At any given moment, only 5% of your addressable market is ready to buy. But the question is: can your GTM team find them before a competitor does?
Key Takeaways
- Only 5% of any addressable market qualifies as an in-market account at any given time.
- ICP fit and in-market readiness are different filters entirely.
- In-market account scoring works by layering first-party and third-party signals together.
- The scoring model is only as useful as the GTM motion built around it.
- Sales and marketing have to operate from the same in-market account list at the same time.
GTM teams in 2026 are running at full capacity, targeting accounts that have no intention of buying anything this quarter.
Not because the accounts are bad fits. Because fit and readiness are two completely different things. A company can match your ICP perfectly and still be two years away from a purchase decision. Chasing them now doesn’t move the needle. It burns budget, rep capacity, and goodwill on an account that wasn’t going anywhere yet.
At any given moment, research consistently puts the slice of any addressable market that’s actively evaluating a solution at around 5%. That number sounds discouraging until you flip it. That 5% is where virtually all near-term revenue lives. Find them, reach them with the right message while the window is open, and the conversion math changes completely.
The companies winning more of that 5% aren’t doing it by working harder. They built a system to identify in-market accounts before the competition does, and trained their GTM motion around acting on that information fast.
What Makes an In-Market Account Different From a Good-Fit One
An in-market account isn’t just a good-fit company. It’s a good-fit company showing active signals that a purchase decision is underway or imminent.
Those signals come in different forms. A surge in research activity around topics your product addresses. Job postings for roles that only make sense if they’re building toward a problem your product solves. Leadership changes that typically precede a technology re-evaluation. Budget cycles opening up. Competitor contract renewals coming due. An uptick in engagement with your own website or content after a period of silence.
None of these signals in isolation tells the full story. That’s the trap most teams fall into. They see one signal, treat it as a green light, and flood the account with outreach before the picture is complete. Buyers notice when the timing feels random. When it feels relevant, they respond.
An account scores as in-market when multiple signals layer on top of each other in a way that suggests a real evaluation is happening right now. One intent spike is noise. Three overlapping signals pointing in the same direction are a pattern worth acting on.
Why ICP Fit Alone Doesn’t Identify an In-Market Account
ICP thinking dominates most ABM conversations. Industry, company size, tech stack, geography, headcount. Build the right profile and the pipeline should follow.
It doesn’t work like that in practice.
An ICP is a filter for 100% of your addressable market. In-market account scoring is a filter for the 5% of that 100% who are actually worth reaching out to this week. Operating only on ICP means the team reaches out to quality-fit accounts whether they’re actively evaluating or completely dormant. The messaging is the same. The timing is random. The rep spends the same energy on an account that’s twelve months from any decision as they do on one that’s sixty days from signing.
The cost isn’t just wasted effort. It’s opportunity cost. While a rep nurtures an account that isn’t ready, a competitor is closing the one that is.
How In-Market Account Scoring Actually Works
The Data Layer Behind In-Market Account Identification
Scoring starts with data aggregation.
First-party signals from your own channels: website visits, content downloads, ad clicks, email engagement, product trial behavior. Third-party intent data from external publisher networks: topic surges, competitor research activity, category-level search behavior tracked across the wider web.
Neither source is sufficient alone.
First-party data is high quality but limited in scope. It only captures accounts that have already found you. Third-party data catches accounts researching the category without having landed on your website yet. The combination is what produces a complete picture of where intent actually sits across the total addressable market.
That data feeds into a model that weights signals differently based on their predictive strength. A pricing page visit carries more weight than a blog read. Three stakeholders from the same account engaging in the same week carries more weight than one. A company posting a job for a role that signals budget allocation for your category carries more weight than a generic technology leadership hire.
The model produces a score. The score produces a prioritized list. The list tells the GTM team where to focus.
First-Party vs. Third-Party Signals: How In-Market Accounts Get Identified Early
First-party signals tell you an account already knows you exist and is showing interest. That’s useful. An account that visits your pricing page twice in a week is sending a clear signal. A contact downloading a product comparison guide is further along than one who read a top-of-funnel blog post.
Third-party intent data tells you something more interesting. It catches accounts researching the category before they’ve engaged with your brand at all. That’s the early window. The moment before the shortlist gets built. An account showing third-party intent on topics your product addresses, before they’ve hit your website, is an account you can reach before your competitors are even on their radar.
Both signals are perishable. Intent data from three weeks ago doesn’t tell you an account is still actively evaluating. It tells you they were. Freshness matters as much as the signal itself.
Connecting In-Market Account Scoring to Your GTM Motion
This is where most implementations fall flat.
A scoring model that produces a prioritized list that then sits in a dashboard is not a working system. It’s a report. The score has to connect directly to what sales and marketing actually do next, automatically and quickly.
When an in-market account crosses a threshold score, the right thing should happen without someone manually checking a dashboard and deciding to act. An alert goes to the rep with account context. A targeted ad sequence activates for contacts at that account. A personalized outreach cadence fires. The response is immediate because the window is real and it closes.
Speed is the variable most teams underweight. An account showing strong in-market signals today may have already shortlisted vendors by next week. The GTM team that reaches them on day one of that evaluation is in a fundamentally different position than the team that reaches them on day fourteen. Same signals. Completely different competitive situation.
Sales and Marketing Need the Same In-Market Account List
In-market account scoring only produces revenue when sales and marketing are operating from the same information at the same time.
Marketing running brand campaigns against a broad ICP list while sales prioritizes a tighter in-market account list creates a fragmented experience for the buyer. Touchpoints feel disconnected. Messaging is inconsistent. The account sees ads about one thing and gets a sales email about something adjacent.
When both functions work from the same scored account list, the buyer experience is coordinated. The ad reinforces the sales message. The content the account sees matches the conversation the rep is having. That coherence is noticeable. It signals the vendor understands their situation, which is exactly the impression that opens doors.
What Happens When You Miss an In-Market Account
Ignoring in-market signals doesn’t mean those accounts disappear. It means a competitor closes them.
The accounts ready to buy this quarter don’t wait for the team to figure out its targeting. They move forward with whoever reached them at the right moment with something relevant. By the time a rep eventually circles back, the deal is done, the contract is signed, and the next evaluation window is eighteen months out.
The other failure mode is chasing accounts that scored high on ICP fit but show no in-market signals, and treating the lack of response as a rep performance problem. It isn’t. It’s a prioritization problem. The account wasn’t ready. Sending more emails or changing the subject line wasn’t going to change that.
Building an In-Market Account Program From the Ground Up
Start with the CRM as the central data source. Every signal, first-party and third-party, should route back to one place. Fragmented data across multiple platforms without a single aggregation point means the scoring model is working off an incomplete picture from the start.
Define what an in-market account looks like for your specific business before building the model. Which signals have historically preceded closed deals? What combination of behaviors did your best customers exhibit before they became customers? The model should reflect your own closed-won data, not a generic framework borrowed from a vendor’s playbook.
Build the response playbook before the model goes live. What happens when an account hits a certain score? Who gets the alert? What’s the first outreach? What ad sequence activates? What content is ready to go? The model is only as useful as the motion sitting behind it.
Revisit the model regularly. Markets shift. Buyer behavior changes. Signals that were predictive eighteen months ago may have lost their weight. A scoring model treated as a finished product rather than a continuously refined one gradually stops reflecting reality.
In-Market Accounts Are a Small Target. That’s the Whole Point.
Most GTM teams resist narrowing their focus because it feels like leaving opportunity on the table.
It’s the opposite. The 95% who aren’t in-market right now aren’t opportunity. They’re a later conversation. Spending the same effort on them as on the 5% who are ready now doesn’t increase coverage. It dilutes it.
Tight targeting on in-market accounts means reps spend more time on accounts with real probability of closing this quarter. Marketing spend concentrates on buyers who are actively evaluating. Win rates go up. Sales cycles get shorter. And the 95% who aren’t ready yet get a lighter-touch nurture that keeps the brand present without burning resources on a conversation that isn’t ready to happen.
The goal isn’t to reach everyone. It’s to reach the right in-market accounts before the window closes.




