
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.
â

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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.
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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
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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.
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Other Articles You May Enjoy.
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Using the Jobs To Be Done Framework to Maximize Revenue in B2B Ads [+Free Template]
Understanding the Jobs To Be Done framework developed by Tony Ulwick can be confusing and overwhelming because most of the information youâll find is focused on product development.
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In this article, Iâm going to unpack the Jobs To Be Done framework from a B2B advertising perspective.
â
Why? Because identifying what job your customers are truly âhiringâ your product or service to do will be the secret to launching a powerful ad campaign.
â
This article is part of our B2B learning track so if youâre serious about learning B2B advertising youâre in the right place!Â
â
Letâs dive into it đ
â
TABLE OF CONTENTS:Â
- Understand Why Customers Choose Your Product
- Using the Jobs to Be Done Interview Matrix Template
- Customize Your Messaging with Personality Insights
- Real Use Case of the JBTBÂ Matrix Template
- Free Resources to Jumpstart Your B2B Marketing Career
â
Understand Why Customers Choose Your Product
â
In any industry, people donât buy products, they invest in solutions to get a job done. Itâs not just to buy another thing like your cat-hoarding grandmother. đ đ
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For B2B marketers, Tony Ulwickâs Jobs to Be Done framework should be focused on why your customers âhireâ your product or service, so you can put them and their needs at the heart of your advertising story.Â
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This will help you to identify what pain points youâre helping your customers solve to get to the root of what motivates them because your advertising campaign should be about them â not you.
â
But how can you do that?
â
You can use the Jobs To Be Done framework when you're launching a new advertising campaign or when you want to improve the conversion rates of your existing advertising campaigns (aka your ads that arenât converting)Â
â
The most impactful way to start is by identifying three to five recent customers who fit your target market (or Ideal Customer Profile - ICP).
â
If you need help identifying your ideal customer profile, check out this article: âHow to Craft B2B Buyer Personas for Ad Targetingâ
â
Select customers who either recently purchased or have the potential to represent your ideal buyer. These interviews will reveal why they chose your service and what specific pain points you helped them solve.
â
To make your life easier, I developed a free template called Jobs to Be Done Interview Matrix đ
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You can find it in Module 2, Lesson 3 of my free B2B Advertising Foundations course, and itâs your roadmap for collecting insights during interviews.
Using the Jobs to Be Done Interview Matrix Template to Gather Actionable Insights
â

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In this JTBD Interview Matrix Template, youâll be looking for five key points that highlight your customerâs journey with your brand:
- Situation and Pain Points - What challenges are they facing?
- Motivation - Why did they start looking for a solution?
- Trigger - What prompted them to move forward with your service?
- Ideal Outcome - What result are they seeking?
- Competitor Evaluation - What other options were they considering?
â
The matrix helps you organize answers by each customerâs profile and offers a side-by-side comparison of their unique characteristics.
â
It also offers 8 helpful interview questions you can use to uncover the right golden nuggets that will make your campaign shine. â¨
Customize Your Messaging with Personality Insights
â
Finally, understanding your customerâs personality type is like having the key to crafting messaging that lands with confidence.Â
â
Resources like Crystal can help you determine each customerâs DISC personality type (Dominance, Influence, Steadiness, Compliance) by scraping their LinkedIn profiles, labelling how they like and prefer to be communicated with, and their style and tone because this will ultimately influence the messaging that you can create for each of your advertising personas.
â

Hereâs a real use case for you to understand each step of the JTBD Interview Matrix
â
Letâs take Spotify as an example. I love Spotify, so if I were doing an interview with a Spotify customer, it would look like this:
â

â
Situation & Pain Points
I get tired of hearing the same songs on the radio. I canât easily listen to the exact song I want to hear.
â
Motivation
I want to listen to specific songs when I want
â
Trigger
Iâm in the gym, and I need a song to pump me up
â
Ideal Outcome
I want to listen to the music I choose, everywhere
â
Other Solutions/ Products Evaluated â Competitors
Radio, XM Radio, Pandora, Apple Music, Silence
â
Personality characteristics (DiSC type, DiSC archetype, etc)
Trailblazer - ID. Confident style, with a mix of informality and formality gets their attention.
- Pace: Speak slightly fast. Sounds like a âgets shit doneâ person.
- Tone: Do not sound too eager, as if you have met a friend suddenly after a long time. Keep the tone calm but confident.
- Tactics To Win: Strong words, focus on results, respectful confidence
â
Based on the JBT Interview Matrix, here are some Spotify ad examples:Â
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The main takeaway is that you can make your ad campaigns even stronger when you really know what âjobâ your customers are âhiringâ your product or service to take care of.
â
Use the Jobs To Be Done matrix to dig deep into what matters most to them and adjust your messaging to connect on a personal level. đ
â
I hope you found this article helpful!
â
Connect with me on LinkedIn, and letâs keep the conversation going.
You can also visit my website here for more valuable content.
Jumpstart Your B2B Marketing Career

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If youâre serious about mastering B2B advertising, then you definitely need to check out my free course that will teach you the foundational knowledge to becoming a high-performing B2B marketer who knows how to use advertising to drive legit business and revenue impact without the fluff or wasting your time and money learning the ropes the hard way.
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- Module 1: youâll get a crash course in the B2Bverse and master terminology, sales processes, and working across teams.
- Module 2: youâll learn how to become your customer's psychologist and understand them deeply with buyer personas that allow you to craft effective messaging.
- Module 3: youâll master the B2B funnel and learn how to think like a CEO to identify performance bottlenecks and convert more leads into revenue.
- Module 4: youâll learn how to put it all together and build your go-to-market strategy that gets your ad in front of your dream buyers and converts attention.
â
This course was designed with absolute beginners in mind.
â
Accelerate your learning curve and start the course today for free.
â
People Also Ask
â
How can I effectively identify the âjobsâ my B2B customers are trying to accomplish with our product or service?
Conduct in-depth customer interviews and surveys to uncover the underlying tasks and objectives your clients aim to achieve. Focus on understanding their pain points and the desired outcomes they seek. ďżź
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What are the best practices for integrating the JTBD framework into our existing B2B advertising strategy?
Align your marketing messages with the specific jobs your customers need to be done. Develop content and campaigns that address these needs directly, demonstrating how your solution effectively fulfills their objectives. ďżź
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How can the JTBD framework assist in differentiating our B2B offerings from competitors in the market?
By focusing on the unique jobs your product addresses, you can highlight distinct value propositions that set you apart. This approach shifts the conversation from features to the specific benefits and outcomes your customers can expect. ďżź
â
What role does customer feedback play in refining our understanding of their jobs to be done?
Regularly gathering and analyzing customer feedback helps in accurately identifying and prioritizing the jobs that need to be done. This ongoing process ensures your offerings remain relevant and effectively meet customer expectations. ďżź
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How can we measure the impact of applying the JTBD framework on our B2B advertising ROI?
Track key performance indicators such as conversion rates, customer acquisition costs, and customer satisfaction levels before and after implementing JTBD-informed strategies. Analyzing these metrics will provide insights into the frameworkâs effectiveness in enhancing your advertising efforts.
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How to Create Tracking Templates in Google Ads
Hey there, Digital Marketer. Do you cringe a little when you hear the words âsetting up tracking in an ad channelâ? đ
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Tracking may be the unsexy side of marketing, but I promise that Google Ads Tracking Templates are simpler than they sound.Â
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In this article, Iâll show you how to set up tracking right, capture accurate data, and see whatâs really driving your conversions and revenue.Â
â
Letâs dive in! đ
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TABLE OF CONTENTS:Â
- What is a Google Ads Tracking Template?
- How to install Tracking Templates in Google Ads
- Benefits of adding Tracking Templates to your campaigns
- From clicks to conversions:Â Master Google Ads for B2B
â
What is a Google Ads Tracking Template?
â
Tracking templates allow you to streamline your link tagging process and pass static and dynamic values.Â
â
I created this little cheat sheet for you here to give you an understanding of a tracking template.

â
Hereâs what each parameter means:
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- {lpurl}: This is your landing page URL. So whatever the URL is in your ad, the template will automatically inherit it and then automatically append these different static and dynamic values based on these parameters.
- UTMs: These are your standard UTMs, like UTM source, UTM medium, campaign, term, and content.
âCheck out our Free UTM Tagger Tool to easily create them in bulk and for more info about each parameter. - Static Values: Static means itâs always the same, itâll remain consistent. So a static value will always be a text.
So in the image example above, we always want the UTM Source to be google, the UTM Medium to be cpc, and the UTM Campaign to be trial. - Dynamic Values: Dynamic means it changes. The values here usually have squiggly brackets like {keyword} or {matchtype}, which tell Google Ads to populate that field dynamically.
For example, with {keyword}, the UTM Term will automatically insert the keyword that drove the click, giving you granular detail on the search behavior driving each visit. - Custom Parameters: These are parameters you can create that are not part of the UTM parameters, which are your standard ones.
Youâll probably want to use custom UTM parameters if you have some sort of advanced tracking setup.
Anything that is available in the URL, you can then set up with JavaScript the ability to pass the data from those parameters into hidden fields in your form, to then be able to route and track and do all sorts of things in your backend.
In the cheat sheet above, the ad_name parameter will give you details about which ad drove the visit.
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So this is a tracking template, and itâs really important as this is going to allow you to get a lot better data and ultimately, better insights from your activities.Â
How to Install a Tracking Template in Google Ads
â
You can install a tracking template at the campaign, ad group, or ad level. You could even do it at the account level with the tracking script, but I recommend that you start off at the campaign level.
â
Here are the steps you need to follow in your Google Ads account đ
â
- Open your account, then open the campaigns tab and choose one campaign. Now go into the settings by clicking on this little gear.

- âScroll down to additional settings.

- Go to the Campaign URL options and paste your tracking template in the âTracking Templateâ field.

Here youâll want to follow the format from the cheat sheet I shared at the beginning of this article because that is the syntax of the tracking template.
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To be easier, you can copy this tracking template below and just add your static values in the highlighted fields:
{lpurl}?utm_source=entersource&utm_medium=entermedium&utm_campaign=entercampaign&utm_term={keyword}_{matchtype}&ad_name=enteradname
- UTM Source: People usually use Google or AdWords.
- UTM Medium: People usually put CPC or paid search. This 100% depends on you and your business, your company, and how you want to track things.
- UTM Campaign: You can put the name of your campaign. The downside is that you have to do this for each campaign.
- UTM Term: This will dynamically push the keyword that drove the click and the match type.
- Ad_Name (custom parameter): This is 100% optional, and most of the clients from our agency donât really need custom parameters, but I just want you to be aware of it.
Once youâve mastered basic tracking, custom parameters can add another layer of insights by capturing non-standard data. For instance, if you want to differentiate ad variations, you could set a custom parameter like ad_name=RSA1.
â
You can also find all the Value Track Parameters Google supports here:

I usually like to set my tracking templates at the campaign level, which suffices. So, in this case, each campaign must have a unique tracking template.
â
Another cool thing about the tracking template is once you create the tracking template at the campaign level, you no longer have to worry about tagging your ads with UTM parameters at the ad level.Â
â
It'll automatically inherit the campaign URL tracking template and tag your links appropriately.
â
If you're just putting all of the tagged URLs at the ad level, it can be really problematic sometimes and time-consuming to make changes and miss things. This helps streamline things and push those dynamic parameters.Â
Benefits of Adding Tracking Templates to Your Campaigns
â
Setting up tracking templates in Google Ads is a powerful way to automate link tagging and capture high-quality data.
â
The better data we pass through our tracking template, the more insights we can receive.Â
â
With standard UTMs, dynamic parameters, and custom fields, youâll get a clear view of whatâs driving performance and find better ways to allocate budget, optimize campaigns, and ultimately boost results. đ
â
Why deny yourself incredible insights such as âwhich keywords drive the most revenue?..â when you can capture that information at no additional cost?Â
â
Thatâs it about tracking templates! đ
â
Now go build your first one and let the data guide your ad strategies! đ¤
â
I hope you found this article useful!
From Clicks to Conversions: Master Google Ads for B2B đĽ
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

â
Here's what you'll learn in each course:Â
â
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
â
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
â
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
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)
â
People Also Ask
â
What is a tracking template in Google Ads?
A tracking template is a URL parameter setup in Google Ads that appends tracking information to your landing page URLs. This allows you to monitor specific details about ad clicks, such as the campaign, ad group, keyword, and device involved. ďżź
â
Why should I use tracking templates in my campaigns?
Implementing tracking templates automates link tagging, ensuring consistent and accurate data collection across your campaigns. This leads to better insights into performance metrics, enabling more informed optimization decisions. ďżź
â
How do I set up a tracking template in Google Ads?
To set up a tracking template:
- Log in to your Google Ads account.
- Navigate to the desired account, campaign, ad group, or ad level.
- Click on âSettingsâ and then âAdditional settings.â
- Under âTracking,â enter your tracking template URL, incorporating the necessary ValueTrack parameters.
- Save your changes.
This setup enables dynamic tracking of various metrics. ďżź
â
What are ValueTrack parameters, and how do they work in tracking templates?
ValueTrack parameters are dynamic URL components that capture specific information about each ad click, such as the device used ({device}), the keyword that triggered the ad ({keyword}), and the campaign ID ({campaignid}). When a user clicks your ad, these placeholders are replaced with actual data, allowing for detailed performance analysis. ďżź
â
How can I test if my tracking template is working correctly?
After setting up your tracking template, use the âTestâ button in the âTrackingâ section of your Google Ads account settings. This function combines your final URL with the tracking parameters to ensure it directs to the correct landing page and that all parameters are functioning as intended.
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â

B2B Google Ads: How To Know If Google Is The Right Channel For Your SaaS
Hey there B2B SaaS marketer! Are you getting FOMO around Google Ads?Â
â
Every day thousands of SaaS businesses are converting clicks into profitable pipeline on Google Ads, and conversely thousands are burning clicks into wasted ad budgets.Â
â
After $10M in Google Ads spend management for incredible SaaS companies like ActiveCampaign, Mixpanel, and others, Iâve developed a criteria for Google Ads success.
â
I call it the Google Ads Sweet Spot. If you want Google to be a significant driver in your pipeline generation you need to make sure your SaaS company checks these 3 criteria.Â
â
After reviewing, itâll be clear if Google is right for you, letâs dive into it đ
â
TABLE OF CONTENTS:Â
â
Proven Concept
â
The first criteria in the Google Ads Sweet Spot is a Proven Concept.Â
â
You see, in order to succeed with Google Ads your product has to be built on a time-tested and proven concept.Â
â
Imagine running Google ads for a generative AI product before the invention of ChatGPT.Â
â
Because AI products still hadnât gained popularity, you probably would have struggled to generate sufficient searches and clicks on your ads.Â
â
If you create an innovative product in a new category that no one understands, you likely wonât see a great return on effort from Google.
â
In this case, itâd make more sense to focus on educating the market about the problem you solve via demand gen channels such as paid and organic social.Â
Existing Demand
â
The second criteria of the Google Ads Sweet Spot is Existing Demand.Â
â
This is directly connected to the first criteria: you wonât generate pipeline or revenue if people arenât actively looking for your solution.Â
â
If you only have, for example, 100 people searching for your product every month, itâs going to be impossible to generate significant results from Google.Â
â
For example, assuming the industry average conversion rate of 3%, and 5% clickthrough rate (CTR) youâre looking at 5 clicks from the 100 impressions, and you need a minimum of 33 clicks to generate a single lead. At 100 impressions/month it will take you six and a half months to generate ONE lead đ¤Żâ extreme example but I hope you get the point.Â
â
You need enough search volume, so you have enough clicks, and ultimately conversions.Â
â
To verify that you have sufficient search volume, you can use the Google Ads keyword planner.Â
â
Letâs say you want to bid on the term Google Ads courses within the United States. You can see that there are approximately 2,900 searches every month for this specific term, which validates that thereâs sufficient search volume to have a chance at success.Â
â

â
Keep in mind monthly searches in the keyword planner are just an average and always changing â use them to inform your estimates but take them with a grain of salt.Â
Sufficient Margin
â
The third criteria of the Google Ads Sweet Spot is Sufficient Margin.
â
You SHOULD NOT run Google Ads if you donât have enough margin, or in other words, a high enough lifetime value (LTV) to offset acquisition costs. Without a high enough LTV, Google will never become a profitable channel for your company.Â
â
Hereâs an example:Â
â
Letâs say you have an LTV of $100 per user, and your average cost per click is $10. In this case, the likelihood of running profitable campaigns is slim â youâd have to convert 10% of your total traffic just to break even đ (when the industry average conv rate is 3-5%).Â
â
If youâre selling a variety of products and you have a small budget (<$10K/month), I recommend running ads for the products with the highest lifetime value to maximize your chances of profitability.Â
â
If your campaigns arenât profitable right away, thatâs okay, as long as you know youâll recoup your investment 3-6 months down the line.Â
â
If you want to see if the math adds up to run Google Ads profitably for your company, check out our free Google Ads Budget calculator.Â
â
I hope you found this article helpful!
â
Google Ads definitely is not for everyone but if your SaaS meets these three criteria your chances of success are far greater than not based on my experience.Â
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
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

â
Here's what you'll learn in each course:Â
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
â
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
â
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
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)
â
People Also Ask
â
What are some advanced targeting techniques for B2B SaaS Google Ads campaigns?
Utilize features like custom intent audiences to target users actively searching for solutions similar to your SaaS product. Combine these with demographic and location filters for precise audience targeting.
â
How can I effectively allocate my budget across different Google Ads campaign types for B2B SaaS?
Consider allocating your budget to a mix of search campaigns for high-intent keywords, display campaigns for brand awareness, and remarketing campaigns to re-engage potential leads.
â
How do I choose the right bidding strategy for my B2B SaaS Google Ads?
Select bidding strategies based on your campaign goals. Use target CPA (cost per acquisition) for lead generation or maximize clicks to drive traffic. Test different strategies to determine what works best for your objectives.
â
What are the common mistakes to avoid in B2B SaaS Google Ads campaigns?
Avoid broad targeting that wastes budget, neglecting negative keywords, and under-optimizing ad creatives. Regularly review and refine your campaigns based on performance metrics.
â
How can I use ad extensions effectively in B2B SaaS Google Ads?
Include ad extensions like callouts, sitelinks, and structured snippets to provide additional information, improve click-through rates, and enhance ad visibility. Highlight key features, testimonials, or unique offerings.
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10 Tips to Create B2B Ads that Convert
If you want your ads to drive conversions, you need the right messaging, positioning, design, tone, format, offer, etc.Â
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This is especially true in B2B, where pushing prospects from initial awareness to conversion is extremely challenging.Â
â
Below are my top 10 tips to maximize your chances of success, based on my own experience working with dozens of B2B clients.Â
â
TABLE OF CONTENTS:Â
- Tip #1: Figure out what you want to say
- Tip #2: Don't use big words or acronyms
- Tip #3: Make it quick
- Tip #4: Use visuals that make your ad stand out
- Tip #5: Create ads that don't look like ads
- Tip #6: Steal from the greats
- Tip #7: Use powerful hooks
- Tip #8: Take up as much space as possible
- Tip #9: Speak like a human
- Tip #10: Stay in tune with what your customer wants
Tip #1: Figure out what you want to say
â
This might sound obvious, but before creating any ad, you should get extremely clear on the problem your company solves.Â
â
All of your messaging should come back to this problem.Â
â
If youâre running case study ads, the case studies should be related to this problem.Â
â
If youâre promoting a GIF of your product, the animation should help tell the story of how you solve that problem.Â
â
As Eugene Schwartz said: The objective of advertising is to highlight a problem and demonstrate how you can solve it.Â
â
Hereâs a template I like using with my clients to clearly articulate the problems they solve.Â
â
Tip #2: Donât use big words or acronyms
â
The more simple you keep your ads, the better theyâll perform.Â
â
Thereâs no need to drop in words like CAC, ROI, or ARPU into your copy. Acronyms are poo.
â
Even if youâre talking about complex topics, aim to keep your explanation simple.Â
â
Also, keep in mind, itâs impossible to explain everything about your company in a single ad.Â
â
To fully understand what you do, a prospect might need to see 20, 30, or 40 different ads, highlighting what you do in different ways.Â
â
Think of the ads in your cold layer as an icebreaker.Â
â
The idea is to communicate the basics of what you do in a simple and interesting way â not to tell your entire story.Â

Hereâs an ad we made at Revenu for a client, to do exactly that.
âTip #3: Make it quick
â
Prospects should know exactly what theyâre signing up for in 3 steps or less.Â
â
We followed that formula for this ad we made for another client.

With very few words, you can easily understand the benefits of the product.Â
â
And if youâre thinking: Thereâs no way I could explain my offer in 3 steps or less⌠you need to simplify your process.
â
When you truly understand your product story, itâs easy to simplify it. Thatâs where the first tip comes in.
âTip #4: Use visuals that make your ad stand out
â
A picture is worth a thousand words.
â
Ads that are filled with words donât grab a users attention.
â
Think about what youâre trying to say, and how you can visualise it.
â
You can see how we did this for Scytale below.Â
â
Itâs a fairly typical advert, but the way itâs broken out visually makes it much easier to digest.

Pro tip: If youâre only using static image ads, try GIFs. Making something move makes people click it more⌠simples.
âTip #5: Create ads that donât look like ads
â
Want to triple your CTR? Make an advert that doesnât look like an advert.
â
Once you get a ton of clicks, you can then retarget them with more product-focused messaging, but theyâve now been introduced to your brand.Â
â
To create these types of ads, think of the things that you do on a daily basis. For example, listening to Spotify, watching Netflix, playing chess or other online games, etc. How can you incorporate these everyday concepts into your ads, so that they feel natural and less promotional?Â
â
Also, think of the memes that make you laugh while youâre scrolling through different social platforms. Can you create versions of these that are related to the problem your company solves?Â
â
Here are a few examples we made for inspiration:Â Â



P.S. If you want more examples, check out my Sexy Ads Library, which contains over 300 of my favorite ads.
âTip #6: Steal from the greats
â
As Pablo Picasso once said, âGood artists copy, great artists steal.âÂ
â
Lately Iâve been diving into B2C ads to find inspiration for B2B, from companies like Porsche, Land Rover, McDonaldâs, etc.Â
â
Itâs extremely hard to create amazing ads if youâre starting with a blank canvas.Â
â
Here are a few great examples:


P.S. Iâll be dropping a new library on my LinkedIn soon with tons of B2C examples, drop me a follow to be the first to see it.
âTip #7: Use powerful hooks
â
To perform well, your ads need to have powerful hooks.Â
â
In other words, you need to give your prospects a very specific reason to take action.Â
â
Are you offering an incentive to take a meeting, such as a gift card, free lunch, or free coffee?
â
Are you sharing a company resource, such as ad credits, a price promotion, or a software add-on?Â
â
Are you providing knowledge, in the form of a consultation, an audit, a workshop, etc.?
â
If you donât give your prospects an obvious reason to take action, they probably wonât.Â
â
P.S. The hooks with the highest conversion rates are typically ones related to your unique company knowledge and resources. Check out a great example from Google belowâŚ

And this great visual from Cognism, making a joke about gift card ads.

P.S. Donât get discouraged if your offer isnât working the first time around â most companies have to experiment with multiple approaches before they find one that works. And when you do, itâs your main driver of new business for the next 5 years.
âTip #8: Take up as much space as possible
â
Ads that take up more space on the screen are more likely to stop the scroll, and typically perform better.Â
â
On LinkedIn Ads, square images (1200X1200) usually perform much better than rectangular images (1200X628).
â
Test vertical images (628X1200) that only appear on mobile too.Â
â
This ad we made got a CTR in the 2%+ range on LinkedIn, with a CPC in the $3-6 range.

This tip also applies to Google Ads. Make sure youâre using ad extensions to take up more space on the SERP and increase the chances of getting a click.Â
â
P.S. If youâre curious about the ad specs you can use across different platforms, check out this comprehensive guide.Â
âTip #9: Speak like a human
â
When youâre writing ads for social, make sure you donât sound like a company.Â
â
Be human â friendly, silly, colloquial, personable.
â
Youâre literally on a social media platform⌠be sociable.
â
Influencers have all the power these days, because people want to hear from real individuals with a real personality.Â
â
So if you want people to listen to you, you need to sound like a human.Â
â
These ads we made follow that exact tone, and itâs much nicer to read.


P.S. Some companies have a more professional and corporate tone of voice, but that doesnât mean you canât be clear and straight to the point. There are ways of sounding human, without being cheeky.
âTip #10: Stay in tune with what your customer wants
â
Even if you follow tips 1-9, youâll still fail if your story is crap.
â
The world is constantly changing. Over time, the problem you solve may stop being a problem. Or another company may solve it for a fraction of the cost.Â
â
When these changes happen, you need to update your product and story in order to stay relevant.Â
â
To verify that the problems you solve are important, talk to your customers and interview companies in your ICP that arenât working with you.
â
- How much of a problem is XYZ to you?
- Are you currently solving XYZ problem?
- How are you solving it?
- Be honest, would you use our product to solve it?
- If not, why?
- Do you use another company to solve this problem instead?
- How much do you pay them?
â
Asking these questions will help you verify that your product and story make sense.Â
â
Pro tip:Â In addition to qualitative feedback from customer interviews, you can ask your G2 rep for an export of all your reviews and upload it into ChatGPT. Then, you can ask ChatGPT to identify the top pain points and benefits that are mentioned, which will help you further understand the problems your company solves.Â
â
Hope you found this article helpful!
Feel free to reach out on LinkedIn with any questions.Â
âResources for mastering B2B advertising
If youâre serious about mastering B2B advertising then you definitely need to join 1,000+ B2B marketers leveling up their paid advertising skill sets in AdConversion.Â
âHereâs 4 reasons why you should consider joining. Every one of our on-demand courses are:
â Â 100% free access.
â Â Taught by vetted industry experts.
â Â Have workbooks, resources, and templates.
â Â Less than 10 minutes per lesson.
We believe every marketer should know how to scale paid ads so they can:
- Scale their ideas
- Level up their careers
- Make a positive impact
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)
â
People Also Ask
â
What are the key elements to consider when creating B2B ads that drive conversions?
Effective B2B ads require clear messaging that addresses the specific problem your company solves, simple language free of jargon, concise content, attention-grabbing visuals, and a human tone that resonates with your target audience. ďżź
â
How can I ensure my B2B ad stands out visually to capture attention?
Utilize compelling visuals that align with your message and consider incorporating movement, such as GIFs, to draw attention. Ads that donât resemble traditional advertisements can also increase engagement by appearing more organic in usersâ feeds. ďżź
â
Why is it important to avoid complex language and acronyms in B2B ads?
Using simple language ensures your message is easily understood, broadening your adâs appeal and effectiveness. Avoiding industry jargon and acronyms prevents confusion and keeps the focus on the value your solution provides. ďżź
â
How can I create a compelling hook in my B2B ad to encourage action?
Offer clear incentives or unique value propositions that address your audienceâs needs or pain points. This could include special offers, exclusive insights, or highlighting unique features that set your solution apart. ďżź
â
What role does understanding the customerâs problem play in crafting effective B2B ads?
A deep understanding of the customerâs problem allows you to tailor your messaging to demonstrate how your product or service provides a solution, making your ad more relevant and persuasive.
â

10 Tips to Align Your Content and Paid Media Strategy
Over the past decade, Iâve led content marketing for multiple B2B SaaS companies, and Iâve noticed a common problem:Â
â
Content marketers and performance marketers rarely communicate.Â
â
This leads to inconsistent targeting, positioning, and messaging, which ultimately leads to lackluster results.Â
â
If you want to hit your revenue targets, your content and paid media strategies need to be part of the same equation, not completely separate entities.Â
â
Below are my top 10 tips on how to get aligned with your content team.Â
â
TABLE OF CONTENTS:Â
- Tip #1: Don't Create "Ads"
- Tip #2: Repurpose the content you already have
- Tip #3: Use paid media to guarantee distribution
- Tip #4: Have a clear POV
- Tip #5: Make sure you have consistent messaging
- Tip #6: Don't be afraid to be different
- Tip #7: Leverage user-generated content
- Tip #8: Share the right content for the right stage of the customer journey
- Tip #9: Leverage retargeting
- Tip #10: Be willing to adapt and change as you learn
Tip #1: Donât Create âAdsâ
â
Itâs easy to fall into the trap of researching the ads of your competitors and trying to mimic them. Or creating ads with a preconceived idea of what an ad should look like.Â
â
But at this point, weâre all hardwired to scroll past the ads in our feed.Â
â
Ironically, in order to stop the scroll, your ads have to blend in with other organic content.Â
â
If you create great organic posts that are educational, memorable, and enjoyable, theyâll probably also perform well as ads.Â
Tip #2: Repurpose the content you already have
â
Are there carousels, newsletters, or podcasts that have performed well for you in the past?Â
â
Revisit this content.Â
â
Why do you think it performed well? How can you remix it to extend its longevity?Â
â
One caveat here: Just because something has performed well in the past doesnât mean you should run it as an ad.Â
â
For ads, I recommend repurposing the content that has performed well AND:Â
â
- Has a clear POV
- Is consistent with your other content themes
- Is related in some capacity to what your company does
â
Otherwise, you may end up confusing your audience.Â
Tip #3: Use paid media to guarantee distribution
â
We need to stop seeing paid media as something separate from content.Â
â
Great ads are just incredible content with guaranteed distribution to the right people.Â
â
If youâre running ads, make sure youâre constantly talking to the content marketers on your team to understand whatâs working.Â
â
What pieces of content are getting the most engagement, communicating important messages, or telling valuable stories?Â
â
Is there an opportunity to put money behind this content?Â
â
Itâs hard to create winning ads if your team is working in silos.Â
Tip #4: Have a clear POV
â
There are so many ads that feel and sound the same.Â
â
Even if they're creative, they donât feel different because they lack a unique POV.Â
â
Whatâs the core idea that you want to communicate to your audience?Â
â
How is your perspective or approach different from that of every other company?Â
â
If youâre not communicating this, your audience will forget about you almost immediately.Â
â
P.S. Donât be afraid to have a slightly more controversial POV, as long as it makes sense for your brand. Sometimes, taking that risk is necessary in order to be memorable.Â
Tip #5: Make sure you have consistent messaging
â
When it comes to messaging, you shouldnât be throwing spaghetti at the wall.Â
â
Instead, you should be repeating yourself constantly. Sharing your core message in different ways so that people can easily understand what you do.Â
â
A lot of marketers are afraid of repeating themselves. But in order for you to be known, liked, and trusted at scale, repetition is essential.Â
â
If you think of the brands that you trust, youâve probably heard their core message millions of times, maybe without even realizing.Â
Tip #6: Donât be afraid to be different
â
In order to succeed, you need to be interesting, and do things that other companies arenât doing.Â
â
Thereâs so much noise these days.Â
â
If youâre running ads, everybody else is.Â
â
If youâre creating content, everybody else is.Â
â
So, ask yourself, what can you do thatâs different?
â
Why should prospects pay attention to you instead of other companies in your space?Â
â
Look at what everybody else is doing. Is there an opportunity for you to do the opposite?
â
You have to be willing to take calculated risks in order to stand out.Â
Tip #7: Leverage user-generated content
â
User-generated content is a powerful and underutilized tactic to build trust with your prospects.Â
â
Do you have video testimonials or celebratory screenshots from your clients?Â
â
This is great for both organic content and ads.Â
â
Having testimonials from real people comes across as more authentic than the standard G2 reviews that everyone else uses.Â
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P.S. I know it can be nerve-wracking to ask for testimonials, but Iâve found that clients are usually happy to help â all you have to do is send a simple email or LinkedIn DM. And if you work at a larger org, you can talk to your customer advisory board, or ask your sales or CS team to make the ask. Â
Tip #8: Share the right content for the right stage of the customer journey
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A lot of companies make the mistake of promoting the same content to every single prospect, without considering what stage of the buyerâs journey theyâre in.Â
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If someoneâs already heard of your brand and interacted with your company multiple times, theyâll likely want to learn more about your product features, and may even be interested in a demo.Â
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But if someone has never heard of you before, they probably wonât be interested.Â
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If youâre targeting a completely cold audience, your priority should be to educate them about the problems you solve, not to generate conversions right away.Â
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The reality is â especially in B2BÂ â the demos you get now are a product of the work you did 6 months ago.Â
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P.S. There are no shortcuts when it comes to building trust. Sure, you can use an intent provider and target people who are technically in-market, but typically, even those people need to see more content before requesting a demo.Â
Tip #9: Leverage retargeting
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By retargeting, I donât mean offering a demo to every single person that has interacted with your brand.Â
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A lot of people in your retargeting audiences wonât be ready for a demo yet.Â
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But they might be interested in attending your event or joining your webinar. Or they might want to learn more about your product, hear from your thought leaders, see testimonials from similar companies, etc.Â
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What interactions have the people in your retargeting audience taken?Â
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Based on these actions, what type of content do you think theyâd be most interested in seeing?Â
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Itâs important to do this exercise to create a positive experience for your prospects.Â
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If all you do is offer demos theyâll get tired of you pretty quickly.
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Pro tip: Think of your retargeting audience as a newsletter that prospects didnât opt into. Just like a newsletter, you need a mix of different content to grow the trust of your audience over time.Â
Tip #10: Be willing to adapt and change as you learn
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In both content and advertising, itâs important to create a strategy thatâs firm but flexible.Â
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Itâs great to have a general plan in place, but it shouldnât be an immovable object.Â
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You have to be willing to adapt based on your audienceâs response.Â
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Are there certain messages that are resonating more?Â
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Are there certain formats that are performing better?Â
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Are there certain audience segments that are expressing more interest in your product?Â
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Based on this feedback, you may have to modify your approach.Â
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Hope you found this article helpful!
Feel free to reach out on LinkedIn with any questions about content strategy or distribution.Â
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People Also Ask
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Why is it important to align content marketing with paid media efforts?
Aligning content marketing with paid media ensures consistent messaging, maximizes reach, and enhances engagement by delivering valuable content to the right audience at the right time. This synergy leads to more effective campaigns and better return on investment. ďżź
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How can repurposing existing content benefit a paid media strategy?
Repurposing high-performing content, such as carousels, newsletters, or podcasts, extends its longevity and leverages proven engagement. By remixing successful content, you can maintain audience interest and ensure consistency across channels. ďżź
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What role does having a clear point of view (POV) play in content and paid media alignment?
A distinct POV differentiates your brand and makes your messaging memorable. Communicating a unique perspective helps your audience understand how your approach stands out from competitors, fostering stronger connections and recall. ďżź
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Why is consistent messaging crucial across content and paid media channels?
Consistent messaging reinforces brand identity and ensures that your audience receives a unified narrative, regardless of the platform. Repetition of core messages builds trust and aids in brand recognition, making your campaigns more effective. ďżź
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How can leveraging user-generated content enhance a paid media strategy?
Incorporating user-generated content adds authenticity and social proof to your campaigns. It showcases real customer experiences, building trust and encouraging engagement from potential clients who see relatable success stories.
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10 Tips to Make LinkedIn Ads Work for B2B SaaS
Over the past few years, Iâve helped dozens of B2B SaaS companies develop their LinkedIn Ads strategy.Â
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Below, Iâll be sharing ten tips that I always give to my own clients, and that will significantly increase your chances of success with LinkedIn Ads đ
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TABLE OF CONTENTS:Â
- Tip #1: Research Your Customers
- Tip #2: Define Your Targeting
- Tip #3: Distribute Your Content
- Tip #4: Repurpose Your Content
- Tip #5: Test Lead Gen alongside ungated content
- Tip #6: Capture Demand With Retargeting
- Tip #7: Use Text and Spotlight Ads
- Tip #8: Leverage your SMEs for thought leader ads
- Tip #9: Set up the right tracking combination
- Tip #10: Make a commitment of at least 6 months
Tip #1: Research Your Customers
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As a marketer, it can be challenging to fully understand your customers, especially since youâre not in direct contact with them.Â
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In order to gain a better understanding, itâs a great idea to watch 3-5 sales calls, recommended to you by the Head of Sales.Â
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Analyze how your sales team is presenting the product to make sure your messaging is aligned.Â
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In addition to this, you can pull transcripts and summaries from hundreds of calls and have ChatGPT develop a content matrix and empathy map for you, summarizing the top pain points of your prospects.Â
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Here is a templatized example of the outcome. ChatGPT can pull it out in this format based on the call summaries and give you a good foundation of commonalities for different prospects.
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Once youâve identified the top pain points and topics with the help of ChatGPT, send them over to a few people on your sales team to validate them. It can be very subjective but can help you to ensure that you havenât missed any important nuances.Â
Tip #2: Define Your Targeting
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Next, define your targeting.Â
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What job titles, job functions, industries, and company sizes do you want to target?Â
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Once youâve drafted your audiences, you can share and refine with your stakeholders.Â
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To start out, you can use a simple targeting combination such as Job titles + Company Sizes + Industries.Â
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If your audience is too small using only job titles, you could substitute for Job Function + Seniority + Skills.Â
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A few additional notes:Â
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1. Make sure to check the audience insights section of LinkedIn Campaign Manager to find exclusions that you could potentially make. (video walkthrough)
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2. If you have multiple personas, make sure to separate them into different campaigns so you can tailor your messaging.
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3. There is no ideal audience size on LinkedIn Ads â small audiences of 10K can work well and larger audiences of 100K can also work well. Start by targeting your ideal customers, and you can expand over time.Â
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Recommendation: Use a validated company list for better targeting and reporting.
Tip #3: Distribute Your Content
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Once youâve set up your audience, the next step is to distribute content towards them.Â
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I highly recommend optimizing your ads for in-feed consumption â talk about the problems you solve directly in your ad copy.Â
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This way, even if people donât visit your landing page right away, theyâll still be learning about your company and can be retargeted later down the line with a more bottom of funnel offer.Â
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Videos are a particularly great format for delivering these in-feed messages, and they also allow you to generate large retargeting pools.Â
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When you run these ads, look at your impressions and views to make sure that youâre reaching your ICP. And check your engagement rate and dwell time metrics to ensure that the content is resonating.Â
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Donât expect demos or trials right away â the goal of these ads is to start generating some initial interest.Â
Tip #4: Repurpose Your Content
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Do you have any great podcast or webinar clips related to your solution?Â
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Has anyone on your team created a product demo walkthrough recently?
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Do you have any customer testimonials from recent events?
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This type of content can be easily repurposed for ads, and is great for both generating and capturing demand.
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Before you start creating new content, look at the content that you already have.Â
Tip #5: Test Lead Gen alongside ungated content
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I know lead gen is an unpopular strategy, but it can be a great approach to run lead gen campaigns alongside ungated content.Â
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If youâre getting leads from incredible people within your ICP, you can show that to your stakeholders as proof that youâre reaching the right audience, and this can help you get approval to run more ungated content.Â
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I donât recommend lead gen as a standalone tactic, but it can be a solid way to get some initial results and build your retargeting audiences, while also validating the quality of your targeting.Â
Tip #6: Capture Demand With Retargeting
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On LinkedIn, lead gen forms arenât just for content like ebooks and whitepapers.Â
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Theyâre also great for capturing demo requests.Â
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The benefit of using lead gen forms is that people donât have to leave the LinkedIn platform to request a demo, so it helps to simplify the process.Â
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To start, I recommend running these ads to your retargeting audience, since people who have already interacted with your brand are the most likely to convert.Â
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Also, when it comes to these demo campaigns, donât be discouraged if you donât see success right away.Â
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In order to succeed, you need to test different types of messaging, different content, and different creatives until you find the right formula.Â
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Another word of advice: Make sure you refresh the creatives in your retargeting audience at least once a month. Retargeting audiences tend to be small and have very high frequencies, so you may see signs of ad fatigue if you donât refresh your creatives consistently.Â
Tip #7: Use Text and Spotlight Ads
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Text and spotlight ads are an amazing and affordable way to stay top of mind with your retargeting audiences.Â
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Theyâre very small and usually appear on the right side of the feed, and they get a ton of impressions but very few clicks.Â
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I recommend setting these ads up with the website visits objective, so that you only pay when someone actually clicks.Â
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Also, I recommend setting the lowest bid you can possibly set, along with a bid cap to avoid overpaying for clicks.Â
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Another format to consider are follower ads, which are very similar to spotlight ads, but intended to drive more company page followers. This format is great for your colder audiences, and can help funnel your ICP into your organic audience for a longer term nurture.Â
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You can use this template to draft the ad copy with ad specifications. You can also use dynamic macros in follower ads.Â
Tip #8: Leverage your SMEs for thought leader ads
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If you have a founder or subject matter expert thatâs active on LinkedIn, consider running their posts as thought leader ads.Â
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Thought leader ads are great because:Â
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1. They have high CTRs and very low CPCs compared to other formats
2. They allow you to get high-performing organic content in front of your ICP
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Customer stories and educational content related to the problem you solve typically perform well as thought leader ads.Â
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Iâd avoid overly promotional and generic, AI-generated content â you want to distribute content thatâs memorable and valuable to your ICP.Â
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For more thought leader ad ideas, check out 14 Powerful LinkedIn Thought Leader Ad Strategies Worth Testing.Â
Tip #9: Set up the right tracking combination
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There is no perfect tracking combination, but you do have to make sure that youâre collecting enough data to understand whatâs happening inside your account.Â
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First of all, you can track online conversions, like form submissions on your website. Then, you can also set up conversion API to have a deeper understanding of which campaigns are turning into pipeline and revenue.Â
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Also, make sure youâre using UTM parameters â itâs much easier now because LinkedIn has dynamic UTM parameters â and pushing them into your CRM for full visibility.Â
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And add âHow did you hear about usâ into your high-intent forms to capture additional insights about the sources that indirectly influence the prospects.
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Just by having these basics in place, you should already have a solid understanding of whatâs happening inside your account.Â
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If you want even more insights on which campaigns and ads are influencing pipeline, you could use a tool like Fibbler to look at multi-touch attribution.Â
Tip #10: Make a commitment of at least 6 months
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If youâre going to get started with LinkedIn Ads, make sure you make a commitment of at least 6 months.Â
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Once you have your audience, targeting, messaging, and content ready to go, you need to decide what your game plan will be and how much budget you need.Â
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How much money will you need to generate awareness within your cold layer?Â
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How will your retargeting audiences expand over time?Â
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What metrics will you look at to determine initial success? Maybe reach and engagement as leading indicators, and conversions as a lagging indicator?Â
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Present a clear plan to your stakeholders so that they know what to expect and are on the same page. Also, emphasize that success wonât happen overnight, and that it takes time and patience to start seeing results.Â
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Hope you found this article helpful!
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Feel free to reach out on LinkedIn with any ad-related questions.Â
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People Also Ask
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What budget allocation strategies should I use for LinkedIn Ads to maximize ROI?
Consider allocating budgets based on campaign objectives, such as lead generation, brand awareness, or engagement. Use test campaigns to identify high-performing audiences and scale your investment in those areas.
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How do I create LinkedIn Ads that effectively nurture leads through the sales funnel?
Use a multi-step approach by running awareness campaigns to introduce your brand, followed by engagement ads that highlight pain points, and finally conversion-focused ads with clear CTAs for demos or trials.
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What are the best LinkedIn ad formats for driving B2B SaaS conversions?
Explore formats like Lead Gen Forms for collecting information, Carousel Ads for showcasing multiple features, and Sponsored InMail for direct and personalized messaging to high-value prospects.
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How can I use LinkedIn retargeting to improve campaign performance?
Set up retargeting audiences based on website visits, video views, or previous ad interactions. Tailor your messaging to re-engage these prospects with personalized offers or content.
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What are some common pitfalls to avoid when running LinkedIn Ads for B2B SaaS?
Avoid overly broad targeting, neglecting to optimize ad creatives, underutilizing LinkedInâs advanced audience features, and failing to test different campaign approaches for continual improvement.
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