a profile, with lightly personalized messages at volume. ABM works a short, specific list with deep research and coordinated follow-up over weeks. The two approaches can complement each other, but they're not interchangeable. For a full breakdown, AI cold outreach tools covers when to use each approach. For measuring the results of your ABM efforts over time, AI marketing analytics tools walks through the right metrics to track.
Start Here: The First Week in Under an Hour
If you've never run ABM before, don't try to set up the full stack on day one. Start with this:
- Create a free Clay account. Pull 10 target companies and run the enrichment to see what data it surfaces.
- For each company, spend 5 minutes on their LinkedIn page — read the CEO's last three posts and the company's "About" section.
- Use the free tier of Claude or ChatGPT to draft one personalized email per company. Give it the specific detail you noticed and ask for a 3-sentence draft that references it.
- Send those 10 emails from your regular inbox this week. No sequences, no CRM. Just send.
You'll spend nothing, develop a feel for the research workflow, and have real reply data before you commit to a monthly software bill. That's the experiment worth running first.
What I found after eight weeks of this: the tools are not the hard part. The discipline of keeping the list short — 10 to 15 accounts, maximum — is the hard part. Every instinct says to add more names. Every week that you hold the line and research fewer accounts more carefully, the results get better.
The $300 stack gives you the infrastructure. The Lean ABM Sprint is the habit. The combination is what actually moves the pipeline.
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Originally published on Superdots.
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