I'm summarising several of my comments into an answer here. Firstly I think the moderator needs to ask themselves: "Is actively seeking accounts that are used by multiple users (such as by a company to provide support) a good use of my time if the account is not actively breaking other rules?" And as a follow on question "Does it impact the amount of time I can contribute as a 'normal' user?" (which I personally feel is just as an important part of a moderator's time, as they are still as much a user as a moderator).
If the answer to the first question is no (or the latter yes) then I don't think that said moderator should be actively seeking for these accounts that don't break any other rules. The time moderators spend time moderating is (for lack of better words) a valuable resource, and if that use of time isn't productive then it's not a good use of that resource. Flags can take awhile to be handled already (this is not meant as a slur on the moderator team) and if resolving those flags is going to be a better use of the moderators time, then I feel this is a much better use of the moderators time.
This, of course, is not true for accounts that are shared by people are breaking other rules. Such accounts probably make themselves "known" more easily though, as likely to suffer flags from savvy community members too, so this hopefully is a problem that more or less solves itself.
As for escalating to the Community Managers, again, if the account the moderator finds isn't breaking any other rules, and the quality of the content they are contributing are good quality (or at least not awful) then going to a CM seems like a good idea. The CM can contact the account and/or company, discuss why what the actions they are doing are against the ToS, and hopefully arrange a better solution with said company; this will hopefully not drive the company away and they will find a method to provide support for their customers (via SO) that is within the ToS. This is a win win. If, of course, the account is other breaking rules, or the quality of the content is distinctly poor, then mod intervention may be best, at least in the short term.
My comments are not also suggesting that such accounts should be allowed. They should not for various reasons; yes, they are against the ToS (that's an easy reason). Such an account, if used well, is likely to receive reputation and privileges. Privileges grant people more features on the site, but also come with the assumption that the person with said privileges knows how the site works. If an account is shared, a new employee could get access to an account with 500, 2k, 5k or even 10k reputation, and yet they have never used Stack Overflow or another site in the community. These people can most certainly do far more harm as they don't know what they are doing. Perhaps they will (mis)use close votes, perhaps they'll make edits to questions that directly conflict with the authors intent (though make it "better" as a support like question) but their revision doesn't go to the queue. Perhaps one of the users just constantly provide low quality content, copy pasta's answers from a list of responses, or worse plagiarises from other sources, but other users maintain enough positive responses that it doesn't cause an answer ban. Individuals should be rated on the quality of their content, not the company's.
If such accounts are a common, but also problematic issue, then perhaps a feature-request should be made specifically for company accounts, that operate differently to individual users. Perhaps these accounts can earn limited privileges, such as never being able to edit without review and can't earn the VTC privilege, but can also always comment in a tag they are affiliated with (this answer is not a place to "solutionise" this, if you really think it's a good idea, comment and ask me to post it as a feature-request (or upvote an existing comment if it does already exist)).