In the technology business, we love to chuck around the TLAs (Three-letter Acronyms). Here’s another one for you – ICP. If you want to get sales and marketing focused – tune in to your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP)!

In defining what accounts your business should target, we throw around terms like total addressable market (TAM) and total serviceable market (TSM), which are designed to narrow the accounts from the broad universe to a set that your business can potentially serve.

These are fine for building a business plan, but when it comes to creating a go-to-market strategy, you ultimately need to hone your target definition to an Ideal Customer Profile (ICP). 

The ideal customer profile (ICP) defines the firmographic datapain pointsorganization needs, environmental factors and purchasing behavior that describe the type of organization that you expect to be your most valuable customer. It’s one level up from the personas that you define as members of the buying team at the ICP-like account.

What’s the right number of ICPs for your business?

The answer is either one, or the fewer the better. If you’re a start-up, start with one and test the results to prove you’ve got it right.

As you build a business and are creating new solutions that meet distinct needs, perhaps across very different markets, then it’s time create unique ICPs. If your solution addresses similar needs across multiple industries, like an accounting package for small business, simply list the relevant industries within your ICP. If the needs, pain points or other elements vary significantly, like an Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) suite that serves manufacturing, retail, logistics, and beyond; then a new ICP is in order. 

This may sound like we are creating an Account-Based Marketing (ABM) and Selling approach, but that’s not necessarily so. This is merely a best practice for targeting accounts in your go-to-market … and you can’t do ABM without it, either.

What’s the big deal about ICPs?

This is not an academic exercise. The ICP is integral to designing account plans for sales, and developing content and campaign plans for marketing. Companies that invest in a well-defined ICP achieve compelling business results, including:

  • Faster sales cycles
  • Higher sales conversion rates
  • Lower customer acquisition costs (CAC)
  • Greater average Long-Term Value (LTV) or contract value (ACV)
  • Lower customer churn

It’s also creating clarity about who NOT to go after. Do make sales and marketing waste their time. You may land big deal with a business outside your ICP, but watch to see if they deliver value or churn over time.

Resources for Building an ICP

You can develop your ICP using both qualitative and quantitative data and analyses. Predictive analytics tools may also have a role. If you have large internal and external datasets, predictive analytics can fill in gaps in your data or reveal additional attributes that correlate to high-value accounts, which are not obvious to the average (or expert) analyst.

Required InformationQualitative SourcesQuantitative Sources
Firmographic data (e.g., size, industry, buying center)3rd party databasesCustomer database, CRM
Pain points / Org. NeedsSales & customer interviews Analyst briefings Voice of the CustomerWin/Loss Analysis
Purchasing behavior (e.g., buying team, buying cycle length)Customer Journey mapsCustomer Journey Analytics, CRM
Environmental factors (i.e., trends & external factors influencing decision making)Competitive landscape, AnalystsWin/Loss Analysis Predictive analytics 

One of the advantages of having an ICP, is that you can create a scorecard that helps you evaluate accounts that come across your radar. If a sales rep brings up an account to target, you can rate it as a poor fit, workable fit, or ideal fit to your ICP.

Stay Tuned

We will come back to this topic in future posts with some examples for specific markets. For now, you can find lots of ICP resources on the interwebs, such as ICP templates from HubSpot or this great ICP video tutorial series from consultant TK Kader.

Photo by Lidya Nada on Unsplash