10 Tips for Running ABM and LinkedIn Ads That Actually Work

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Tim Davidson
VP Marketing at B2B Rizz

I see a lot of companies completely overcomplicate ABM on LinkedIn. 


Some think they need an expensive ABM platform just to get started. Others assume that simply uploading an account list and running ads will magically drive pipeline. 


Neither approach works.


I’ve tested LinkedIn Ads for ABM across different industries, budgets, and company sizes, and I’ve seen what actually moves the needle. The key isn’t just running ads. It's getting the fundamentals right and making sure ads, targeting, and sales outreach all work together.


In this post, I’m breaking down 10 practical, no-BS strategies I use to make ABM campaigns on LinkedIn drive real results. If you’re tired of wasted budget and low engagement, this is for you.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

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Tip 1: Your Account List is the Foundation. Get It Right

The account list is the backbone of any ABM campaign.


If your account list is wrong, everything else will fail. Your targeting, your engagement, your pipeline.


A lot of companies just pull a list from a data provider using filters like industry, employee size, and technology stack and assume it’s good to go. But here’s the issue:

  • Data providers are never 100% accurate. I’ve used ten different data providers, and they all have their problems.

  • You’ll end up with bad data. You might export 5,000 accounts, but not all of them are actually relevant.


How to Build a Better Account List
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  1. Work with sales. Most companies create their ABM list in a vacuum and don’t loop in sales. That’s a mistake.

  2. Look at past closed-won deals. If you’re just pulling a list of the biggest logos you can think of (Nike, Google, Microsoft) you’re probably missing accounts that actually convert.

  3. Check the late-stage pipeline. What do these accounts have in common?

  4. Ensure coverage. What accounts are missing? Just because a sales rep Slack-ed over a few high-profile accounts doesn’t mean they’re the only accounts worth targeting.


A well-built account list makes every impression valuable. If your impression itself isn’t worth anything, your list is wrong.
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Tip 2: Upload a Company List, Not a Contact List

Once you have a strong account list, the next step is uploading it to LinkedIn Ads.


This is where a lot of folks make a critical mistake. They upload a contact list instead of a company list.

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Why Contact Lists Are a Bad Idea

  • Low match rates: You’ll be lucky to get 30-70% of your contacts matched in LinkedIn.

  • People change jobs constantly: Your contact list gets stale fast. People get promoted, leave, or switch roles.

  • You’ll miss key decision-makers: If someone new joins a company in the target role, they won’t be in your contact list.

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Why Company Lists Work Better

  • Match rates are 95-100%: LinkedIn recognizes companies better than individual contacts.

  • Dynamic audience updates: If someone gets promoted or a new decision-maker joins the company, they’ll automatically be included.

  • More precise targeting: You can layer on job titles, seniority, and functions to ensure you’re reaching the right people within those accounts.


If you only upload a contact list, you’ll have to constantly update it. That’s an operational nightmare.


If you upload a company list and use job title filters, LinkedIn does the updating for you. Plus, you get better match rates.

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Tip 3: Monitor and Manage Ad Frequency

Since ABM campaigns target smaller audiences, ad frequency can get out of control fast if you’re not careful.


If people see the same ad 40 times in a month, they won’t just ignore you, they’ll actively resent your brand.


I always check my frequency metrics and aim for around three impressions per week per person.


If my frequency goes beyond that, I rotate in new creatives.

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How to Manage Frequency

  • If an ad is performing well, keep it running until engagement drops.

  • If performance starts declining, pause it and swap in a new version.

  • Small tweaks work. You don’t need an entirely new creative. Sometimes just changing the headline, background color, or image is enough to reset engagement.


A good ABM strategy requires constant creative refreshes.


If you don’t monitor frequency, you’re going to annoy your target accounts instead of influencing them.

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Tip 4: Cap Impressions Using LinkedIn’s Company Feature

One of the biggest budget-wasters in LinkedIn ABM campaigns is uneven ad distribution.


Let’s say you’re targeting 500 companies. If Amazon is on that list, Amazon employees alone might eat up 50% of your budget. Why? Because Amazon has more employees in your target roles than smaller companies.

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How to Fix This

LinkedIn has a Company Engagement Feature that lets you cap impressions per company.

  • Create dynamic exclusion lists for companies that have received 500+ impressions in the past 7 days.

  • Once a company hits that limit, it gets automatically excluded, forcing LinkedIn to spread the budget to other accounts.

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How to Adjust Your Cap

  • If none of the companies hit the cap → Lower the threshold (e.g., 300 impressions).

  • If too many companies are excluded → Raise the cap (e.g., 700 impressions).


This simple tweak ensures that no single company dominates your budget, and every account on your list gets a fair share of impressions.

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Tip 5: Test One-to-One ABM Ads (But Avoid Germany)

I’ve been testing one-to-one ABM ads for a while now, and the results have been insane.


A standard LinkedIn image ad usually gets a 0.5% to 1% click-through rate.


But when I run personalized one-to-one ABM ads, I’m seeing 5% - 10% CTRs.

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How to Run One-to-One ABM Ads

  1. Create a simple template.

  2. Dynamically insert the company name or logo.

  3. Tweak the messaging slightly to make it feel personal.


These ads stand out because they look like they were designed specifically for the company.


But before you go all-in, there are two major caveats:

  • Don’t run these in Germany: German companies will hit you with a legal notice if you use their name or logo in an ad.

  • This works best for MarTech, SalesTech, and Customer Success industries: If you’re targeting IT buyers, this approach might feel too aggressive.


If you’re hesitant to use logos, you can still personalize these ads by:

  • Mentioning the company in the ad copy instead of the image.

  • Using a screenshot from the company’s website instead of their logo.


One-to-one ABM ads aren’t for every industry, but in the right space, they massively outperform standard image ads.

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Tip 6: Use LinkedIn Ad Engagement as a Sales Trigger

A big mistake I see in ABM campaigns is running LinkedIn ads in isolation and expecting them to create pipeline on their own.


That’s not how it works.


You need to use LinkedIn ad engagement as a sales trigger to prioritize outreach.


Instead of sales reaching out cold, why not time it based on actual engagement? If an account is consistently clicking on ads or engaging with content, that’s a strong signal that they might be open to a conversation.


LinkedIn lets you create dynamic audience lists based on engagement, which means I can track things like:

  • Paid clicks: Who has clicked on an ad multiple times over a set period?

  • Video views: Who has watched a certain percentage of a video ad?

  • Impressions: Which accounts have received a high volume of impressions?


I can then send this data to sales as a prioritized list of accounts.


A sales rep reaching out to an account that has clicked on an ad three times in the past two weeks is going to have way more success than reaching out completely cold.


Some companies use tools like Fibbler to track progression of clicks over a period of month, all the way towards becoming an opportunity.


But even if you’re just using LinkedIn’s native company engagement feature, you can still set up alerts for sales when an account’s activity spikes.


This is one of the easiest ways to align marketing and sales, yet most companies don’t do it. If you’re just running LinkedIn ads without tying them into your outbound strategy, you’re leaving money on the table.

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Tip 7: Split Campaigns by Employee Size

A CEO at a 50-person company is very different from a VP at a 10,000-person company.


You can’t treat them the same.


The way LinkedIn distributes ad spend also makes this even more important. If you mix small and large companies in the same campaign, the large companies will dominate your spend.


Why? Because they have more employees that fit your targeting criteria.


I split campaigns into two groups:

  • 500+ employees: Exclude managers. There are too many, and they don’t always have decision-making power.

  • Under 500 employees: Keep managers in. At smaller companies, managers have more influence over decisions and often report directly to the CEO.

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At big companies, targeting managers is usually a waste of money.


If I’m running an ad campaign for a marketing software company, the CMO at Amazon isn’t going to care about my ad.


But at a 200-person company, the CEO or VP of Marketing might be the final decision-maker.


This segmentation also allows me to write better ad copy. If I know I’m speaking to executives at smaller companies, my messaging will be more direct and high-level.


If I’m speaking to senior managers at larger companies, I might focus more on how my product solves day-to-day problems.


If you’re running a single campaign for all employee sizes, chances are your budget is being wasted on the wrong people at big companies while ignoring the right people at smaller ones.

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Tip 8: Create ABM-Specific Remarketing Lists

Most people run generic remarketing campaigns, but for ABM, you need to build remarketing lists specific to your target accounts.


This means you’re not just retargeting anyone who clicked on an ad. You’re only retargeting people from your ABM account list who showed engagement.


Here’s how I structure my ABM remarketing lists:

  • Image ad remarketing: People from ABM accounts who clicked on an image ad.

  • Video view remarketing: People from ABM accounts who watched at least 50% of a video ad.

  • Website remarketing: Visitors from ABM accounts who landed on key pages (e.g., demo request, pricing, case studies).


This ensures I’m spending remarketing dollars on accounts that actually matter rather than random people who engaged once and never came back.

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What should you show in these remarketing campaigns?

In remarketing, I shift the content to focus on social proof and direct response ads. This could be:

  • Case studies featuring similar companies

  • Testimonial ads showing a customer’s face and a short quote

  • Comparison ads (e.g., "Us vs. Them")

  • Before and after ads that show the pain before using my product and the results after


In some cases, I also test demo CTAs and incentives, especially for enterprise deals where a small push (like a free assessment or report) can make a big difference.


If you’re only running top-of-funnel awareness ads and never segmenting high-intent ABM accounts into remarketing, you’re missing a huge opportunity to convert engaged prospects.


Side Note: Check out all the cool ads that Tim Davidson put together
over here.

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Tip 9: Don’t Sleep on Exclusions

A lot of people think that because they’re targeting an account list, they don’t need to add exclusions.


That’s a mistake.


Even if your account list is perfect, LinkedIn’s targeting isn’t.


Here’s the problem: LinkedIn doesn’t always match job titles and company names correctly. If someone has multiple roles in their profile, LinkedIn might target them under the wrong company.


For example, let’s say someone runs a side business while working full-time at Amazon. LinkedIn might show them your ad under both companies, meaning you’re wasting budget on someone who isn’t actually part of your ABM target.


To fix this, I always:

  • Check LinkedIn’s Demographics Report to see which job titles and industries are getting served ads.

  • Exclude job functions that don’t matter. If I’m selling to CMOs and VPs of Marketing, I don’t want my ads going to HR or IT.

  • Exclude competitors.


Just because you’re running ABM doesn’t mean you can trust LinkedIn to get everything right.


If you’re not actively reviewing exclusions, you’re burning ad dollars.

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Tip 10: LinkedIn Ads Are Just One Part of ABM

I need to make this very clear. Running LinkedIn Ads alone is not ABM.


ABM is about orchestrating multiple touch points across marketing and sales. If you’re just running ads and waiting, you’re missing the point.


Here’s how I integrate LinkedIn Ads into a full ABM strategy:

  1. Pick a set of high-priority accounts (start with 50-100).

  2. Run LinkedIn ads to build awareness.

  3. Monitor engagement signals (clicks, views, impressions).

  4. Trigger sales outreach when accounts show activity.

  5. Use email, cold calls, events, and direct mail to reinforce messaging.

  6. Retarget engaged accounts with case studies and demo CTAs.

  7. Track movement through the funnel and adjust the strategy.


One of the best ways to start is by working closely with an enterprise sales rep.


Pick 100 accounts and run a coordinated campaign, where marketing runs ads and sales follows up based on engagement.


If you’re just running LinkedIn Ads and calling it ABM, you’re not doing ABM. You’re just running ads to a list.

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Hope you found this article helpful! 


‍If you’re looking to learn more about LinkedIn Ads, check out these free LinkedIn Ads courses, that will teach you how to launch, optimize, and scale LinkedIn Ads campaigns effectively. 


And if you have any questions about LinkedIn Ads, feel free to send me a message on LinkedIn.   

Tim Davidson
VP Marketing at B2B Rizz
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Want to level up your B2B advertising skill set?
AdConversion was created to help B2B marketers master advertising with free courses, articles, resources, and templates created by the world best practitioners.
☝️Takes <  90 seconds
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