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For decades, B2B organizations have talked about the need for sales and marketing alignment. Sales teams blame marketing for low-quality leads and weak brand awareness, while marketing blames sales for letting leads go cold. But while buyer behavior and engagement tools have evolved rapidly, the way these two functions work together has not kept pace.
In today’s environment, alignment isn’t enough. Buyers are making decisions faster, often before ever speaking to sales, and the only way to meet them where they are is for sales and marketing to operate as one unified team.
The “Day One List” Reality
Research from Google and Bain shows that 86% of B2B buyers start with a “Day One List” of three to five vendors, and 92% purchase from that list. By the time sales has a chance to connect, most decisions are already in motion. If a company isn’t on that initial list, the opportunity is likely gone.
Getting on that list requires visibility, credibility, and trust, built consistently across multiple channels. Neither sales nor marketing can achieve that alone.
Why Sales and Marketing Alignment Falls Short
Alignment often means both teams are moving in the same direction, but still operating separately. In reality, the modern B2B buying process is non-linear. Buyers conduct extensive research, often getting 70% of the way through their decision before engaging a vendor.
This means sales and marketing can’t simply hand off leads in sequence. They must work the same accounts simultaneously, using shared data, insights, and strategies. Without unification, gaps appear, and buyers notice.
A More Complex Buying Process
The average B2B purchase now involves 13 decision-makers and takes about 11.5 months. Even after this lengthy process, 81% of buyers report dissatisfaction, saying they don’t feel consulted or advised.
Sales teams are handling larger buying groups and longer cycles, while marketing teams face shrinking budgets—down to 7.7% of company revenue in 2024, according to Gartner. Proving marketing’s direct impact is harder as attribution becomes less about direct cause-and-effect and more about correlation across multiple touchpoints.
Strengths Each Team Brings
True unification starts with recognizing the complementary strengths of each function:
- Sales brings empathy, persistence, problem-solving, and skill in building long-term relationships.
- Marketing brings audience insights, brand positioning, targeting, and digital engagement, supported by data-rich tech stacks.
When these strengths work together from the start, prospecting becomes more targeted and effective.
Account-Based Social Selling as the Bridge
Social platforms offer a powerful way to merge sales and marketing efforts, particularly through account-based social selling. Unlike traditional account-based marketing, this approach ensures sales is actively nurturing relationships while marketing runs targeted campaigns.
Intent data reveals which accounts are in-market, and tools like LinkedIn Sales Navigator help identify decision-makers. Marketing can then deliver thought leadership directly into those accounts’ feeds through paid ads, ensuring the message reaches people already aware of the brand.
This unified approach addresses a significant problem: LinkedIn’s Circles of Boom study found only a 16% overlap between audiences targeted by sales and marketing. With unification, that overlap should be close to 100%.
Making Unification Happen
If a buyer engages with 13 pieces of content before talking to sales, marketing should already be part of that journey. If sales is pursuing an account, marketing should reinforce the effort with relevant paid awareness.
Unification means:
- Shared priorities and account lists
- Joint program development
- Connected measurement of success
- A single, consistent presence to the buyer
Getting onto the “Day One List” requires more than alignment; it demands unified strategy, execution, and commitment to creating a seamless buyer experience from first touch to final decision.










