
How to Audit B2B Google Ads Accounts [+Free Template]
Google Ads is not getting any cheaper, so frequently auditing your account is critical to keep your campaigns profitable.
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In this step-by-step guide, I will walk you through the exact same process we use internally to audit our clientsâ Google Ads accounts.
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As a bonus, you can get a free copy of my 8-Part Google Ads Audit Checklist from Module 1, Lesson 5 of my B2B Google Ads 102 free course, so you can have it on hand while you go through the tasks below.
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So letâs get started đ
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Part 1 - Account Review
- Part 2 - Campaign Review
- Part 3 - Ad Group Review
- Part 4 - Keyword Review
- Part 5 - Ads & Extensions Review
- Part 6 - Landing Page Review
- Part 7 - Budget & Performance Review
- Part 8 - Visibility Review
- Resources to Master B2B Google Ads
- Google Ads Audit FAQ
Part 1 - Account Review
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First and foremost, you canât improve your account performance without mastering the basics. So letâs dive in!
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1. Billing Information
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Is your billing information correct?
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Checking this will ensure that your ads continue to run smoothly and you don't face any unexpected billing issues.
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To check your billing information, follow these steps:
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- Sign in to your Google Ads account.
â - Click on the "Billing" icon on the left-hand menu.
â - Click on "Settings" to view your current billing information.
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Here, you can view your payment method, payer details (name, address, etc), and other important details.Â
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Make sure all the information is correct and up-to-date. If you notice any errors, click on the pencil next to each detail to make the necessary changes.
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It's important to note that any changes you make to your billing information may take up to 24 hours to take effect.Â
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Additionally, if you have any pending charges on your account, you won't be able to make changes until those charges are paid off.
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2. Is your time zone correct?
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The accuracy of your account's time zone setting is more crucial than it may seem at first glance. The time zone affects how you schedule ads, interpret performance data, and manage billing cycles.
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You cannot change your time zone manually, and it can only be reset once, so as Google advises, choose your new time zone carefully.
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To request a change, youâll need to fill out this form and follow the instructions below:
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- The form must be filled out by an Admin user of a manager account.
â - Your time zone can only be shifted eastward, for example, from GTM (Greenwich Mean Time) to IST (India Standard Time).
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3. Do you have auto-tagging turned on?
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Auto-tagging is an easy 3-step process:
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- Sign in to your Google Ads account
â - On the left-hand side, under admin> click on Account Settings
â - Click on âAuto-taggingâ - check the box and save.
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Once you enable this feature, Google will automatically mark your source_medium as âcpcâ
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4. Did you turn off ad suggestions?
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Have you ever gone to your Google Ads account and noticed a bunch of changes that werenât made by you or anyone on your team?This probably happened because you didnât turn off the ad suggestions đ
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So follow these steps to have peace of mind:
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- Sign in to your Google Ads account.
â - Click on the "Campaigns" on the left-hand menu.
â - Click on "Recommendations" and go to âAuto-applyâ
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Make sure you turn off all of the recommendations that arenât relevant to your account.
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I personally like to turn off all of them, so I donât have any changes made by Google without my consent.
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5. Is your conversion tracking still working accurately?
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This is crucial because if your conversion tracking is not working correctly, you wonât feed Googleâs algorithm with essential data to make the best bidding choices for your conversion-based strategies.
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Hereâs how you can check if your tracking is in place:
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- Sign in to your Google Ads account.
â - Click on the "Goals" on the left-hand menu.
â - Click on "Conversions" and go to âSummaryâ
â - Youâll be able to see the status of your conversions - you want to see âActiveâ
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Pro-tip: If you see the status âNo recent conversionsâ - search for your keyword on Google and submit a test.
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If you donât see any activity and have been running Google Ads campaigns for a while, it probably means youâll need to see whatâs going on to ensure the tracking setup is in place.
Part 2 - Campaign Review
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Depending on the size and organization of the account, this step will take longer or shorter. So letâs go đˇââď¸
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1. Do your campaigns follow a logical naming convention?
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Having a solid naming convention in place isnât just about aesthetics, itâs the foundation for good account management.
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My campaigns usually have a naming convention that follows this structure:
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- Region (NA, EMEA, APAC)
â - Campaign Theme (Brand, NonBrand, Generic, Competitor)
â - Keyword Topic
â - Network (Search, Display)
â - Keyword Match Type (Exact, Phrase, Broad)
â - Device (Desktop, Mobile, All Devices)
â - Offer (Demo, Trial, etc)
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So if you have disjointed campaign names, itâs an opportunity to adjust that and make your life easier.
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2. Are you targeting the right networks (display unchecked)?
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You want to focus on the Search Network and search partners, avoiding the Display Network unless itâs a separate campaign.
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- Select the desired campaign
â - Go to âCampaign Settingsâ (on the right-hand side)
â - Click on Networks
â - Choose the desired Network and saveÂ
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- At the campaign level
â - Scroll over your campaign
â - Setting logo will appear
â - Click on the logo
â - Under Networks, choose the desired Network and save.
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3. Is your location targeting and options still accurate?
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If you have a proper naming convention, you should be able to tell where you intend to target your campaigns, but you still need to ensure the correct locations are selected.Â
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Similar to Networks, there are two ways to check your locations:
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- Select the desired campaign
â - Go to Locations (on the left-hand side - Audiences, keywords and content)
â - Click on the pencil icon
â - Choose the desired locations and saveÂ
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- At the campaign level > Scroll over your campaignÂ
â - The settings logo will appear
â - Click on the logo
â - Under Locations, Enter location(s) and Save.
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4. Are you targeting one language per campaign (with relevant ads + landing pages)?
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In a perfect world, your ads and landing pages should match the primary language of the targeting locations.
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Hereâs how you can change the language of your campaigns:
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- At the campaign level, toggle over your campaign name
â - Click on the icon setting once it appears
â - Under âLanguagesâ you can select the desired language and click Save.
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5. Is your daily budget still aligned with your goals?
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Being an effective marketer involves strategically allocating your budget over the designated campaign duration while achieving the goals.Â
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Ex. If your average cost per demo is $300 and you need to generate 10 demos, then you must have at least $3,000 - Now, if the plan is to run the campaign for 30 days, then you must allocate a $100 daily budget and check daily to make sure itâs pacing well.Â
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Generally speaking, I donât recommend running campaigns with less than $50/day for B2B campaigns, but this will obviously depend on your average cost per click.
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Check our Google Ads Budget Calculator tool if you need help to define your budget đ
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6. Are you using the correct bidding strategy?
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When youâre first starting out, getting as many clicks as possible is important to get some early conversions, so the âMaximize Clicksâ strategy is a good option.
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If you have more than 15 conversions, you can switch to the âMaximize Conversionsâ strategy if your goal is to get as many conversions as possible.
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If you have offline conversions set up, you can use the âMaximize Conversion Valueâ strategy or the âTarget ROASâ strategy. These will help you get more relevant conversions.
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Here are two ways to check your bidding options:
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- Select the desired campaign
â - Go to Setting (on the right-hand side)
â - Click on Bidding > âChange bid strategyâ
â - From the dropdown menu, select the desired bidding strategy and save.
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- At the campaign level > scroll over your campaign > Setting logo will appear
â - Click on the logo
â - Under Bidding, âChange bid strategyâ
â - From the dropdown menu, select the desired bidding strategy and save.
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7. Do you have the correct conversion actions set? (if applicable)
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Campaigns can inherit account-level conversions or have specific conversion actions set.Â
Both approaches are valid, but itâs essential to use the one that aligns with your campaign goals.Â
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For instance, if a campaign-specific conversion action set is used, make sure it includes all relevant actions in the conversion funnel.
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Follow the steps below to add/check conversion actions:
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- At the campaign level > scroll over your campaign
â - Setting logo will appear, click on the logo
â - Under Goals, âUse campaign-specific goal settingâ
â - Click the pencil iconÂ
â - Select the appropriate (previously tested) conversions and save.Â
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8. Are your ad rotation settings still accurate?
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Generally speaking, I recommend using the âBest Performing Adsâ option. This way, the Google algorithm will analyze your ads' performance and prioritize delivering the the ads with the best performance.
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But if you see that Google is serving some ads dramatically more than others, then you can select âRotate Ads Indefinitelyâ and Google will distribute each ad individually.
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For conducting A/B testing on multiple ads, I recommend selecting the "Do not optimize" setting to make sure youâre collecting more precise data.
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To review your ad rotation settings, follow these steps:
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- At the campaign level > scroll over your campaign
â - Setting logo will appear, click on the logo
â - Click on additional settings > Ad rotation
â - Click the pencil iconÂ
â - Select the preferred method and save.Â
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You can also follow the steps above at the Ad Group level
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9. Is your ad schedule still up to date?
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You can review your campaign's performance by day of the week and time of day, then adjust your ad schedule as needed. To do so, follow these steps:
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- Click on âOverviewâ on the left-hand side
â - Under the âDay & Hourâ table, you can choose the metrics that matter the most to you to view performance by Day and/or Hour.
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Now that you know which days and times generate the best results, you can tailor your ad scheduling accordingly.Â
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- Select the campaign or ad group
â - Click on Ad Schedule on the left-hand side
â - Click the pencil icon
â - Choose the optimal time and save.Â
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10. Are you targeting the right devices?
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Similar to the ad schedule, you can follow the same steps to find the best performance by device and make adjustments. Steps as follows:
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- Click on âOverviewâ on the left-hand side
â - Under the âdevicesâ table, you can choose the metrics that matter the most to you.Â
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You can now update your targeting by device accordingly.Â
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- Select the campaign or ad group
â - Click on âWhen and where ads showedâ on the left-hand side
â - Â Edit bid adjustment
â - To stop showing on a specific device, choose âDecrease with 100% ratio > SaveÂ
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If youâre using the device on the campaign naming convention, you want to make sure the campaign is targeting the device it has on its name.
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11. Are you excluding existing leads and sales from your campaigns? (bonus)
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A practical approach to lowering costs involves not targeting existing leads and customers.Â
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Google enables the upload of first-party data for use primarily in Remarketing Lists for Search Ads (RLSA) and for creating exclusions. Steps below:
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- Select audiences on the left-hand side
â - Edit exclusions
â - Select the Campaign or Ad group
â - Choose the previously uploaded audience > Save
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12. Do you have observational audiences added to your campaigns? (bonus)
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Gain insights into how different audiences interact with your campaigns without altering who sees your ads:
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- Select audiences on the left-hand side
â - Audience segments
â - Select Campaign or Ad Group
â - Under observation, choose what is important to you and save.Â
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13. Have you been actively running campaign experiments in the past? (bonus)
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With the Experiments feature, you can execute A/B tests without needing to set up new campaigns.
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If the outcome proves successful, the winning campaign can then be chosen as the primary one.
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Part 3 - Ad Group Review
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1. Are your ad groups broken out logically into related themes?
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There are generally 6 buckets of themes for search ads:
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- Brand
- Non-brand
- Competitive
- RLSA (Search Remarketing)
- Content
- Dynamic Search Ads
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A clear naming convention aids in quickly identifying campaign and group themes. Example:
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âCampaign: NA_Non-Brand_Search_EN_Exact_All-Devices_Demo
âGroup: Non-Brand_Software
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If there is no proper naming convention, then we have some cleaning to do:
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- Download the data at the keyword level
â - Delete: Ad spend < $ 1
â - Open a new column called âThemeâ beside the Keywords
â - Tag the Theme of the campaign/group according to the Keyword
â - Turn it into a pivot table to get the data by Theme
â - Update the naming convention
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If you donât do a good job separating your keywords into themed ad groups, it will hurt your quality score.
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Because if you have too many keywords in your ad group, itâs hard to make sure that the ads are relevant to all these keywords.
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2. Do you have less than 15 keywords per ad group?
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This is not a set-in-stone law, but it will help you mitigate the damage to your ad relevance.
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Google allows up to 15 headlines and 4 descriptions in Responsive Search Ads. The goal is for keywords within each group to have a relevant ad to boost the quality score.Â
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At the end of the day, you know you are doing a good job with your ad groups and how you structured your keywords if you see that your ad relevance is above average.
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3. Are your ad groups filled with relevant keywords, ads, and landing pages?
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Each groupâs keywords should align with an ad in the same language, context, and call to action as well as a landing page contextualizing the search terms.
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Hereâs a good example of a great message match from the CRM software folk.
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Theyâre bidding on the keyword âCRM software for startupsâ, their ad mentions âCRM for startupsâ, and if you click on the ad, their landing page talks exactly about CRM for startups. Everything is aligned.
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4. Are your best ad groups receiving enough budget?
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With accurate conversion tracking in place for your campaigns (we covered this in Part 1), we can see which ad groups bring more conversions at a lower cost per conversion.After reviewing the ad group performance, you can optimize your ad groups in these ways:
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- Pause the ad groups with more search volume that are just cannibalizing and eating up all the campaign budget without bringing conversions.
- Take the top performers' ad groups and put them into their own campaign.
- Run target CPA bidding and set different target CPA caps at the different ad group levels, so you can put a more restrictive cap on the one thatâs eating up all the budget and then put a larger one on the one that hasnât spent enough.
âPart 4 - Keyword Review
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1. Are your search terms as close to perfect as possible?
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Regularly checking the search term report has 2 main benefits:
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- Reduce CPA: Comparing the number of clicks to the number of conversions - exclude all irrelevant results.
- Increase Expected CTR: Compare the number of impressions to the number of clicks - exclude all irrelevant results.
How to check the search term report in Google ads:
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- Under âCampaignsâ on the left-hand side > Click âInsights and reportsâ
â - Select âSearch termsâ
â - Filter by campaign
â - Evaluate the above recommendations.Â
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2. Do you have a strong negative keyword list in place?
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Negative keywords help us reduce the wasted budget and increase the overall quality of ads.Â
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The broader the match type, the more important it is to have an extensive list of negative keywords.Â
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However, even with Exact match type, search terms must be regularly checked, and negative keywords constantly be updated.
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Maintaining a universal negative keyword list for your entire account can be beneficial. This list might include words related to profanity, employment, bargaining, etc.
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Below you can access a sample list we use in our agency.Â
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đ Master Negative Keyword List
âTo avoid unintended blocking, please ensure these negative keywords apply to your business and do not overlap with any targeting keywords.How to create a new list in Google:Â
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- Select âToolsâ on the left-hand side
â - Under âShared libraryâ click on âExclusion listsâ
â - Select the âplus signâ
â - Add the list of desired negative keywords and name the list accordingly.Â
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3. Do you have the appropriate match types for your keywords?
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If you donât know which match type you should start with, then always start with the Exact match type and work your way up.Â
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If you donât get quality conversions with the Exact match type, then changing the match type wonât help.
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Generally, Broad match types have the highest wasted budget - unless the campaign is layered with a first-data party audience.Â
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4. Do you have underperforming keywords you can pause or optimize?
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Usually, 20% of the keywords are responsible for 80% of the results. Make sure to check the performance of each keyword and pause underperformers continuously.Â
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However, before pausing, analyze the relevance of search terms against keywords.Â
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If they align, evaluate the click-through rate (CTR) to determine if the ad copy requires updates.Â
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If users are still clicking on the ad without converting, consider revising the landing page.
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5. Are your keyword bids set at an optimal amount? (if applicable)
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If you're using automated bidding, you don't have to worry about this step.
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But if you're using manual bidding, sometimes your manual bid is too low, so your ads wonât show on the first pages of the results.
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I recommend that your Max. CPC amount is at least high enough to the first page bid estimate.
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You can find the keyword bid simulator by hovering over the small chart in the Max. CPC field.
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âPart 5 - Ads & Extensions Review
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1. Are your keywords in your ad copy?
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This is an easy way to increase ad relevance and ultimately get more clicks.Â
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I canât stress enough the importance of having a strong message match.
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When users encounter their specific search terms within your adâespecially if these terms are variations of your targeted keywordsâthe likelihood of them proceeding to your landing page significantly increases.
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2. Are you title-casing the beginning of each letter in your ad?
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Title casing is when you capitalize the letter of each important work in the sentence.
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In my experience, title casing works better on paid search because your ads will look more professional, and it will enhance readability.
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â3. Do you have a minimum of two ads per ad group?
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Running multiple ads allows for A/B testing or split testing, where different versions of ads can be compared to see which one performs better.Â
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By consistently testing ads, youâll drive a better click-through rate, and this will ultimately result in a better Expected Click-through rate, which will improve your quality score and reduce your costs while putting your ads in a better search results position.
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4. Are you speaking one-to-one, communicating benefits, answering objections, and providing a CTA?
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You want to make sure you are speaking one-to-one In your copy and not using corporate speak, where it seems youâre talking to an auditorium versus a person.Here are a few important points your ads should cover:
- Are you communicating benefits in the second headline to differentiate yourself from your competitors on the SERP?
- Are you answering objections? (If there are objections that you can answer on your copy)
- Are you providing a Call-to-Action (CTA) that moves people and motivates them?
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Hereâs a good example from Brevo:
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- We can instantly see the benefit: 9000 emails free per month
â - One-to-one communication: Donât let them overcharge you
â - CTA that motivates: Stop overpaying for email and get the best value in email delivery & email marketing tools.
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5. Are you using all the characters available in your headline, description & path fields?
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You donât have to use every single one, but I recommend you use as many as you can.
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Utilizing all available characters in Google Ads' headline, description, and path fields increases message clarity and impact, boosting click-through and conversion rates.Â
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6. Are you using as many ad extensions (assets) as possible? (Especially core ones)
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Extensions expand your presence on the search results page, improving the chances of receiving more clicks, which will increase your expected CTR and the overall quality score.Â
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While assets such as the business logo and name are best set at the account level, it's often better to tailor other extensions, like callouts, structured snippets, sitelinks, etc., to reflect the the messaging of each campaign or ad group.Â
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How to create new ad extensions in Google:Â
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- Select âCampaignsâ on the left-hand side
â - Under âAssetsâ click on âAssetsâ
â - Select the desired extension to see the ones you already have.
â - Click on the âplus signâ to add new ad extensions.Â
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7. Are you consistently testing new ad copy, types and modifiers?
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If you are not doing this, youâll know because you will see the click-through rate consistently going down week over week, month over month.
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If youâre auditing someone elseâs account, you can check the âChanges historyâ option to see if they are constantly testing new ads.
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For modifiers, you can use dynamic keyword insertion in your ad copies to dynamically test different variations.
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8. Are you sending searchers to relevant landing pages?
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In my opinion, this is the most important thing.
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If your prospects search for âCRM for startupsâ, your ads should say âCRM for startupsâ, and your landing page should say âCRM for startupsâ.
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This sounds basic and trivial, but the amount of people who miss this is dramatic.
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So make sure that you have a strong message match.
âPart 6 - Landing Page Review
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âRemember that success will come from half traffic and half your landing page, so I highly recommend deep diving into your pages individually as you go through this.
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1. Are you mirroring the message from your ad on the landing page?
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As I mentioned in the last step of Part 5, the landing page experience is a crucial element of the quality score.Â
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A page that fails to align with your ad's messaging is unlikely to offer value to the user.Â
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2. Can the searcher understand what you do & why in 5 seconds or less?
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This is called the five-second rule, and itâs essentially a test where if your prospects just look at the above the fold section of your landing page, can they understand in five seconds what you do and essentially why they should care?
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In this example from Microsoft Clarity, we can easily understand that this is a free tool that will help you get insights into the behavior of users on your website so you can improve your products.Â
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Itâs also used by 100k+ sites worldwide and is GDPR & CCPA-compliant.
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You donât want to be vague on your landing pages, and you want to make sure that they have the following:
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- Clear and concise headline
â - Engaging subheadlinesÂ
â - Visual elements
â - Call to action (CTA) throughout the page
â - Quick loading time for all devices
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To learn more about landing page best practices, dive into the article below by Pedro CortĂŠs:
â10 Proven Landing Page Tips To Boost Your Conversion Rates
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3. Is your landing page loading fast enough?
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As mentioned above, the landing pages must load quickly on all devices. Tools like Lighthouse or PageSpeed Insights can help you better understand areas of opportunity.Â
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I recommend you run your page through PageSpeed Insights and apply anything applicable.Â
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Youâre probably going to need the help of a developer, but itâs definitely worthwhile to improve the page speed because this is a big factor in terms of your landing page experience for quality score.
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A simple thing to improve your landing page loading time is compressing the website images to reduce the file sizes.
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4. Do you have one clear call to action on your landing page that mirrors your ad?
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If your ad is talking about Downloading a Whitepaper but the landing page only has CTAs around Booking a Demo, then that will have a negative experience for the user.Â
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Align landing page CTAs with ad promises to ensure a seamless user experience and encourage conversions.
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5. Are you communicating benefits, answering objections, and providing a CTA?
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The higher the ask, the more context must be provided on the page. This is specifically true for the âBook a Demoâ CTA.Â
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Ensure you address objections while emphasizing the key benefits of your product that will solve the users' problems.
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I recommend that you talk with your sales team to get insights on different objections that come up in the sales process, this way you can add sections on your landing page to proactively communicate against those objections so that you can actually drive more quality leads.
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6. Does your form, chatbot, or online booking widget still work?
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Before launching any new offers, test the page to make sure everything is working as intended.
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- Submit a fake test lead and see if it actually routes into your CRM.Â
â - Go look for your lead record.
â - Check if the page isnât broken.Â
â - Review what the experience looks like.Â
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Make sure you audit that process because I can't tell you how many times people think their campaigns are failing, and then something just broke on the technical side.
Part 7 - Budget & Performance Review
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1. What is the spread of budget and performance by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
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This is where you will need to export a lot of data from Google Ads and use Excel/Google Sheets.
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đ I recommend watching the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on exporting and labeling the data to perform this analysis.
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Hereâs a common successful budget distribution you can use as guidance:Â
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- Brand: < 20%
- Non-brand > 60%
- Competitive > 20%
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You can use our free Google Ads Budget Calculator to find your ideal Google Ads budget.
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2. What is the spread of budget and performance by region?
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If you are targeting multiple regions, break out the campaign as such (ex: NA, EMEA, APAC).
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đ Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
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Look for the highest-performing locations for each region and make sure low-quality conversions are not wasting your budget. If youâre not separating your campaigns into regions, you can still check how the budget has been spread around different locations through the Locations report:
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- Select âCampaignsâ on the left-hand side
â - Go to âLocationsâ, under âAudiences, keywords, and contentâÂ
â - Select the desired campaign
â - Download the data under Location
â - Summarize into a pivot table to get:
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion
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3. What is the spread of budget and performance by offer?
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If you are separating the campaigns by offer, break out the campaign as such (Demo, Trials, eBooks, etc)
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đ Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
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Hereâs how to download the landing page report:
- Select âCampaignsâ on the left-hand side
â - Go to âLanding Pagesâ, under âInsights and ReportsâÂ
â - Select the desired campaign
â - Download the data
â - On Excel:
- Delete: Ad spend <$1
- If there is no proper naming convention:
- Open a new column (Offer) beside the landing page (LP)
- Tag the offer of the campaign according to the LP
- Summarize into a pivot table to get:
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion

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6. What is the spread of budget and performance by match type?
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If you are separating the campaigns by match type, break out the campaign as such (Exact, Phrase, Broad)
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đ Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
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Hereâs how to download the match type report:
- Select âCampaignsâ on the left-hand side
â - Go to âSearch Keywordsâ, under âAudiences, keywords, and contentâÂ
â - Select the desired campaign
â - Add the column âMatch typeâ
â - Download the dataÂ
â - On Excel, summarize into a pivot table to get:some text
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion
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7. What is the spread of budget and performance by device?
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If you are separating the campaigns by devices, break out the campaign as such (Desktop, Mobile, Tablet, All Devices)
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đ Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
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If the campaigns are not separated into devices, hereâs how you can check the spread of budget and performance by device downloading the device report:

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8. What is the spread of budget and performance by week days?
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Check if youâre targeting all days of the week and if thereâs opportunities to exclude some days when the performance is not good, so you can free up budget for the strongest days.Hereâs how to download the day of the week report:
- Select âCampaignsâ on the left-hand side
â - Go to âWhen and where ads showedâ, under âInsights and reportstâÂ
â - Select the desired campaign
â - Choose âDayâ in the right-side navigation if you only want to see the day of the week
â - Download the data
â - On Excel, summarize into a pivot table to get:some text
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion
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To learn more about how to create a winning Google Ads budget strategy, dive into the article below:
âHow to Create a Winning Google Ads Budget Strategy for B2B SaaSâ
âPart 8 - Visibility Review
â
Hereâs where we will talk more about Impression Share and Quality Score.
â
1. What is the search impression share by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
â
There are different ways you can see the impression share by the campaign theme.Â
â
You can use Excel as I showed previously in Part 7, or you can go into your account and filter by campaign name, assuming you have good campaign naming conventions.
â
đ Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
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2. What is the search lost rank by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
â
The process here is the same from the previous task. The only difference is that you need to add the âSearch lost IS (rank)â column.
â
đ Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
â
3. What is the search lost to budget by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
â
The process here is the same from the previous tasks. The only difference is that you need to add the âSearch lost IS (budget)â column.
â
đ Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
â
4. What is the search top IS by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
â
The process here is the same from the previous tasks. The only difference is that you need to add the âSearch top ISâ column.
â
đ Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
â
5. Do 70% of your keywords have above 7 quality scores?
â
This is something I learned from Brad Geddes years ago, the OG of Google Ads.
â
Check the video below to see a complete guide on Quality Score and how to perform a Quality Score analysis:
â
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6. What aspects of quality score do you need to improve?
â
After going going through the data in the previous task, summarize your findings to know where you have opportunities to improve.
â
Example:
- 100% of keywords have a Quality Score below 7.
â - 94% of keywords are rated as âBelow Averageâ for landing page experience.
â - 45% have âAbove Averageâ ad relevance.
â - 100% have âBelow Averageâ expected CTR.Â
â
âOptimization strategies you can adopt to improve your Quality Score:
ââ
- Improve Landing Page Experience:
â- Ensure pages are fast, relevant, and mobile-friendly
â - Align ad copy with landing page content for a seamless message match.
- Ensure pages are fast, relevant, and mobile-friendly
- Refine Ad Relevance
â- Group keywords into tightly themed ad groups.
â - Write ads tailored to the specific intent of each group.
- Group keywords into tightly themed ad groups.
- Boost Expected CTR
â- Test compelling ad headlines and descriptions.
â - Use ad extensions to enhance visibility and clickability.
â
- Test compelling ad headlines and descriptions.
I hope you received a ton of value from this Google Ads Audit guide.
â
If you have any questions, feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn.Â
âFrom Clicks to Conversions: Master Google Ads for B2B đĽ
â
â
If you want to become a Google Ads pro, check out our free B2B Google Ads courses, where you'll learn how to launch, optimize, and scale your campaigns to drive pipeline and revenue.
â

Here's what you'll learn in each course:
âď¸ B2B Google Ads 101 - How to Launch Dangerously Effective Campaigns for Beginners
- The Googleverse: The Game You're Playing & How To Win
- Measurement: How to Make Sure You're Profitable
- Targeting: How to Show Up For the Right Searcher
- Planning: Putting It All Together
đŻ Google Ads 102 - How to Clicks Into Profit
- Visibility: How To Find the Hole Sucking Profits
- Workflows: How to Optimize On a Daily, Weekly, Monthly & Quarterly Basis
- Experimentation: How to Test & Automate Profitability
- Troubleshooting: How To Solve Inevitable Problems
đ Google Ads 103 - How to Scale Google Ads For Advanced Advertisers
- Methodology: How to Vertically Scale Google Ads From A-Z
- Campaigns: Scaling Horizontally Through Campaign Themes
- Channels: Scaling Outside of Paid Search
â
âClick Here to Join 1,000+ B2B Marketers Today and start leveling up your advertising skill set.
â
Takes < 90 seconds to sign up (seriously we timed it đ)
âPeople Also Askâ
â
How can a Google Ads audit improve my campaign performance?
â
- A Google Ads audit can significantly enhance your campaign performance by identifying inefficiencies and areas for optimization within your account.Â
â
âHow often should I conduct a Google Ads audit?
â
- It is recommended to conduct a Google Ads audit at least once every quarter. For accounts with significant spending or those in highly competitive industries, more frequent audits may be beneficial to stay ahead of competitors and efficiently manage advertising spend.
â
âWhat are the key components of a Google Ads audit?
â
- Budget Allocation: Analyzing how the budget is distributed across various channels and campaigns to identify opportunities for reallocation.
â - Campaign Themes: Reviewing the balance between branded, non-branded, and competitive campaigns to ensure optimal allocation for reaching new customers.
â - Device Usage: Evaluating performance across devices (mobile, computer, tablet, TV) to tailor strategies for each device type.
â - Match Types: Assessing the use of exact, phrase, and broad match types in campaigns to ensure efficient targeting.
â - Quality Score: Examining the quality score of keywords, focusing on ad relevance, landing page experience, and expected CTR to identify areas for improvement.
â - Visibility Metrics: Analyzing impression share and losses due to rank and budget to optimize bid strategies and campaign visibility.
â
How often should I perform a Google Ads audit?
Itâs recommended to conduct a comprehensive audit at least quarterly. However, for high-spending accounts or during periods of significant change (e.g., new product launches or market shifts), more frequent audits may be beneficial.
â
Can I perform a Google Ads audit myself, or should I hire a professional?
While self-auditing is possible, hiring a professional can provide deeper insights and a fresh perspective. Professionals are often equipped with advanced tools and expertise to identify issues that might be overlooked otherwise.
â
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Other Articles You May Enjoy.

10 Tips to Make Google Ads Work for Your B2B SaaS Company
Running Google Ads today isnât the same as running Google Ads in 2015.Â
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What years ago was a winning strategy no longer is, and will only lead to headaches, poor leads, and wasted spend.Â
â
Many marketers have already abandoned Google entirely, claiming that it doesnât work anymore or itâs a waste of money â but this, in my experience, isnât true.Â
â
Over the past few years, Iâve helped B2B SaaS companies such as Dreamdata, Airtame, and Templafy drive millions in revenue through Google Ads, and have developed a repeatable strategy to maximize performance.Â
â
Iâll be sharing my tips for success below đ
â
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Tip#1: Set up quality conversion tracking
- Tip #2: Consolidate your campaigns and ad groups
- Tip #3: Focus on exclusions
- Tip #4: Create fast and relevant landing pages
- Tip #5: Leverage smart bidding
- Tip #6: Decrease the amount of RSAs per ad groupÂ
- Tip #7: Pin you headlines
- Tip #8: Donât forget about device adjustments
- Tip #9: Figure out whether you should bid on your own brand or not
- Tip #10: Separate Brand and Non-Brand in your reporting
- Bonus tip: Dive deeper into your performance by country
Tip #1: Set up quality conversion tracking
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Many companies are simply tracking form submits, without paying attention to lead quality. This makes optimization challenging, both for the performance marketer managing the account and for the Google Ads algorithm.Â
â
To improve performance, make sure you send all the lifecycle stages from your CRM back into the Google Ads platform â this might look like MQLs, SALs, opportunities, etc. â and assign higher values to higher value conversions, so that Googleâs algorithm understands what to optimize for.Â
â
If youâre using HubSpot as a CRM, this process will be very simple, as your Click IDs will automatically be captured without requiring a manual setup.Â
â
If youâre using a different CRM, youâll need to manually push your click IDs into your CRM using hidden fields â this process might seem complicated, but you should be able to find a marketing operations specialist on Upwork that can help you with the initial setup.Â
Tip #2: Consolidate your campaigns and ad groups
â
In the past, when exact match was still exact, SKAGs (single keyword ad groups) made sense.Â
â
By including one keyword per ad group and using that keyword in the ad and landing page copy, you could improve your overall quality score.Â
â
Now that exact match is a lot less exact, this approach doesnât make sense anymore.Â
â
These days, consolidation is the way to win â by grouping relevant keywords into the same ad group, we give the Google Ads algorithm more data points to make optimizations.Â
Tip #3: Focus on exclusions
â
With exact match being less exact, exclusions are now more important than inclusions.Â
â
In other words, instead of trying to come up with hundreds of keywords to include in your campaigns, itâs better to spend your time excluding hundreds of irrelevant keywords.Â
â
For example, maybe you want to show up for the keyword customer journey tracking, but notice in your search terms report that youâre consistently showing up for the term customer journey mapping, which isnât relevant to your core offering. By excluding different variations of customer journey mapping, youâll be able to improve your overall targeting and get in front of more relevant prospects.Â
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Pro tip: In the Google Ads reporting section, you can easily create a search terms report and schedule it to be emailed to you on a weekly basis. This will allow you to be more proactive about making exclusions in your account.Â
Tip #4: Create fast and relevant landing pages
â
Landing pages are one of the most overlooked aspects of Google Ads performance.Â
â
If they arenât loading quickly, Google will lower your quality score and it will be nearly impossible to get in front of your prospects. Before launching any campaign, double check that your landing pages are loading quickly on both mobile and desktop devices.Â
â
Next, make sure your landing page is as closely related as possible to the keywords in your ad group. For a product analytics ad group, youâd want your landing page to focus on product analytics. For a marketing analytics ad group, youâd want your landing page to focus on marketing analytics.
â
Take a look at the customized landing pages below:
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This message match will improve your quality score and will also improve the relevance for your prospects, leading to better performance.Â
â
I know that creating new landing pages can be a heavy lift, especially if you have a small team. If this is the case, I recommend duplicating an existing landing page and simply modifying the hero section. Once you start seeing some initial traction from this simple landing page, you can put in the extra effort to create a fully customized experience.Â
â
Pro tip: To check the speed of your landing pages, you can use a free tool such as PageSpeed Insights.Â
Tip #5: Leverage Smart Bidding
â
Sometimes, smart bidding doesnât make sense. For example, if youâre starting a new campaign and have zero conversions, itâs a better idea to start with manual CPC or maximize clicks with a bid cap.Â
â
However, once you have 10+ conversions per campaign, youâll typically see better performance if you switch over to smart bidding and let Google optimize for you.Â
â

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This wasnât always the case â in the past, Googleâs algorithm was much less sophisticated, and you were better off trying to control every single bid adjustment.Â
â
But these days, youâll usually see more traffic and an increase in conversions by letting go of control, as long as youâre feeding Google high quality signals from your CRM.Â
â
As with everything in marketing, there are exceptions, and there are instances where youâll switch to smart bidding and your CPCs will skyrocket đ¨
â
If this happens, consider testing a portfolio bidding strategy with a target CPA and a bid cap â this will mimic max conversions bidding while giving you more control over the cost per click.Â
Tip #6: Decrease the amount of RSAs per ad group
â
Most people think that having more responsive search ads = more variations for Google = better performance.Â
â
But the opposite is actually true.Â
â
Letâs say you create 3 RSAs, and have 15 headlines per ad. This means that Google will have to test 45 different headlines until it finds a winning combination, which could take years đ
â
If you only include 1 RSA per ad group (maximum two), your headlines will be tested much faster and Google will be able to find a winning combination more easily, minimizing wasted spend and improving overall results.Â
â
Pro tip: If you have a small budget, you might want to take things a step further, and test 6-9 headlines instead of 15. This way, Google will be able to test all the headlines in a matter of weeks (not years).Â
Tip #7: Pin your headlines
â
Thereâs still a lot of debate around pinning vs not pinning headlines.Â
â
Some people say that pinning is a bad idea, since it will negatively impact your ad strength, but ultimately, Googleâs ad strength has no bearing on performance.Â
â
Iâve seen more success with pinning because it makes your headlines more legible â if your ads are clear and searchers have a better understanding of what your company does, youâll see an improvement in performance.Â
â
If your headlines are redundant â as often happens with unpinned headlines, which leads to words like Google Ads agency and Google Ads consultant being next to each other â prospects are less likely to trust you, and much less likely to click.Â
â
Hereâs the exact formula that I like to follow for my headlines:
â
Headline 1: Include your target keyword to maximize relevance
â
Headline 2: Include unique selling points or social proof
â
Headline 3: Include your company name or a relevant CTA
â

â
For each headline, I like to create 2-3 variations that Google can test.Â
â
Pro tip: Spend most of your time crafting headlines 1 and 2. Headline 3 is much less important these days, as Google rarely displays it in the SERP.Â
Tip #8: Donât forget about device adjustments
â
Oftentimes, certain devices will significantly outperform others.Â
â
For example, if you see that 20% of your spend and 90% of your conversions are happening on desktop, you might want to add a negative bid adjustment to mobile devices or tablets, in order to increase the budget allocated to desktop.Â
â

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You could argue that mobile impressions are still valuable, and that decreasing spend on mobile could negatively impact performance if people are researching on their phones and then converting on desktop, but based on my experience, itâs best to work with the data thatâs available to you â if a certain device is converting at a higher rate, I would recommend adding negative bid adjustments to the other devices.Â
Tip #9: Figure out whether you should bid on your own brand or not
â
Running brand campaigns vs not running them at all is a controversial topic.Â
â
Some people say that the impact of brand campaigns is minimal â prospects were already looking for you and may have converted organically â and that they simply exist to inflate performance marketing metrics.Â
â
However, in my experience, this isnât the case, and it usually is a good idea to run brand campaigns to protect your brand, especially if competitors are bidding on your company name.Â
â
Back when I was working at Momondo, a B2C company, we were driving a ton of revenue from competitive campaigns, bidding on our competitor, Kayak, who wasnât running brand campaigns to protect themselves.Â
â
Now, you might be thinking: sure, thatâs B2C, but in B2B, especially enterprise B2B, you probably wonât change the course of a deal with a single ad.Â
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But from what Iâve seen with my B2B clients, this isnât true â my clients have driven a significant amount of revenue by bidding on competitor terms, which validates that bidding on your own terms to protect yourself is a good idea.Â
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Check out the example from Mixpanel below. If they didnât bid on their own brand name, competitors like Pendo and Heap might end up stealing some of their prospects.Â
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If youâre undecided about whether you should run brand campaigns or not, you can run a holdout study.Â
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Stop running brand campaigns in a specific region â maybe start with one of your less important regions â and see if the amount of demos or trials goes down. If it does, you can assume that youâre losing out on pipeline and revenue by not bidding on your own terms.Â
Tip #10: Separate Brand and Non-Brand in your reporting
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Brand and non-brand campaigns are completely different.Â
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Brand campaigns are defensive. Someone already found out about your brand through other marketing efforts, and theyâre looking for you specifically â youâre bidding on your own name in order to protect your brand from competitors trying to steal your traffic.Â
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On the other hand, non-brand campaigns are offensive. Youâre trying to show up for relevant solutions that your prospects might be looking for, and youâre trying to drive interest from a colder audience.Â
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In other words, getting a conversion on a non-brand campaign is significantly more challenging than driving a conversion on a brand campaign; you need to separate these campaign types in your reporting to truly understand whatâs working.Â
Bonus tip: Dive deeper into your performance by country
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Most companies and ad agencies tend to look at performance by region, but completely ignore performance by country, which results in inefficient spending.Â
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For example, if youâre targeting France, Italy, Spain, DACH, Nordics, and the UK in the same campaign, if you drill down and analyze performance by country, you might realize that all your spend is going to the southern European countries, which typically have more affordable CPCs.Â
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And if you look further down the funnel, you might see that Spain, DACH, and Nordics are generating a lot of form submissions, but that all your pipeline is actually coming from the UK.Â
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Ultimately, you want to ask yourself:Â
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1. Are any countries cannibalizing my spend and do they need to be separated into different campaigns?
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2. Are there countries that arenât generating any form submissions that we might want to pause?
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3. Are there countries that are generating submissions but never convert into pipeline that we might want to invest less money in?
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If you ask yourself these questions consistently, youâll be in a much better position than 99% of companies.
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Hope you found this article helpful!Â
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If youâre looking to learn more about Google Ads, check out these free Google Ads courses, that will teach you how to launch, optimize, and scale Google Ads campaigns effectively.Â
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And if you have any questions about Google Ads or paid media in general, feel free to reach out on LinkedIn.Â

10 Unorthodox Tips to Maximize the Impact of Your LinkedIn Ad Campaigns
If youâre a marketer with some paid media experience, youâve likely heard the same LinkedIn Ads advice many times: disable audience expansion, turn off the LinkedIn audience network, use manual bidding, etc.Â
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This is all great advice, but following it doesnât guarantee success â as the LinkedIn Ads market becomes increasingly saturated, it takes a more advanced approach to be successful.
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Below, Iâll be sharing some less common strategies that my LinkedIn Ads agency has used to generate millions in revenue, and that you can implement to take your LinkedIn Ads performance to the next level. Â
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TABLEÂ OFÂ CONTENTS
- Tip #1: Leverage the LinkedIn Insight Tag
- Tip #2: Implement a solid paid search strategy
- Tip #3: Review the intent of your search terms on Google
- Tip #4: Use video
- Tip #5: Communicate with your sales team
- Tip #6: Have a monthly and quarterly maintenance plan
- Tip #7: Experiment with organic content
- Tip #8: Use thought leader ads
- Tip #9: Leverage ad scheduling
- Tip #10: Use LinkedIn Sales Navigator to connect with your ICP
- Conclusion
Tip #1: Leverage the LinkedIn Insight Tag
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This might sound silly, but I think itâs important to say it: Make sure youâre leveraging the LinkedIn Insight Tag to its full potential.Â
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Iâve audited so many accounts where the insight tag isnât installed and all the spend is going to cold audiences, and Iâve also seen accounts where the tag is installed, but the right audiences havenât been set up.Â
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As soon as you create your account, set up your 30, 90, and 180-day website visits remarketing audiences â these audiences are extremely high value and arenât retroactive.Â
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In other words, if you set them up 6 months after creating your account, youâll miss out on 6 months of website traffic that you could retarget đ˘

If you havenât installed the insight tag already, check out this tutorial.
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And for a full breakdown of the remarketing audiences you can create in LinkedIn Campaign Manager, take a look at this comprehensive guide.Â
Tip #2: Implement a solid paid search strategy
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One of the best ways to improve your LinkedIn Ads results is to implement a solid paid search strategy â this could be Google Ads, Bing, or another paid listing.Â
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Although LinkedInâs targeting capabilities are incredible, youâre typically reaching a colder audience that isnât actively searching for your solution, and have to take them from unaware to aware before driving conversions, which means longer sales cycles.Â
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Meanwhile, with paid search, you can target people who are looking for your exact solution or researching the pain points you solve and shopping for vendors/solutions.Â
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By running search ads and then retargeting with LinkedIn Ads, you can stay in front of in-market, warm audiences that are already problem and brand-aware, and significantly shorten your sales cycle. You can even qualify this in-market search traffic by layering in LinkedInâs demographic and firmographic targeting filters on top of your warm website traffic to only retarget high-fit prospects.Â
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Pro tip: If youâre investing a lot of money in paid search (30K+/month), you might be able to create a custom LinkedIn Ads remarketing audience with the UTM source âpaid_searchâ, or âcpcâ, or âgoogleâ. This way, youâll only retarget high-intent prospects who have already clicked on your search campaigns.Â

Tip #3: Review the intent of your search terms on Google
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Thereâs no point in running search campaigns if youâre not getting in front of your ICP.
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If youâre a performance marketer working at an agency, make sure you communicate with in-house marketers to confirm youâre showing up for the right search terms â their feedback is essential, because they know their business and ICP better than you do.Â
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To make things simple, send the team a search terms report bi-weekly or monthly, and ask for feedback on what to exclude.Â
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By doing this, youâll improve the quality of your Google Ads traffic, and also significantly improve the quality of your LinkedIn Ads remarketing audiences.Â
Tip #4: Use video
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Video is one of the most impactful formats on LinkedIn, as it allows you to build trust, communicate your value, and showcase your personality more effectively than images.Â
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If you work at a service-based company, you can steal the exact strategy I use at my agency:
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1. Target your cold audience with videos that clearly describe what you do and what problems you solve â these videos donât have to be super exciting, but they do have to be relevant to the right audience and weed out people who arenât in your ICP.Â
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2. In remarketing, use clips of yourself speaking on well-known podcasts â this will help you build more credibility with your ICP and make them more likely to reach out.Â

If youâre selling a product instead of a service, run video ads showcasing how leaders in your industry use your product to solve their problems â this third-party validation is extremely powerful and has helped my SaaS clients generate millions in revenue over the past few years.Â
Tip #5: Communicate with your sales team
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Thereâs no point in having great CPCs, CTRs, and CPLs if the sales team has no interest in working with your leads.Â
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At minimum, Iâd recommend meeting with your sales team once a month to go over your lead quality â these conversations will help you refine your targeting and exclusions, and minimize the amount of ad dollars being wasted.Â
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In addition to this monthly check-in, you can go one step further and set up automated lead alerts in Slack (using Zapier). When these alerts come in, your sales team can react â thumbs up for a good lead and thumbs down for a bad one â and you can use these reactions to get real-time feedback and make quick pivots in targeting.Â
Tip #6: Have a monthly and quarterly maintenance plan
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This might seem a bit boring, but itâs important to have a monthly and quarterly maintenance plan for your account â the same way you have a maintenance plan for your car or for your health.Â
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For example, if you launched new video campaigns, did you create video view audiences and add them to your remarketing campaigns? Is your insight tag still active and picking up website traffic? Is your ad budget staying on LinkedIn and not being wasted on the LinkedIn audience network? Are your conversion events still functional, or do you have to update them due to changes in your website URLs?Â
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Without these consistent checks, things can easily go awry and you can waste thousands or even millions of dollars.Â
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Hereâs the exact maintenance checklist that we use with our clients â feel free to make a copy and use it for your own accounts.Â
Tip #7: Experiment with organic content
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If a piece of content performs well organically, it will most likely also perform well as an ad.Â
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Use organic social media as a testing ground â test different pain points, messages, formats, and styles, on both personal accounts and your company page, and make note of whatâs attracting meaningful DMs and high-quality leads.Â
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Once your posts have received a solid amount of engagement, you can boost them to your ICP and turn them into evergreen assets that will continue to generate inbound leads with minimal effort.Â
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By maximizing distribution via paid, youâll improve your organic performance, and by testing new concepts via organic social, youâll improve the ROI on your paid media efforts.Â
Tip #8: Use thought leader ads
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Posts from thought leaders will consistently outperform ads from company pages. This is partially due to a mindset shift â when we post from our personal pages our reputation is on the line, so we try to be less promotional and more helpful.Â
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That being said, even if you promote the same exact post from a company page vs a thought leaderâs page, the thought leader ad will typically perform better â this confirms that the saying is true: people want to buy from people, not companies.Â
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By running thought leader ads, you can expect to see:Â
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1. Increased engagements, which will allow you to build your remarketing audiences more quickly
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2. An increase in LinkedIn DMs from qualified prospects
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3. A spike in organic search traffic
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4. An incremental lift in conversions (my agency saw a 15-20% increase)

Pro tip: Experiment with different types of thought leader ads (videos, images, text, custom graphics) and double down on whatever works best.Â
Tip #9: Leverage ad scheduling
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LinkedIn Ads start running on UTC time (8 p.m. EST), which means that a lot of companies are spending their money at nighttime and run out of budget by 5 or 6 a.m. â this leads to poor performance, as prospects are typically not as receptive to ads at these hours.Â
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With ad scheduling, you can ensure that your ads are showing up at the right times.Â
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For my agency, I like to run ads from 5 a.m. to 2 p.m. EST, pause in the afternoons, and restart in the evenings. For you, this schedule might look a bit different, based on when your ICP is most active.Â
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In addition to scheduling, it can also be interesting to experiment with ad rotation, especially if youâre a smaller company with limited budget.Â
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For example, you could run 3 campaigns on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, and 3 different campaigns on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday.Â
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Typically, to run 6 campaigns youâd need a budget of at least $60/day (due to LinkedInâs $10/day per campaign minimum), but with ad rotation, youâd only need $30/day â in other words, your budget would go a longer way and youâd be able to reach more audiences.Â
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Ad scheduling and rotation may not be necessary if you have a massive budget and are targeting a broad audience, but it can make a huge difference if youâre spending under $30K/month and want to make the most of your budget.Â
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To get started with ad scheduling and ad rotation, you can use DemandSense, a tool that we developed at my agency.
Tip #10: Use LinkedIn Sales Navigator to connect with your ICP
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If youâre experimenting with LinkedIn organic, paid, and thought leader ads, itâs a great idea to connect with your LinkedIn profile visitors to maximize the impact of your efforts.Â
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Hereâs exactly how you can do this:
1. Set up a filter in LinkedIn Sales Navigator for people who have visited your profile, arenât connected with you (2nd or 3rd degree connections), and fit your ICP criteria (right company size + seniority level)
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2. Send connection requests to these people on a weekly basis â in my experience, itâs best to send blank connection requests to avoid coming across as a salesperson
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3. Once your connection request has been accepted, send a simple intro message such as: Hey X, saw you checked out my profile and thought it would be good to connect. If you ever have any questions about LinkedIn Ads or want to talk about B2B marketing, let me know. Here's the link to some resources that people commonly ask me for: [insert valuable link]
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With this approach, I typically see about a 60% acceptance rate, and I always get a lot of follow up questions, such as: Do you work for X company? Have you experienced X problem?Â
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Plus, a lot of prospects end up visiting my company website, which means that I can stay in front of them for a longer period of time, since they get pulled into my LinkedIn remarketing audience.Â
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Pro tip: You can start by doing this process manually with LinkedIn Sales Navigator, but you can also automate and simplify the process by using a tool like PhantomBuster.Â
Conclusion
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Even if youâre doing everything right on LinkedIn â communicating with sales, using video, experimenting with organic social, amplifying your thought leadership, etc. â donât expect to see tons of demos and opportunities right away.Â
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Facebook Ads, Google Ads, and email are very transactional channels, but LinkedIn Ads are more similar to SEO â it takes time to see results but your efforts will pay dividends down the road.Â
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Hope you found this article helpful!
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âFeel free to reach out with any questions about LinkedIn Ads or paid media.Â

10 Tips to Drive Pipeline Acceleration with Paid Media
Most B2B SaaS companies have a two-dimensional approach to paid media: prospecting campaigns to generate awareness, remarketing campaigns to capture demand.Â
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This isn't necessarily wrong, but there are so many more possibilities, such as moving existing open deals faster to close â this is called pipeline acceleration.
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As a Demand Marketing Manager at Unmuted, I've helped my B2B SaaS clients drive revenue through pipeline acceleration.
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Here are my 10 tips on how to make this playbook work for you đ
ââ
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Tip #1: Communicate the goal to your internal stakeholders
- Tip #2: Start targeting your open opportunities with LinkedIn Ads
- Tip #3: Tailor your messaging to different personas
- Tip #4: Measure the impact of your campaigns
- Tip #5: Donât forget to exclude your customers
- Tip #6: Apply the same playbook to upsells and cross-sells
- Tip #7: Incorporate different channels into the mix
- Tip #8: Use thought leader ads
- Tip #9: Leverage signals to understand how deals are progressing
- Tip #10: Use insights from closed lost campaigns to tweak your strategy
Tip #1: Communicate the goal to your internal stakeholders
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Before running any pipeline acceleration campaigns, make sure your executive team understands that the goal is NOT to drive new opportunities, but to increase the rate (and speed) at which open opportunities turn into revenue.Â
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This might seem basic, but without this alignment, your campaigns may be considered a failure and paused prematurely, even if theyâre extremely successful.Â

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Tip #2: Start targeting your open opportunities with LinkedIn Ads
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Once you have buy-in from internal stakeholders, I recommend getting started with LinkedIn Ads.Â
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For your targeting, you can create a dynamic list of open opportunities in HubSpot and connect it to LinkedIn Campaign Manager. And if youâre using another CRM, such as Salesforce, you can send your open opportunities to LinkedIn Campaign Manager via Zapier.Â
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On top of this company list of open opportunities, youâll want to layer on job titles within your DMU (decision-making unit) â these are all the people that may be involved in sales conversations.Â
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For example, if youâre selling an attribution tool, you might want to reach RevOps, Marketing, Sales, and Business Development job titles at your target accounts.Â
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Marketing job titles (VP of Marketing, Head of Demand Gen, Chief Marketing Officer) will likely push the deal forward, but other departments will need to sign off in order for a purchase to be made. By building trust within all these key departments, youâll increase the likelihood of a deal moving over the finish line.Â
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Pro tip: If you donât have a massive list of open opportunities, you may not be able to layer on job titles, as your audience size will be too small. If you run into this issue, try using job function targeting instead.
â
Tip #3: Tailor your messaging to different personas
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If you have a large enough audience size to do so, consider creating different campaigns for each persona within your DMU (decision-making unit). For example:Â
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Campaign 1: Open opportunity companies + Marketing job titles
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Campaign 2: Open opportunity companies + Finance job titles
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Campaign 3: Open opportunity companies + Sales job titles
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By separating these different personas into different campaigns, you can create messaging thatâs more relevant to each department â marketing ads could focus on measurement, finance ads could focus on revenue, sales ads could focus on closing more deals, etc.Â
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With more tailored messaging, your ads are more likely to resonate and leave an impression on different departments.Â
Tip #4: Measure the impact of your campaigns
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Once your campaigns are live, you need a way to measure (and prove) that theyâre working.Â
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Hereâs how I recommend doing it:
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1. When a deal closes, go to the Companies tab in LinkedIn Campaign Manager and see how many impressions (and engagements) the Closed Won company received. If you see a lot of impressions and engagements, itâs safe to assume that your ads played a role in the eventual conversion.Â
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2. To take things up a level, consider using a tool like Fibbler, which sends ad impressions on a company level back into HubSpot â this will allow both your marketing and sales team to see how many ads companies saw before making a purchase.Â
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3. If you have a larger budget, consider investing in a tool like Dreamdata or HockeyStack, which will provide more details on the incremental lift driven by your pipeline acceleration campaigns.Â
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4. For a true A/B test, manually split your open opportunities into two different groups, and expose only one of them to the pipeline acceleration ads. Are the exposed companies closing faster and at a higher rate?Â
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5. To further understand the impact of your campaigns, ask the POC of your new customers if they happened to see your ads, and if those ads influenced their decision in any capacity.Â
Tip #5: Donât forget to exclude your customers
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This is simple, but extremely important: Donât forget to exclude new customers from your pipeline acceleration campaigns.Â
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If your customers continue seeing ads from your company during their onboarding phase, you may end up annoying them, in addition to throwing money down the drain.Â
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Making these exclusions is straightforward: when a company transitions from opportunity to closed won in HubSpot, they should be added to a new dynamic list of customers, which can be connected to LinkedIn Campaign Manager and added as an exclusion list in your pipeline acceleration campaigns.Â
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If youâre using a different CRM, the process is similar, youâll just have to make the connection through Zapier instead.Â
Tip #6: Apply the same playbook to upsells and cross-sells
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Once this playbook is working well for pipeline acceleration, you can apply it (with a few modifications) to upsells and cross-sells.Â
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For example, if you launch a new product, you could target a list of all your existing customers highlighting its capabilities, and outlining how it will enhance their existing workflows. Check out an example from ZoomInfo below:Â
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The possibilities are endless once you understand the fundamentals of LinkedInâs targeting â any lifecycle stage can be targeted with relevant content and offers.Â
Tip #7: Incorporate different channels into the mix
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Once LinkedIn Ads are working well for you, consider adding other channels and strategies into the mix to create a sense of omnipresence.Â
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For example, maybe you could test Meta or Reddit retargeting ads (depending on where your audience spends the most time).Â
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Itâs also a great idea to leverage LinkedIn organic, to expand your reach beyond paid ads.Â
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Your Head of Sales, Chief Commercial Officer, members of your marketing team, and other employees who are consistently posting on LinkedIn can connect with people within the DMU (Decision-making unit) at your open opportunity companies â this way, theyâll be seeing content from your organization constantly, and youâll be top of mind throughout the entire sales process.Â
Tip #8: Use thought leader ads
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To maximize the impact of your ads, you ideally want your team to be posting relevant content on LinkedIn, and you can take things to the next level by running thought leader ads, boosting the top performing posts from your team members to your list of open opportunities.Â
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For example, if your Head of Sales makes a post related to the capabilities of your product and it goes viral, you can put some ad spend behind this post, targeting all your open opps â this will serve as great social proof, reassuring members of the DMU that working with your company is the right decision.Â
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The added benefit of thought leader ads is that they donât look like ads at all, and typically drive more interest and engagement than standard company ads.Â
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Hereâs a good example from Sendoso:
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Tip #9: Leverage signals to understand how deals are progressing
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To understand how deals are progressing, take a look at the signals that are available to you.Â
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Is a specific company seeing your ads a lot? Are they engaging frequently? Are they going a step further and visiting your website? (you can easily see this using a tool like Warmly, LeadInfo, or Leadfeeder)
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If youâre in the US and have access to person-level identification tools, you can even see some of the people that are visiting your site. For example, if the CFO, CMO, and CTO are all visiting your website, you can infer that the deal is progressing rapidly and chances of a purchase are high.Â
Tip #10: Use insights from closed lost campaigns to tweak your strategy
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Keep a close eye on closed lost deals and look for recurring patterns.Â
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Are you consistently losing on pricing, timing, or to a specific competitor?Â
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This is great intel for messaging in future pipeline acceleration campaigns â if you can get ahead of potential objections, the likelihood of an opportunity closing is significantly greater.Â
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For example, letâs say youâre reviewing a year of data and notice that you lost most of your deals to a specific competitor.Â
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In your future pipeline acceleration campaigns, you might want to run competitive ads, highlighting the benefits of choosing your product. This might help prospects who are thinking of working with your competitor choose to work with your company instead. Â
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Hereâs a great example from Cognism:Â
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Hope you found this article helpful!
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ââFeel free to reach out on LinkedIn with any questions about pipeline acceleration, paid media strategy, or B2B marketing.Â

How to Scale Outside of Paid Search with YouTube Ads & Demand Gen Campaigns for B2B SaaS
Hey there, if youâre a B2B marketer looking to scale your Google Ads campaigns, youâre in the right place.
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In this article, Iâll walk you through how to effectively use YouTube Ads and Google Demand Generation (previously known as Discovery) campaigns to scale beyond paid search and stay top of mind while keeping costs low.
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So letâs dive in! đ
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Why You Need to Scale Beyond Paid Search
- How to Leverage Custom Audiences
- How to Stay Omnipresent with Remarketing
- From Clicks to Conversions: Master Google Ads for B2B
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Why You Need to Scale Beyond Paid Search
Search campaigns are fantastic for capturing high-intent users, but eventually youâll hit a wall. Why? Thereâs only so much traffic coming from people searching for your keywords (especially in B2B).
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As I always say, Google Ads is a blessing and a curse. Youâre blessed with intent but cursed with scale.Â
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So to break through, itâs necessary to explore other types of Google Ads campaigns.

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Video and Demand Gen campaigns, in particular, are great for that because they let you reach a broader audience on YouTube, Gmail, and Discover at a fraction of the cost per click youâd pay for high-intent search terms.
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For example, instead of paying $100 per click for âCRM softwareâ, you could pay just $0.05 per view on YouTube, targeting the same audience.
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Itâs a game-changer for SaaS companies looking to grow.
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How to Leverage Custom Audiences
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You may ask how you can get LinkedIn-like targeting with YouTube Ads and Demand Gen campaigns since we canât rely on job titles or target specific companies.
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The secret to successful prospecting with these channels lies in custom audiences.
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These are people actively searching for your top-performing keywords, competitors, or industry terms.
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Custom segments let you target users based on search behavior, getting your brand in front of highly relevant prospects at just the right time.
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Hereâs how you can create custom segments on Google Ads:
- Go to âToolsâ on the left-hand side of your Google Ads manager
- Click to expand the âShared libraryâ option and go to âAudience Managerâ
- Click on the âCustom segmentsâ option
- Click on the plus sign to create a new custom segment
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Below is a custom segment I created to target people with any interest or purchase intentions in B2B-related terms and tools and how many impressions I can get per week with this segment.
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I also recommend creating custom segments with the following:
- Relevant B2B Apps (especially if they integrate with your product)
- Your competitors
- Relevant B2B Brands
- Your high-converting paid search keywords
- Irrelevant B2C Interests/Searches for exclusion if needed
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As I pointed out, by using these custom audiences, you can target people who have searched specific terms on Google through Demand Gen or YouTube campaigns. Instead of paying a premium cost for search clicks, youâre reaching them on different platforms for dramatically less.
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If you want to learn more about YouTube costs check out this benchmark data we pulled from $1,041,988 in ad spend from our own B2B SaaS clients.
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Staying Omnipresent with Remarketing
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In B2B marketing, sales cycles can range from months to years, so another great option to leverage Video and Demand Generation campaigns on Google Ads is using remarketing audiences to stay top of mind with your prospects.
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Running remarketing campaigns on YouTube, Gmail, Discovery and Google Display allows you to re-engage visitors whoâve interacted with your site or content.
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For example, you can create specific segments based on user activity, such as visiting your pricing page, blog, case studies, or downloading a resource.
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Here are some of the remarketing segments I recommend most for B2B SaaS companies:
- Pricing Page Visits
- Product Page Visits
- Prospects that downloaded a resource
- Prospects that attended webinars or in-person events (custom list)
- Demo Page Visits (excluding users that filled out the form)
- Trials (for PLG companies)
- Case Study Visits
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If youâre running LinkedIn Ads and confident in your audience targeting, you can also steal that LinkedIn Ads traffic by remarketing them on Google đĽ
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To do that, you just need to build a retargeting audience using utm_source=linkedin or whatever utm_source you use for your LinkedIn Ad campaigns.Â
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This will let you get in front of the same users on YouTube, Gmail, Discovery, and Display for a fraction of the cost youâre paying on LinkedIn. đ¤
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Check out our free LinkedIn Ads courses to master this channel:
- B2B LinkedIn Ads 101: The Ultimate Crash Course for New LinkedIn Advertisers
- B2B LinkedIn Ads 102: The Blueprint for LinkedIn Ads Optimization
- B2B LinkedIn Ads 103: Advanced Scaling Strategies From $25M in Ad Spend
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The beautiful thing about remarketing is that it deals with smaller audience sizes and requires less budget, but it keeps you in front of the people who matter most.
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So I highly recommend building a multichannel B2B retargeting strategy to ensure your brand stays visible, nurturing prospects throughout their long decision-making process.
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You can steal my YouTube Remarketing Checklist to ensure you donât forget anything when creating your campaigns.
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Final Words
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Scaling beyond search campaigns, leveraging custom audiences, and using remarketing are your keys to running successful B2B SaaS campaigns on YouTube and Google Demand Generation.
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These strategies let you break free from search constraints, attract new prospects efficiently, and remain top of mind throughout the sales cycle.
If you have any questions, feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn.Â
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From Clicks to Conversions: Master Google Ads for B2B đĽ
If you want to become a Google Ads pro, check out our free B2B Google Ads courses, where you'll learn how to launch, optimize, and scale your campaigns to drive pipeline and revenue.
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Here's what you'll learn in each course:Â
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âď¸ B2B Google Ads 101 - How to Launch Dangerously Effective Campaigns for Beginners
- The Googleverse: The Game You're Playing & How To Win
- Measurement: How to Make Sure You're Profitable
- Targeting: How to Show Up For the Right Searcher
- Planning: Putting It All Together
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đŻ Google Ads 102 - How to Clicks Into Profit
- Visibility: How To Find the Hole Sucking Profits
- Workflows: How to Optimize On a Daily, Weekly, Monthly & Quarterly Basis
- Experimentation: How to Test & Automate Profitability
- Troubleshooting: How To Solve Inevitable Problems
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đ Google Ads 103 - How to Scale Google Ads For Advanced Advertisers
- Methodology: How to Vertically Scale Google Ads From A-Z
- Campaigns: Scaling Horizontally Through Campaign Themes
- Channels: Scaling Outside of Paid Search
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Click Here to Join 1,000+ B2B Marketers Today and start leveling up your advertising skill set.
Takes < 90 seconds to sign up (seriously we timed it đ)
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3 Messaging Mistakes B2B SaaS Companies Make in Their Ads (and How to Fix Them)
Paid ads have the potential to be the biggest revenue driver in your business. Not to mention, they are one of the fastest ways to build brand awareness.Â
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But if you are like most B2B SaaS companies, you probably find that a large portion of ads you run drive a less-than-impressive CTR or an astronomical CPL.Â
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Before you switch strategies or try another platform, we need to look at your ad copy. One study found that 75% of B2B LinkedIn ad creative was ineffective, ranking just one star or less out of five đą
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Here are 3 common mistakes SaaS companies make in their ad messaging. Read on to learn what they are and how you can fix them today.Â
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Mistake #1: Showing the what but not the how
- Mistake #2: Trying to fit too much in one ad
- Mistake #3: Using buzzwords
Mistake #1: Showing the what but not the how  Â
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You need to get specific about the core features of your product.Â
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You might be thinking, well duh! Â
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But you would be surprised at how many ads fail to clearly communicate how their product actually achieves the awesome results that it does.Â
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If you search the LinkedIn ad library, youâll find it awash with ads like this ⤾

And while, yes, everyone wants to make more sales, statements that solely focus on a result, without explaining the how, leave people in the vague zone.
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The mind craves certainty, tangibility and proof. So youâll want to get out of the vague zone and into the land of specificity as quickly as possible.Â
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Hereâs how to fix itÂ
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In our B2B ad agency, we have consistently seen this formula perform again and again.
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1. Hone in on one specific feature
2. Clearly tie it to a very specific outcome
3. Show how the feature actually achieves that outcome
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(Bonus if you combine it with a visual snapshot of this process happening on the platform)
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Letâs take an example.Â
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Imagine you are an analytics company that tracks user behavior on your website.Â
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Your product has a LOT of functions, but it essentially allows marketing teams to understand what users do on your website, so they can improve user experience and ultimately make more sales.Â
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Usually, something like this happens. You simplify the whole process and end up with a headline like âTurn data into dollars.â
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Short and catchy, right?Â
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Maybe. But if you ask the marketing manager reading the ad to explain what theyâre actually getting? They will have no idea.Â
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Try this instead.
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Think about one core feature of your product that customers like.Â
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In this case, it could be tracking when customers drop off during the sales process.
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Focus the whole ad around that feature.Â
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For example, we could say something like âSee when customers drop off, remove obstacles that stop them buying.â
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Ok, you can make it catchier than that.Â
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But this version allows our audience to really understand how the product helps them.
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Combining this with a visual to show what we mean is also a game changer. Here this might look like a simplified snapshot of a tracking dashboard, with a notification that says â462 users dropped off at checkout.â
This ad is now:
⤡ Tangible
⤡ Our audience gets what our product does
⤡ And instead of spelling out the result, we make it easy to make the connection between this feature and making more sales.Â
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Hereâs a real example from one of my clients, a data analytics platform. It hones in on one specific feature that allows you to watch replays of users navigating your platform:

Mistake #2: Trying to fit too much in one ad
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When you work closely on a product, you are acutely aware of ALL its awesome features.Â
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But, that doesnât mean you should mention them all in a single ad.Â
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While you might think everything is important, speaking to too many benefits or features can confuse or overload your audience, ending up something like this ⤾

The more you make your audience work to understand your product, the more likely they wonât remember your ad at all.
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Speaking to one benefit in one ad is typically much more memorable.Â
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The goal of an ad in SaaS isnât usually to make an outright sale â B2B sales processes are far too long and convoluted for that.
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Instead, we want to pique our audienceâs interest just enough to click to learn more.
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They can then dig further into your features on the website or landing page.Â
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Hereâs how to fix itÂ
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So how can you avoid saying too much?Â
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Letâs take an example.
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Imagine you have a marketing automation software that:
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- Automates email campaigns
- Segments audiences
- Includes prebuilt templatesÂ
- Connects to a CRM
- Integrates with tools
- AND has analytics capabilities
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You might be struggling to know what to focus on.Â
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Try this.
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Choose a real-life use case. For example, reviving abandoned cart sales with automated emails.Â
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Instead of listing features, your ad might say something like:Â
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â70% of shoppers abandon their cart. Bring them back with set-and-forget followups you can activate in a few clicks.â
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Not only does this hone in on one easy-to-grasp feature, it also helps your audience imagine implementing and benefiting from the product.
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Hereâs another example from one of my clients, a customer feedback analytics platform. It focuses on the use case of automating feedback tagging:Â

Mistake #3: Using buzzwords
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We know we shouldnât use buzzwords, but still, itâs a constant battle not to let them worm their way into B2B content.Â
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I get it.
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⤡ Everyone else is using them Â
⤡ They are an industry normÂ
⤡ And they neatly encapsulate what we want to express Â
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But ultimately, they are the lazy way out. And they are killing your conversions.
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So the next time you feel the urge to harness, unlock, optimize, revolutionize, supercharge, streamline, or transform in your B2B ads, try this đ
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Do the tangibility test.Â
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- Can your claim be proved right or wrong?Â
- Could you go away and draw it on a piece of paper?
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If the answer is no, keep reworking it until itâs a yes.Â
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Hereâs how to fix itÂ
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Letâs take the headline of this ad ⤾

Could you prove with a yes or no if this company can âstreamline product dropsâ? Erm, Iâm not really even sure what that means.Â
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Could you draw âstreamlining a product dropâ on a notepad? Me neither.Â
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I did some digging and learned that this company offers a platform where brands can run eCommerce launches.Â
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So letâs adapt the headline to something like this.
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âLaunch your new clothing line on a platform that will never crash.â
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Could you prove itâs possible or not to launch products on this platform? Yes.
Could you prove it to be true or false that the platform will never crash? Yes.Â
Could you draw this concept on a piece of paper? I could give it a good shot.Â
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Hereâs an example for one of my clients, where I used conversational and human language over buzzwords to promote a webinar:

Final Thoughts
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Great SaaS ads donât have to be flashy or loaded with buzzwords. They succeed when they:
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- Show how they achieve the outcome
- Focus on a single message at a time
- Use clear, tangible language over jargon
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By avoiding these three common messaging mistakes, youâll not only boost your click-through rates but also connect with your audience in a way that builds trust and drives action.
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Now, go audit your ad copyâwhat changes can you make today?
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Hope you found this article helpful! đ
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Feel free to reach out on LinkedIn with any copywriting questions.Â
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And for more B2B SaaS copywriting tips, check out this article by Eden Bidani.Â
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Free Resources to Build a Full-Funnel Paid Media Program
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If you want to build a full-funnel B2B paid media program, then you should definitely check our free course Building a Paid Media Program: Scale Your B2B SaaS Advertising.Â
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Hereâs what is in for you:
- Module 1: you'll learn the S.C.A.L.E framework for building a paid program.
- Module 2: you'll learn how to create your paid strategy with the five stages.
- Module 3: you'll learn how to measure your paid media program correctly.
- Module 4: you'll learn how to create world-class campaigns from A-Z.
- Module 5: you'll learn how to create an experimentation engine.
- Module 6: you'll learn how to scale with the Scaling Quadrant.
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It doesnât matter if youâre a seasoned B2B advertiser or a complete newbie.
Youâre going to walk away with frameworks and repeatable processes for building a paid media program that scales.
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Click Here to Join 1,000+ B2B Marketers Today and start leveling up your advertising skill set.
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It takes < 90 seconds to sign up (seriously we timed it đ)
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People Also Ask
How can I effectively measure the impact of improved ad messaging on my campaign performance?
Utilize A/B testing to compare different ad copies and analyze metrics like click-through rates (CTR), conversion rates, and cost per acquisition (CPA) to determine which messaging resonates best with your audience.
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What are some strategies to ensure my ad messaging aligns with my target audienceâs pain points and needs?
Conduct thorough market research, including customer surveys and interviews, to gain insights into your audienceâs challenges. Use this information to craft messages that directly address their specific concerns.
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How can I balance creativity and clarity in my ad messaging to effectively communicate my value proposition?
Focus on clear and concise language that highlights the unique benefits of your product. While creativity can capture attention, clarity ensures the message is understood and compelling.
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What role does audience segmentation play in crafting effective ad messages for B2B SaaS products?
Segmenting your audience allows for personalized messaging that speaks directly to the needs of different groups, increasing relevance and engagement. Tailor your ad copy to address the specific pain points of each segment.
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How can I avoid using jargon or buzzwords in my ad messaging while still appearing knowledgeable and credible?
Use straightforward language that clearly explains your productâs benefits. Focus on how your solution solves problems rather than relying on industry jargon, which can alienate or confuse potential customers.
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Behind Firefish Softwareâs Paid Media Strategy
Hey everyone đÂ
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Iâm Campbell Nelson, Marketing Director at Firefish Software, a CRM designed for recruitment agencies.Â
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Over the last 12-18 months, Iâve led Firefish Softwareâs transition from a traditional lead gen strategy to a demand gen approach, which has helped us significantly increase both pipeline and brand awareness.Â
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Iâll be breaking down our entire paid media strategy & sharing my learnings belowđ
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
âBackground
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Last year, we made the transition from lead gen to demand gen for the following reasons:Â
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1. While we were generating a ton of MQLs, our lead to opportunity and opportunity to closed won conversion rates were poor. We hypothesised that by going ungated, we could build more trust and increase conversion rates. Â
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2. New clients acquired through lead gen campaigns had a relatively low LTV and were problematic when it came to stickiness, which seemed to indicate a lack of brand affinity. By switching to a demand gen approach, we believed that we could solve this issue and increase retention further through the lifecycle.Â
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3. In the CRM space, buying cycles are dictated by contract renewals which can sometimes run for up to 4 years, meaning that most prospects are out of market. By shifting to ungated content, our goal was to maximize distribution and increase long-term mental availability, which would be crucial for predictable growth.Â
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4. When attending conferences and expos, a lot of prospects mentioned our blog but had no idea that we were a CRM software â this was indicative of a lack of product awareness. We decided that ungated content would be necessary to distribute our value propositions more widely and be in the consideration set when prospects entered the market.Â
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So far, this shift has been highly successful. Since going ungated and removing lead gen forms, weâve seen a 40% year-on-year increase in opportunities from direct and organic branded search channels. Further down the funnel, weâve seen a 50% increase in closed-won revenue from branded organic search and each quarter we are seeing incremental improvements in our win rates from each demand focussed channel â all associated with increased awareness.Â
âOur Strategy
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Hereâs the full breakdown of the paid media strategy that has led to our successđ
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30% of our LinkedIn budget goes to content. These are typically playbooks and other resources that will help recruiters (key members of the buying committee) become better at their jobs. If everyone in the buying committee trusts us and has an awareness of our value, we know that theyâll champion us and push deals over the finish line.Â
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50% of our budget goes to product ads, aimed at our key decision makers (C-suite, VPs, Directors). These ads are all related to our main value propositions, and they clearly articulate how we can solve their biggest problems.Â
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By consistently highlighting these pain points, we know that weâll be top of mind when decision-makers start actively searching for solutions.Â
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Finally, the remaining 20% of our LinkedIn budget goes to social proof. We show these ads to both champions (recruiters) and decision-makers (VPs and execs) that have entered our remarketing audience, either by visiting our website or engaging with other ads in some capacity.Â
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The goal of these ads is to continue to build trust and increase the likelihood of a conversion.Â
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YouTube
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While most of our spend happens on LinkedIn, we also run YouTube Ads to stay in front of prospects across multiple channels.Â
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All of these ads clearly highlight our value propositions and show exactly how our product works.Â
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To minimize wasted spend, we run these 30-second video ads to our warmest audiences:Â
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1. Remarketing, staying in front of people who have already visited our site
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2. Prospecting, targeting people who have searched our dream product-related keywords on Google (doing this via YouTube is great because we can get in front of high-quality prospects without paying Googleâs insanely high CPCs)
âLessons Learned
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By leading Firefish Softwareâs marketing and implementing this strategy, Iâve learned a lot of important lessons â here are the biggest ones:
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1. Itâs okay to make mistakesÂ
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Youâre not going to get everything right the first time around. Sometimes your message wonât resonate and your ads will flop, and thatâs okay. Marketing is all about failing, learning from the failures, and trying again.Â
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2. Nail down your value propositionÂ
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This is something that so many B2B SaaS companies get wrong đ˘
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In the early days, we were testing a lot of different messages in our ads, but we hadnât clearly outlined our value proposition or the problems we were solving with our product.Â
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Now that weâve clearly outlined our core value props, all our ads highlight them in some capacity. Also, most of our content now relates to these value props as well, so we can easily repurpose it for our ad campaigns.Â
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Ultimately, having alignment across your entire marketing department on overall messaging is essential to maximize your ROI and return on effort.Â
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3. Create a memorable experience
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Itâs so easy to fall into the trap of copying exactly whatâs already being done in your industry.Â
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But by doing this, youâll likely end up with vanilla B2B ads that your prospects wonât remember. I know we definitely fell into this trap, running generic ads with boring âclick hereâ CTAs đĽą
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No matter what type of ads youâre running â product, content, social proof, etc. â the most important question you should ask yourself is:Â
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Are my ads memorable?Â
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If they arenât, prospects probably wonât think of your brand when itâs time to buy.Â
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4. Figure out attribution
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If youâre switching to a demand gen strategy, you need to get good at stakeholder management and bring your CRO/CFO along on the journey â otherwise, they might be alarmed by the sudden decrease in leads.Â
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To prove that your strategy is working, I highly recommend using an attribution tool like Dreamdata or HockeyStack (Dreamdata has a free version that you can get started with) to demonstrate that certain touchpoints are having an impact on pipeline.Â
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In addition to this, itâs a good idea to set up microconversion events, such as engaged visits, to demonstrate that your ICP is finding value in your content.Â
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Finally, make sure youâre also tracking positive comments and mentions of your ads in self-reported attribution â showing these to the leadership team will increase their confidence in your new demand gen approach.
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5. Have fun
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We often forget this in B2B, but marketing is supposed to be fun.Â
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Itâs supposed to be about creativity and testing new ideas, not just measurement and graphs. If youâre having fun, your prospects will take notice, and will likely be more interested in working with you.Â
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Hope you found this article helpful!
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âFeel free to reach out on LinkedIn with any questions about paid media or B2B marketing.Â
â
Free Resources to Build a Full-Funnel Paid Media Program
â
If you want to build a full-funnel B2B paid media program, then you should definitely check our free course Building a Paid Media Program: Scale Your B2B SaaS Advertising.Â
â

Hereâs what is in for you:
- Module 1: you'll learn the S.C.A.L.E framework for building a paid program.
- Module 2: you'll learn how to create your paid strategy with the five stages.
- Module 3: you'll learn how to measure your paid media program correctly.
- Module 4: you'll learn how to create world-class campaigns from A-Z.
- Module 5: you'll learn how to create an experimentation engine.
- Module 6: you'll learn how to scale with the Scaling Quadrant.
â
It doesnât matter if youâre a seasoned B2B advertiser or a complete newbie.
Youâre going to walk away with frameworks and repeatable processes for building a paid media program that scales.
â
Click Here to Join 1,000+ B2B Marketers Today and start leveling up your advertising skill set.
â
It takes < 90 seconds to sign up (seriously we timed it đ)
â
People Also Ask
How can transitioning from a lead generation to a demand generation approach impact the quality of leads and overall customer retention?
Shifting to demand generation focuses on creating awareness and interest, potentially attracting more engaged prospects who have a genuine need for your solution, leading to higher-quality leads and improved customer retention.
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What are the key considerations when deciding to ungate content in a B2B marketing strategy?
Consider the trade-off between lead quantity and quality. Ungating content can enhance trust and reach, but itâs essential to have alternative methods for capturing prospect information and nurturing leads effectively.
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How can a company effectively measure the success of a demand generation strategy compared to traditional lead generation?
Evaluate metrics such as brand awareness, website engagement, lead-to-opportunity conversion rates, and customer lifetime value to assess the effectiveness of demand generation efforts.
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What challenges might arise when shifting from a lead generation to a demand generation model, and how can they be addressed?
Challenges include aligning internal teams, redefining success metrics, and adjusting marketing tactics. Address these by providing training, setting clear goals, and maintaining open communication across departments.
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How can a demand generation approach be tailored to accommodate long buying cycles, such as those influenced by multi-year contracts?
Implement strategies that maintain ongoing engagement with prospects, such as regular content updates, nurturing campaigns, and staying top-of-mind until they are ready to make a purchasing decision.
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