Email: me@tatjanavehovec.me
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ABM IN PRACTICE · Article 01 of 05 · Level: Foundational
Let’s start with something uncomfortable.
The conversation that determines whether your company makes the shortlist is probably happening right now. In a Teams chat you’re not in. A WhatsApp thread between two CTOs who went to university together. A forwarded email with the subject line “have you seen this?” A private LinkedIn DM that starts with “we’re evaluating vendors, who have you used?”
You are not in that conversation. And no amount of retargeting budget will get you there.
This is dark social. And it is where B2B buying decisions actually begin.
Dark social is not mysterious as it sounds. It is just any sharing that happens in channels you cannot track. Private messages, email forwards, internal Slack or Teams, copied links pasted directly into a browser with no referrer data.
When someone reads your article and sends it to three colleagues with “this is exactly what we’ve been talking about”, that is dark social. When a CTO screenshots your LinkedIn post and drops it into the engineering leadership channel – dark social. When a VP of Marketing forwards your PDF to the CMO before a strategy session – dark social.
Research from Strategic ABM puts it plainly: 80% of shortlists are finalised before a demo request or sales outreach ever happens. The buying window opens and closes in channels your analytics cannot see.
For ABM specifically, this matters enormously. Your target accounts are small, defined, and relationship-driven. The people inside them talk to each other constantly. They ask for recommendations. They share things that made them think differently. If your content is never in those private conversations, you are invisible at the exact moment B2B buying intent is forming, and no campaign spend fixes that.
You cannot buy your way into dark social or automate your way in. You can only earn your way in. By creating something worth sharing.
You cannot buy your way into dark social. You cannot automate your way in.
You can only earn your way in: by creating something worth sharing.
– Tatjana Vehovec
Check out the whole (5 posts) series here:
Before tactics, understand the mechanics of the modern B2B buying process, because it is not the linear funnel anymore.
Research consistently shows that B2B buyers complete 60–80% of their evaluation process before they ever speak to a vendor. They have already formed opinions, shortlisted companies, and eliminated others, all in conversations and content consumption that generated zero trackable signals in your CRM.
The process, more often than not, looks like this:
Your job is not to interrupt step 5, at 5 you’re running late. Your job is to be the content shared at step 3. Right on time.
That requires understanding precisely why content travels, and creating accordingly.
Content enters the B2B buying process through dark social when it does one of three things:
This is the most powerful trigger. A senior buyer reads something, feels genuinely understood, and immediately thinks of two or three colleagues who need to see it. The forward happens before they’ve finished reading.
B2B buyers often know something is wrong long before they know what to call it. Content that names the problem precisely, and frames it in a way that makes the sharer look sharp, travels fast inside professional networks.
Long-form content gets bookmarked and forgotten. A focused one-page PDF, a six-paragraph LinkedIn post, a sharp two-minute voice note, these get forwarded because the sender doesn’t have to explain them. They stand alone. They do the work.
Dark social ABM is a content discipline applied with account intelligence.
– Tatjana Vehovec
Create a single-page PDF that addresses one specific problem your target accounts are dealing with right now.
Don’t talk about your product or your company.
The problem.
Title it something a senior buyer would send to their team: “Why [specific thing] is costing you [specific outcome]” or “The three questions you should be asking before [specific decision].”
Make it visually clean. Make it opinionated. Make it short enough to read in three minutes and dense enough to be worth keeping.
Distribute it on LinkedIn with a direct, non-promotional post. Put it behind a light-touch download form on your website. And here is the key move: send it directly, not as a pitch, but as a resource, to five or six people in your Tier 1 accounts who you already have some relationship with. Tell them you thought of them when you wrote it.
That is not a sales email, but the kind of thing people forward.
LinkedIn is the one dark social channel you can partially seed. A post that generates genuine engagement, comments, shares, and most importantly, saves, is being distributed into private networks you cannot see.
The format that travels furthest in B2B is the counterintuitive take. It’s not old internet classics “here are five tips.” Not your usual product announcement. But something that starts with a specific, provocative observation your target audience will either strongly agree with or strongly disagree with.
Both reactions drive sharing. The person who agrees forwards it as validation. The person who disagrees shares it to argue. Either way, your content is now in a conversation you weren’t in.
Write one post per week. Make it about a real problem in your target industry. Have an actual opinion. Sign it with your name, not your company’s.
Works for: Tier 1 accounts where you already have a first-degree connection
Most senior buyers receive dozens of templated LinkedIn messages every day. They ignore (almost) all of them, because the messages are obviously not written for them specifically.
A max 45-second voice note is different. It sounds like a person, and it sounds like you actually thought about them before sending it.
The mechanics are simple. You need an existing first-degree connection inside a target account, someone you’ve met at an event, engaged with on content, or been introduced to through a mutual contact. You record a short voice message directly in LinkedIn Messenger. Conversational. 30 to 60 seconds maximum.
The content is not a pitch. Make it relatable, as a reaction to something they posted or shared recently, a short observation about something happening in their industry that is directly relevant to their role, or a resource you genuinely thought of when you read something about their company.
“I saw you posted about [X] last week, it reminded me of something I’ve been thinking about in [their context]. I wrote a short piece on it, thought you might find it useful. Happy to send it over.”
That is the entire message. You don’t ask a thing. You provide.
The follow-up, if they respond, which they will at a significantly higher rate than text outreach, is where the relationship develops and the real ABM magic starts. The voice note opens the door. You do not sell through the door on the same day you open it.
This is the most strategically precise dark social tactic, and the one closest to classic ABM thinking.
Identify your likely internal champion inside a target account, the person who will advocate for you in the room when you’re not there. Then create something that makes their life easier in that specific room.
A one-page business case summary. A competitive comparison formatted for an internal slide deck. A “questions to ask any vendor” document that happens to be structured around your strengths. A benchmark report they can share with their CFO.
It’s not that you are creating marketing material, it’s you – arming the person who is already going to bat for you with the content they need to win the internal conversation. That content will be forwarded, shared, printed, and presented in meetings you will never attend. That is dark social working exactly as it should.
Here is the practical problem with dark social: you cannot directly measure most of it. The forward happens in Gmail. The screenshot goes into Teams chat. The link gets pasted without a referrer.
What you can measure is the downstream effect.
Watch for unexplained direct traffic spikes to your website, particularly to your pricing, about, or case study pages, in the days after publishing or distributing content. These are often people who received a forwarded link and typed your URL directly rather than clicking through.
Watch for clusters: three people from the same company visiting your site within a week, none of them from the same referral source. That is a dark social conversation that just surfaced.
Watch for connection requests and LinkedIn profile views from target accounts that follow content activity. The pattern reveals the conversation even when the conversation itself is invisible.
None of this is precise, but all of it is directionally useful! The point is not to perfectly attribute dark social, it is to notice when it is working and double down on the content that triggered it.
You are not trying to go viral here. You are the thing that passes between two people at a company you care about, at the moment they are starting to think about the problem you solve.
That requires knowing the problem precisely. Writing about it with genuine authority. And creating content in the formats that travel: short, specific, opinionated, and immediately useful to the person who receives it.
You don’t have to have a big content team to win this dark social game. But your team has to know your buyer well enough to say the thing the buyer was already thinking, before anyone else does.
Next in this series: ABM in Practice No. 2 — How to Identify B2B Target Accounts the Moment Their Buying Window Opens →
Want to see how this thinking applies in practice? Explore the work → or get in touch directly if you’re navigating an ABM challenge right now.