Email: me@tatjanavehovec.me
Linkedin: linkedin.com/in/tatjanavehovec
Case Study · GTM Strategy · Hardware · B2B
A 1:1 ABM strategy built entirely from a cold start, inside an industry where legacy systems are not just technical infrastructure but organisational identity. No prior contact. No existing relationship. A C-suite that had no recognised need for what was being offered, until a direct competitor moved first and suddenly they did. Fourteen months from zero to a 3M contract. Investment followed within six months of close.
3M
Value of the first contract. Closed after 14 months of structured 1:1 ABM engagement from a cold start.
14
Months from zero prior contact to signed partnership. Every month was a deliberate build, not a waiting game.
Existing relationships inside the account at the start. No warm introduction. No internal advocate. No thread to pull on.
6 m
Months after contract close before investment followed. The account did not just generate revenue. It repositioned the company in the market.
Industry
Industrial IoT · Edge Computing · Embedded Systems
account type
Large Enterprise · High institutional conservatism
ABM model
1:1 · Single high-value account · Full strategic focus
Scope
C-suite Engagement · Stakeholder Strategy · Pre-Sales · Technical Communications
outcome
3M first contract · Investment round within 6 months
The situation
A one-to-one ABM strategy is not (only) a more expensive version of enterprise sales outreach. It is a fundamentally different operating model, one that treats a single account not as a target to be converted but as a market to be understood, entered, and won through the systematic construction of trust, relevance, and commercial conditions that did not previously exist.
That distinction matters most in sectors like industrial IoT and edge computing, where the accounts worth winning are precisely the ones most resistant to being won through conventional means. They are large, technically sophisticated, deeply embedded in their own infrastructure decisions, and institutionally conservative in ways that make standard B2B engagement models fail on first contact.
This account had no recognised need for what was being offered. They were not in the market. They were not evaluating alternatives. They were not dissatisfied with their current embedded systems setup in any way they would have articulated if asked. The one to one ABM strategy did not begin with a product conversation. It began with the question that every single-account engagement has to answer before anything else: what has to be true inside this organisation before a commercial conversation is even worth having?
That question, taken seriously, changes the entire architecture of the engagement.
The question was never whether this account could be won. The question was whether we could engineer the conditions for a commercial conversation inside an organisation that had no reason to have one yet. That is a different problem than sales. It requires a different architecture entirely.
The challenge
Understanding why a 1:1 ABM strategy is necessary is straightforward. Understanding why it is difficult in practice requires being specific about what resistance actually looks like inside a large industrial IoT enterprise, because it is never one thing.
Here it was three compounding factors, each of which would have been sufficient on its own to defeat a conventional sales approach. Together they defined an engagement that required a purpose-built strategic architecture rather than an adapted version of a standard ABM playbook.
The first was legacy system attachment. In embedded systems and edge computing environments, the technology stack is not a tool the organisation uses. It is a system the organisation is built around. Engineers have professional identity tied to its architecture. Procurement has multi-year contracts structured around its vendor relationships. Leadership has staked strategic roadmap decisions on its continued evolution. Any communication that framed the existing infrastructure as a problem to be solved would have triggered institutional defensiveness before the conversation had started.
The second was stakeholder complexity without a natural entry point. Commercial authority sat with the C-suite. Contractual authority sat with procurement. Technical veto power sat with engineering. Each level operated with a different risk tolerance, a different decision timeline, and a different set of requirements that needed to be satisfied before they would move. A conversation that resolved one level’s concerns could easily destabilise another if the narrative across levels was not precisely consistent.
The third was the absence of recognised need. This is the hardest resistance factor in any one-to-one ABM strategy because it cannot be addressed directly. You cannot present a solution to a problem the account does not believe it has. The recognised need had to be created before any commercial motion was possible. And it had to be created without the engagement ever appearing to manufacture urgency, because institutional buyers at this level can identify that manoeuvre immediately and it destroys credibility on contact.
Inside the engagement
Inside the account
The approach
The foundational decision in this 1:1 ABM strategy was one that most organisations struggle to make and almost none sustain: the first phase would contain no commercial content whatsoever.
The first phase was entirely focused on establishing credibility at the executive level. Through insight. Through demonstrated understanding of the account’s actual strategic context. Through communication that brought genuine value to conversations the executive was already having internally, with no commercial agenda attached to any of it.
That is a harder discipline than it sounds. The instinct in any enterprise engagement is to introduce the product early, to plant the seed, to at least signal what the conversation is eventually building toward. Resisting that instinct for the first six months of a 14-month engagement requires a level of strategic patience that most organisations do not have the architecture to sustain.
In industrial IoT, C-suite credibility is not built through capability decks and case studies from adjacent verticals. It is built through the quality of the questions you ask and the relevance of the thinking you bring to conversations the executive is already having internally. That requires account intelligence work at a depth most organisations do not reach, and it requires the discipline to suppress commercial intent for longer than feels rational.
That discipline was not just a tactic, but in this case the entire strategic architecture.
01
Account Intelligence Before Any Outreach
Before a single contact was made, a comprehensive account intelligence framework was built covering organisational structure, budget cycle timing, visible strategic priorities from public reporting and industry presence, technology stack signals, key personnel movements, and the competitive dynamics specific to their segment of the industrial IoT market. The outreach that followed was not generic. Every communication was calibrated to something specific and verifiable about their actual situation. This is what separates 1:1 ABM strategy from personalised marketing. The intelligence is not decoration. It is the foundation every subsequent decision is built on. Without it, personalisation is performance. With it, it is relevance.
02
C-suite Entry, Executed With Precision
03
Insight-Led Relationship Architecture
04
Parallel Technical Credibility Building
05
Recognising and Leveraging the Competitive Signal
06
Commercial Narrative Construction for Procurement
In a 1:1 ABM strategy, the close is almost never the result of the final conversation. It is the result of every conversation that came before it being precisely right. By the time a competitor moved and urgency entered the account, the decision was already substantially made. Because we were already there, and we were already trusted. The 14 months were not a long sales cycle. They were the construction of an outcome.
– Tatjana Vehovec
The results
The contract closed at month fourteen. Not as a trial engagement or a phased pilot with exit options, but as a full strategic partnership at 3M. The account that had no recognised need for the solution at the start of the engagement became its most significant commercial relationship.
Within six months of close, investment followed.
3M
Value of the first contract. Closed from a cold start through 14 months of structured 1:1 ABM strategy. No warm introduction. No prior relationship. No existing commercial thread to pull on.
Time between contract close and investment round. The account did not just generate revenue. Its name, its scale, and its sector credibility repositioned the company in the eyes of investors evaluating market traction in industrial IoT.
0→closed
The full arc of the 1:1 ABM engagement. From zero organisational contact to a signed enterprise partnership at a scale that redefined the company’s commercial trajectory and validated every conversation that followed.
The investment outcome is where most people focus because the number is large and the timeline from contract to close is fast. But the investment was not a consequence of contract value alone. It was a consequence of what that specific account represented inside the industrial IoT and edge computing market.
Investors evaluating a company in embedded systems are not just looking at revenue. They are looking for evidence that the product can win inside large, technically sophisticated, institutionally conservative enterprises. That category of account defines market leadership in this sector. A 3M contract with an account of that profile is not just a revenue line on a pitch deck. It is proof of market penetration that changes the entire investment narrative from “promising technology” to “validated commercial traction at enterprise scale.”
That is what a properly constructed 1:1 ABM strategy produces beyond the immediate contract. Not just the deal. The repositioning that the deal enables. Every commercial conversation that followed closed faster because the credibility proof point existed. Every investor conversation started from a different baseline because the market signal was unambiguous.
The transferable principle for any organisation considering a 1:1 ABM investment at this level is the same one that governed every decision in this engagement: the question is not whether you can afford the time. It is whether you can afford the alternative, which is approaching accounts like this without the architecture, being deflected at the first interaction, and spending the same 14 months without a result, a proof point, or a repositioned market narrative to show for it.
The 14 months did not just close one account. They changed the conditions for every account and every investor conversation that came after.
For more on how ABM strategy works across different account tiers and engagement models, and where 1:1 fits inside a broader account-based marketing framework, there is more in my Thinking section.
1:1 ABM strategy, C-suite engagement architecture, industrial or technical B2B, long-cycle enterprise partnerships. Let’s talk directly.