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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.
In this step-by-step guide, I will walk you through the exact same process we use internally to audit our clients’ Google Ads accounts.
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.
So let’s get started 👇
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
First and foremost, you can’t improve your account performance without mastering the basics. So let’s dive in!
1. Billing Information
Is your billing information correct?
Checking this will ensure that your ads continue to run smoothly and you don't face any unexpected billing issues.
To check your billing information, follow these steps:
- Sign in to your Google Ads account.
- Click on the "Billing" icon on the left-hand menu.
- 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.
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.
Additionally, if you have any pending charges on your account, you won't be able to make changes until those charges are paid off.
2. Is your time zone correct?
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.
You cannot change your time zone manually, and it can only be reset once, so as Google advises, choose your new time zone carefully.
To request a change, you’ll need to fill out this form and follow the instructions below:
- The form must be filled out by an Admin user of a manager account.
- Your time zone can only be shifted eastward, for example, from GTM (Greenwich Mean Time) to IST (India Standard Time).
3. Do you have auto-tagging turned on?
Auto-tagging is an easy 3-step process:
- Sign in to your Google Ads account
- On the left-hand side, under admin> click on Account Settings
- Click on “Auto-tagging” - check the box and save.
Once you enable this feature, Google will automatically mark your source_medium as “cpc”
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4. Did you turn off ad suggestions?
Have you ever gone to your Google Ads account and noticed a bunch of changes that weren’t made by you or anyone on your team?This probably happened because you didn’t turn off the ad suggestions 😅
So follow these steps to have peace of mind:
- Sign in to your Google Ads account.
- Click on the "Campaigns" on the left-hand menu.
- Click on "Recommendations" and go to “Auto-apply”
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Make sure you turn off all of the recommendations that aren’t relevant to your account.
I personally like to turn off all of them, so I don’t have any changes made by Google without my consent.

5. Is your conversion tracking still working accurately?
This is crucial because if your conversion tracking is not working correctly, you won’t feed Google’s algorithm with essential data to make the best bidding choices for your conversion-based strategies.
Here’s how you can check if your tracking is in place:
- Sign in to your Google Ads account.
- Click on the "Goals" on the left-hand menu.
- Click on "Conversions" and go to “Summary”
- You’ll be able to see the status of your conversions - you want to see “Active”
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Pro-tip: If you see the status “No recent conversions” - search for your keyword on Google and submit a test.
If you don’t see any activity and have been running Google Ads campaigns for a while, it probably means you’ll need to see what’s going on to ensure the tracking setup is in place.
Part 2 - Campaign Review
Depending on the size and organization of the account, this step will take longer or shorter. So let’s go 👷♂️
1. Do your campaigns follow a logical naming convention?
Having a solid naming convention in place isn’t just about aesthetics, it’s the foundation for good account management.
My campaigns usually have a naming convention that follows this structure:
- Region (NA, EMEA, APAC)
- Campaign Theme (Brand, NonBrand, Generic, Competitor)
- Keyword Topic
- Network (Search, Display)
- Keyword Match Type (Exact, Phrase, Broad)
- Device (Desktop, Mobile, All Devices)
- Offer (Demo, Trial, etc)
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So if you have disjointed campaign names, it’s an opportunity to adjust that and make your life easier.
2. Are you targeting the right networks (display unchecked)?
You want to focus on the Search Network and search partners, avoiding the Display Network unless it’s a separate campaign.
- Select the desired campaign
- Go to “Campaign Settings” (on the right-hand side)
- Click on Networks
- Choose the desired Network and save
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- At the campaign level
- Scroll over your campaign
- Setting logo will appear
- Click on the logo
- Under Networks, choose the desired Network and save.
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3. Is your location targeting and options still accurate?
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.
Similar to Networks, there are two ways to check your locations:
- Select the desired campaign
- Go to Locations (on the left-hand side - Audiences, keywords and content)
- Click on the pencil icon
- Choose the desired locations and save
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- At the campaign level > Scroll over your campaign
- The settings logo will appear
- Click on the logo
- Under Locations, Enter location(s) and Save.
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4. Are you targeting one language per campaign (with relevant ads + landing pages)?
In a perfect world, your ads and landing pages should match the primary language of the targeting locations.
Here’s how you can change the language of your campaigns:
- At the campaign level, toggle over your campaign name
- Click on the icon setting once it appears
- Under “Languages” you can select the desired language and click Save.
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5. Is your daily budget still aligned with your goals?
Being an effective marketer involves strategically allocating your budget over the designated campaign duration while achieving the goals.
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 it’s pacing well.
Generally speaking, I don’t recommend running campaigns with less than $50/day for B2B campaigns, but this will obviously depend on your average cost per click.
Check our Google Ads Budget Calculator tool if you need help to define your budget 🙌
6. Are you using the correct bidding strategy?
When you’re first starting out, getting as many clicks as possible is important to get some early conversions, so the “Maximize Clicks” strategy is a good option.
If you have more than 15 conversions, you can switch to the “Maximize Conversions” strategy if your goal is to get as many conversions as possible.
If you have offline conversions set up, you can use the “Maximize Conversion Value” strategy or the “Target ROAS” strategy. These will help you get more relevant conversions.
Here are two ways to check your bidding options:
- Select the desired campaign
- Go to Setting (on the right-hand side)
- Click on Bidding > “Change bid strategy”
- 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
- Click on the logo
- Under Bidding, “Change bid strategy”
- From the dropdown menu, select the desired bidding strategy and save.
7. Do you have the correct conversion actions set? (if applicable)
Campaigns can inherit account-level conversions or have specific conversion actions set.
Both approaches are valid, but it’s essential to use the one that aligns with your campaign goals.
For instance, if a campaign-specific conversion action set is used, make sure it includes all relevant actions in the conversion funnel.
Follow the steps below to add/check conversion actions:
- At the campaign level > scroll over your campaign
- Setting logo will appear, click on the logo
- Under Goals, “Use campaign-specific goal setting”
- Click the pencil icon
- Select the appropriate (previously tested) conversions and save.
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8. Are your ad rotation settings still accurate?
Generally speaking, I recommend using the “Best Performing Ads” option. This way, the Google algorithm will analyze your ads' performance and prioritize delivering the the ads with the best performance.
But if you see that Google is serving some ads dramatically more than others, then you can select “Rotate Ads Indefinitely” and Google will distribute each ad individually.
For conducting A/B testing on multiple ads, I recommend selecting the "Do not optimize" setting to make sure you’re collecting more precise data.
To review your ad rotation settings, follow these steps:
- At the campaign level > scroll over your campaign
- Setting logo will appear, click on the logo
- Click on additional settings > Ad rotation
- Click the pencil icon
- Select the preferred method and save.
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?
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:
- Click on “Overview” on the left-hand side
- Under the “Day & Hour” 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.
- Select the campaign or ad group
- Click on Ad Schedule on the left-hand side
- Click the pencil icon
- Choose the optimal time and save.
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10. Are you targeting the right devices?
Similar to the ad schedule, you can follow the same steps to find the best performance by device and make adjustments. Steps as follows:
- Click on “Overview” on the left-hand side
- Under the “devices” table, you can choose the metrics that matter the most to you.
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You can now update your targeting by device accordingly.
- Select the campaign or ad group
- Click on “When and where ads showed” on the left-hand side
- Edit bid adjustment
- To stop showing on a specific device, choose “Decrease with 100% ratio > Save
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If you’re using the device on the campaign naming convention, you want to make sure the campaign is targeting the device it has on its name.
11. Are you excluding existing leads and sales from your campaigns? (bonus)
A practical approach to lowering costs involves not targeting existing leads and customers.
Google enables the upload of first-party data for use primarily in Remarketing Lists for Search Ads (RLSA) and for creating exclusions. Steps below:
- Select audiences on the left-hand side
- Edit exclusions
- Select the Campaign or Ad group
- Choose the previously uploaded audience > Save
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12. Do you have observational audiences added to your campaigns? (bonus)
Gain insights into how different audiences interact with your campaigns without altering who sees your ads:
- Select audiences on the left-hand side
- Audience segments
- Select Campaign or Ad Group
- Under observation, choose what is important to you and save.
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13. Have you been actively running campaign experiments in the past? (bonus)
With the Experiments feature, you can execute A/B tests without needing to set up new campaigns.
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
1. Are your ad groups broken out logically into related themes?
There are generally 6 buckets of themes for search ads:
- Brand
- Non-brand
- Competitive
- RLSA (Search Remarketing)
- Content
- Dynamic Search Ads
A clear naming convention aids in quickly identifying campaign and group themes. Example:
Campaign: NA_Non-Brand_Search_EN_Exact_All-Devices_Demo
Group: Non-Brand_Software
If there is no proper naming convention, then we have some cleaning to do:
- Download the data at the keyword level
- Delete: Ad spend < $ 1
- Open a new column called “Theme” beside the Keywords
- Tag the Theme of the campaign/group according to the Keyword
- Turn it into a pivot table to get the data by Theme
- Update the naming convention
If you don’t do a good job separating your keywords into themed ad groups, it will hurt your quality score.
Because if you have too many keywords in your ad group, it’s hard to make sure that the ads are relevant to all these keywords.
2. Do you have less than 15 keywords per ad group?
This is not a set-in-stone law, but it will help you mitigate the damage to your ad relevance.
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.
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?
Each group’s 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.
Here’s a good example of a great message match from the CRM software folk.
They’re bidding on the keyword “CRM software for startups”, their ad mentions “CRM for startups”, 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?
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:
- 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 that’s eating up all the budget and then put a larger one on the one that hasn’t spent enough.
Part 4 - Keyword Review
1. Are your search terms as close to perfect as possible?
Regularly checking the search term report has 2 main benefits:
- 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:
- Under “Campaigns” on the left-hand side > Click “Insights and reports”
- Select “Search terms”
- Filter by campaign
- Evaluate the above recommendations.
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2. Do you have a strong negative keyword list in place?
Negative keywords help us reduce the wasted budget and increase the overall quality of ads.
The broader the match type, the more important it is to have an extensive list of negative keywords.
However, even with Exact match type, search terms must be regularly checked, and negative keywords constantly be updated.
Maintaining a universal negative keyword list for your entire account can be beneficial. This list might include words related to profanity, employment, bargaining, etc.
Below you can access a sample list we use in our agency.
👉 Master Negative Keyword List
To 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:
- Select “Tools” on the left-hand side
- Under “Shared library” click on “Exclusion lists”
- Select the “plus sign”
- Add the list of desired negative keywords and name the list accordingly.
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3. Do you have the appropriate match types for your keywords?
If you don’t know which match type you should start with, then always start with the Exact match type and work your way up.
If you don’t get quality conversions with the Exact match type, then changing the match type won’t help.
Generally, Broad match types have the highest wasted budget - unless the campaign is layered with a first-data party audience.
4. Do you have underperforming keywords you can pause or optimize?
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.
However, before pausing, analyze the relevance of search terms against keywords.
If they align, evaluate the click-through rate (CTR) to determine if the ad copy requires updates.
If users are still clicking on the ad without converting, consider revising the landing page.
5. Are your keyword bids set at an optimal amount? (if applicable)
If you're using automated bidding, you don't have to worry about this step.
But if you're using manual bidding, sometimes your manual bid is too low, so your ads won’t show on the first pages of the results.
I recommend that your Max. CPC amount is at least high enough to the first page bid estimate.
You can find the keyword bid simulator by hovering over the small chart in the Max. CPC field.
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Part 5 - Ads & Extensions Review
1. Are your keywords in your ad copy?
This is an easy way to increase ad relevance and ultimately get more clicks.
I can’t stress enough the importance of having a strong message match.
When users encounter their specific search terms within your ad—especially if these terms are variations of your targeted keywords—the 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?
Title casing is when you capitalize the letter of each important work in the sentence.
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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3. Do you have a minimum of two ads per ad group?
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.
By consistently testing ads, you’ll 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.
4. Are you speaking one-to-one, communicating benefits, answering objections, and providing a CTA?
You want to make sure you are speaking one-to-one In your copy and not using corporate speak, where it seems you’re 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?
Here’s a good example from Brevo:

- We can instantly see the benefit: 9000 emails free per month
- One-to-one communication: Don’t let them overcharge you
- CTA that motivates: Stop overpaying for email and get the best value in email delivery & email marketing tools.
5. Are you using all the characters available in your headline, description & path fields?
You don’t have to use every single one, but I recommend you use as many as you can.
Utilizing all available characters in Google Ads' headline, description, and path fields increases message clarity and impact, boosting click-through and conversion rates.
6. Are you using as many ad extensions (assets) as possible? (Especially core ones)
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.
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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.
How to create new ad extensions in Google:
- Select “Campaigns” on the left-hand side
- Under “Assets” click on “Assets”
- Select the desired extension to see the ones you already have.
- Click on the “plus sign” to add new ad extensions.
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7. Are you consistently testing new ad copy, types and modifiers?
If you are not doing this, you’ll know because you will see the click-through rate consistently going down week over week, month over month.
If you’re auditing someone else’s account, you can check the “Changes history” option to see if they are constantly testing new ads.
For modifiers, you can use dynamic keyword insertion in your ad copies to dynamically test different variations.
8. Are you sending searchers to relevant landing pages?
In my opinion, this is the most important thing.
If your prospects search for “CRM for startups”, your ads should say “CRM for startups”, and your landing page should say “CRM for startups”.
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This sounds basic and trivial, but the amount of people who miss this is dramatic.
So make sure that you have a strong message match.
Part 6 - Landing Page Review
Remember 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.
1. Are you mirroring the message from your ad on the landing page?
As I mentioned in the last step of Part 5, the landing page experience is a crucial element of the quality score.
A page that fails to align with your ad's messaging is unlikely to offer value to the user.
2. Can the searcher understand what you do & why in 5 seconds or less?
This is called the five-second rule, and it’s 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?
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.
It’s also used by 100k+ sites worldwide and is GDPR & CCPA-compliant.

You don’t want to be vague on your landing pages, and you want to make sure that they have the following:
- Clear and concise headline
- Engaging subheadlines
- Visual elements
- Call to action (CTA) throughout the page
- Quick loading time for all devices
To learn more about landing page best practices, dive into the article below by Pedro Cortés:
10 Proven Landing Page Tips To Boost Your Conversion Rates
3. Is your landing page loading fast enough?
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.
I recommend you run your page through PageSpeed Insights and apply anything applicable.
You’re probably going to need the help of a developer, but it’s definitely worthwhile to improve the page speed because this is a big factor in terms of your landing page experience for quality score.

A simple thing to improve your landing page loading time is compressing the website images to reduce the file sizes.
4. Do you have one clear call to action on your landing page that mirrors your ad?
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.
Align landing page CTAs with ad promises to ensure a seamless user experience and encourage conversions.
5. Are you communicating benefits, answering objections, and providing a CTA?
The higher the ask, the more context must be provided on the page. This is specifically true for the “Book a Demo” CTA.
Ensure you address objections while emphasizing the key benefits of your product that will solve the users' problems.
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.
6. Does your form, chatbot, or online booking widget still work?
Before launching any new offers, test the page to make sure everything is working as intended.
- Submit a fake test lead and see if it actually routes into your CRM.
- Go look for your lead record.
- Check if the page isn’t broken.
- Review what the experience looks like.
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
1. What is the spread of budget and performance by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
This is where you will need to export a lot of data from Google Ads and use Excel/Google Sheets.
👉 I recommend watching the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on exporting and labeling the data to perform this analysis.
Here’s a common successful budget distribution you can use as guidance:
- Brand: < 20%
- Non-brand > 60%
- Competitive > 20%
You can use our free Google Ads Budget Calculator to find your ideal Google Ads budget.
2. What is the spread of budget and performance by region?
If you are targeting multiple regions, break out the campaign as such (ex: NA, EMEA, APAC).
👉 Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
Look for the highest-performing locations for each region and make sure low-quality conversions are not wasting your budget. If you’re not separating your campaigns into regions, you can still check how the budget has been spread around different locations through the Locations report:
- Select “Campaigns” on the left-hand side
- Go to “Locations”, under “Audiences, keywords, and content”
- Select the desired campaign
- Download the data under Location
- Summarize into a pivot table to get:
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion

3. What is the spread of budget and performance by offer?
If you are separating the campaigns by offer, break out the campaign as such (Demo, Trials, eBooks, etc)
👉 Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
Here’s how to download the landing page report:
- Select “Campaigns” on the left-hand side
- Go to “Landing Pages”, under “Insights and Reports”
- Select the desired campaign
- Download the data
- 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

6. What is the spread of budget and performance by match type?
If you are separating the campaigns by match type, break out the campaign as such (Exact, Phrase, Broad)
👉 Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
Here’s how to download the match type report:
- Select “Campaigns” on the left-hand side
- Go to “Search Keywords”, under “Audiences, keywords, and content”
- Select the desired campaign
- Add the column “Match type”
- Download the data
- On Excel, summarize into a pivot table to get:some text
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion

7. What is the spread of budget and performance by device?
If you are separating the campaigns by devices, break out the campaign as such (Desktop, Mobile, Tablet, All Devices)
👉 Check out the Part 7 video above if you need a walkthrough on the data analysis methodology using Excel.
If the campaigns are not separated into devices, here’s how you can check the spread of budget and performance by device downloading the device report:

8. What is the spread of budget and performance by week days?
Check if you’re targeting all days of the week and if there’s opportunities to exclude some days when the performance is not good, so you can free up budget for the strongest days.Here’s how to download the day of the week report:
- Select “Campaigns” on the left-hand side
- Go to “When and where ads showed”, under “Insights and reportst”
- Select the desired campaign
- Choose “Day” in the right-side navigation if you only want to see the day of the week
- Download the data
- On Excel, summarize into a pivot table to get:some text
- Ad spent
- Conversions
- Cost per conversion

To learn more about how to create a winning Google Ads budget strategy, dive into the article below:
How to Create a Winning Google Ads Budget Strategy for B2B SaaS
Part 8 - Visibility Review
Here’s where we will talk more about Impression Share and Quality Score.
1. What is the search impression share by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
There are different ways you can see the impression share by the campaign theme.
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.
👉 Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.

2. What is the search lost rank by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
The process here is the same from the previous task. The only difference is that you need to add the “Search lost IS (rank)” column.
👉 Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
3. What is the search lost to budget by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
The process here is the same from the previous tasks. The only difference is that you need to add the “Search lost IS (budget)” column.
👉 Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
4. What is the search top IS by campaign theme? (NonBrand, Brand, Competitive, RLSA, Content)
The process here is the same from the previous tasks. The only difference is that you need to add the “Search top IS” column.
👉 Check out the Part 8 video above if you need a walkthrough on how to find this data.
5. Do 70% of your keywords have above 7 quality scores?
This is something I learned from Brad Geddes years ago, the OG of Google Ads.
Check the video below to see a complete guide on Quality Score and how to perform a Quality Score analysis:
6. What aspects of quality score do you need to improve?
After going going through the data in the previous task, summarize your findings to know where you have opportunities to improve.
Example:
- 100% of keywords have a Quality Score below 7.
- 94% of keywords are rated as “Below Average” for landing page experience.
- 45% have “Above Average” ad relevance.
- 100% have “Below Average” expected CTR.
Optimization strategies you can adopt to improve your Quality Score:
- Improve Landing Page Experience:
- Ensure pages are fast, relevant, and mobile-friendly
- Align ad copy with landing page content for a seamless message match.
- Ensure pages are fast, relevant, and mobile-friendly
- Refine Ad Relevance
- Group keywords into tightly themed ad groups.
- Write ads tailored to the specific intent of each group.
- Group keywords into tightly themed ad groups.
- Boost Expected CTR
- Test compelling ad headlines and descriptions.
- Use ad extensions to enhance visibility and clickability.
- Test compelling ad headlines and descriptions.
I hope you received a ton of value from this Google Ads Audit guide.
If you have any questions, feel free to connect with me on LinkedIn.
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People Also Ask
How can a Google Ads audit improve my campaign performance?
- A Google Ads audit can significantly enhance your campaign performance by identifying inefficiencies and areas for optimization within your account.
How often should I conduct a Google Ads audit?
- 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.
What are the key components of a Google Ads audit?
- Budget Allocation: Analyzing how the budget is distributed across various channels and campaigns to identify opportunities for reallocation.
- Campaign Themes: Reviewing the balance between branded, non-branded, and competitive campaigns to ensure optimal allocation for reaching new customers.
- Device Usage: Evaluating performance across devices (mobile, computer, tablet, TV) to tailor strategies for each device type.
- Match Types: Assessing the use of exact, phrase, and broad match types in campaigns to ensure efficient targeting.
- Quality Score: Examining the quality score of keywords, focusing on ad relevance, landing page experience, and expected CTR to identify areas for improvement.
- Visibility Metrics: Analyzing impression share and losses due to rank and budget to optimize bid strategies and campaign visibility.
How often should I perform a Google Ads audit?
It’s 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.
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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How To Get Your Ad Budget Approved In 2024
Looking to ask your boss or client for more ad budget?
This can feel really uncomfortable the first time but I promise it gets easier.
With a simple shift in mindset and some solid tactics you’ll be securing budget in no time.
Here are 3 simple but effective steps for you to implement before having that budget conversation.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Step 1: Pull the numbers
Your client or boss wants to be successful.
They want to surpass their goals (just like you).
If you can show them how your increased budget will make this happen, they will gladly give it to you.
Remembering this will help you release the anxiety associated with asking for more budget.
The key is you need to sell your stakeholders on WHY they should invest more and the way you'll do that is by building a case that makes them as certain as possible.
Don’t assume your clients or managers will be able to realize this on their own.
Build a no-brainer case that makes saying anything but yes sound illogical.
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This starts with pulling the numbers 👇
Answer your critical questions
Put your investor hat on and answer critical questions such as:
- Which channels are performing best?
Ex: Google Ads driving the most opps at the lowest cost
- What's the overall blended trend? (paid + organic)
Ex: Opps are increasing QoQ at a 25% lower cost
- What's the current return on investment?
Ex: $6 pipe-to-spend and 150% ROI
Depending on your company, goals, and what you’re asking budget for this will vary.
Brainstorm all of the key questions you’ll need to pull data to answer.
The difficulty of this step will vary on your current level of reporting.
If you don’t already I HIGHLY recommend building a Paid Media dashboard that connects your ad spend to pipeline and revenue performance reported in your CRM.
Here’s an example of our Paid Media Dashboard Template in our Building a Paid Media Program course:
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You can get free access to this template and learn how to set it up in Module 3, Lesson 3 of the course.
It’s going to be hard to ask for more ad budget if you can’t prove that your current campaigns are actually contributing to the bottom line.
Don’t have any data?
If you’re reading this and saying, Silvio how can I pull numbers if I don’t have any?
Maybe you’re trying to secure budget for a new channel.
If this is the case I have two recommendations:
1. Run a pilot campaign for $100
Let’s say you’re trying to secure budget to test X (Twitter) Ads.
Put together $100 (most companies can afford this) and launch a pilot campaign.
The only goal of this campaign is to understand what are your real costs (ex: CPM, CPC).
Once you have this information you can work backwards from your goals to create a starting budget.
For example:
- $3 CPC at a 5% landing page conversion rate = $60 cost per lead
- $60 cost per lead at a 3% lead to opportunity ratio = $1,980 cost per opportunity
- $1,980 cost per opportunity at a 20% win rate = $9,900 cost per closed won deal
If you need help running the numbers, check out our Google Ads budget calculator.
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From here you’ll have a good idea of what a starting budget would look like.
You’ll also have a sense of what’s possible on this channel.
2. Do some research
Ask around or search for benchmarks associated with the channel you’re looking to invest in.
Even just collecting anecdotal evidence (ex: screenshots of others) talking about how much success they’ve had with this specific channel, tactic, etc can go a long way.
LinkedIn polls are a great way to collect this feedback:
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You can DM the respondents asking for more information.
The TL;DR here is don’t let lack of data be an excuse to show up empty handed.
Once you’ve pulled all the necessary information it’s time to find the story.
Step 2: Find the story
Behind the data there is a story being told, it's your job to find it and tell it.
Here's some key questions to answer to help find it:
- What went well? (the highlights)
- What went bad? (the lowlights)
- Where are we today vs before? (the journey)
- What were the biggest blockers? (the obstacle)
- Where do we go from here? (the opportunities)
Data alone won't persuade, and stories without data are subject to suspicion.
A combination of both is required in order to effectively present your case.
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Image above is Module 6, Lesson 1 of our Building a Paid Media Program course
For example, perhaps I’m trying to secure more budget for Google Ads:
- What went well? (the highlights) some text
- Google Ads contributed 25% more opportunities at a $7 pipe-to-spend ratio.
- What went bad? (the lowlights)some text
- We missed out on 57% more volume due to budget limitations.
- Where are we today vs before? (the journey) some text
- We’ve optimized our pipe-to-spend efficiency from $3 to $7.
- What were the biggest blockers? (the obstacle)some text
- High search lost to budget for our top contributing campaigns.
- No landing page testing due to limited development resources.
- Where do we go from here? (the opportunities)some text
- With an additional $25,000 in budget we can scale our top contributing campaigns and yield up to 35% more demo requests at a $15 CPC and 5% landing page conversion rate.
Here’s a simple presentation template you can use to present your case and answer each key question:
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Once you've found the story and pulled the numbers you're ready to present.
Step 3: Present your case
After steps 1-2 the majority of the prep work is done.
Now it’s time to get the meeting scheduled with your boss or client.
You could have the most beautiful slides and compelling case but if you can’t effectively communicate the significance of what you’re asking it won’t matter.
Thankfully, like any skill, communication is something you can improve on with practice.
5 unconventional tips to implement in your budget presentation:
1. Remember you both want the same thing.
Ultimately, your stakeholders want you to be right. If you can drive more pipeline/revenue they'd happily give you the budget (assuming financial availability).
The challenge though is like an investor they are analyzing the potential upside and downside of your plan, and don't believe the promises you're making.
You need to addresses their concerns with a combination of data and storytelling that makes them as certain as possible.
Just remembering this simple truth will help you show up differently.
2. It’s a conversation, not a lecture.
You’ll want to keep this discussion conversational.
Make sure to check-in frequently with your boss or client and ask things like:
- Is this making sense?
- Did you have any questions?
- Are there any concerns you have that I haven’t addressed?
The last thing you want to do is to speak to them for 30-minutes and then ask:
“soooooo did you have any questions…..? 😅”
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3. Replace “I think” with “the data suggests”
You’ve pulled the data and done the homework.
Don’t water down your points by saying “I think” get in the habit of replacing this with “the data suggests” and then calling out the data point that comes to mind.
This will make your perspectives and points of view far more compelling.
Which ultimately lead to more certainty from the decision maker.
Greater certainty = greater chance of budget approval
4. Don’t forget to smile.
This might sound silly 😂 but it’s really easy to forget to smile.
This conversation is about new opportunities, and that’s exciting.
Instead of telling yourself I’m nervous, reframe it as I’m excited.
This is called anxiety reappraisal and Alison Wood a psychologist at the Harvard Business School found evidence to support.
Here’s a quick excerpt from her abstract: “Across several studies involving karaoke singing, public speaking, and math performance, I investigate an alternative strategy: reappraising anxiety as excitement. Compared to those who attempt to calm down, individuals who reappraise their anxious arousal as excitement feel more excited and perform better” — Alison Wood Brooks
Don’t knock it until you try it!
5. Turn your weakness into a strength
Maybe you’re reading this article and saying to yourself:
- I’m not a good presenter because I’m an introvert
- I’m not a good presenter because English isn’t my first language.
Whatever your weaknesses are, turn them into strengths with humor.
When you start budget approval call begin by addressing your big weakness with humor.
Here’s what this might look like for the weaknesses above:
- Hey {First Name} thanks for the time today. As you might have noticed I’m not going to be giving a Ted talk anytime soon with my English so if you’re having trouble understanding just stop me at any point.
- Hey {First Name} thanks for the time today. I just wanted to start off by saying I’d rather chug a bottle of hot sauce then give a presentation but I believe so much in what I’m going cover today that I had to do this – so I appreciate you baring with any mishaps I might have.
Whatever your weaknesses are don’t run from them.
Embrace it and transform it into a strength.
Additional Resources
If you want to learn more about securing budget checkout Module 6 - Lesson 1 of our Building a Paid Media Program course, it’s 100% free and takes < 90 seconds to sign up.
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If you want to dive deeper into B2B advertising check out some of our other top articles:
- B2B Advertising in 2024: The Definitive Guide
- How to Build a Multichannel B2B Retargeting Strategy (Step-By-Step)
Thanks for reading, good luck on getting your budget approved!
(you got this) 🎉
People Also Ask
How can I address concerns about the risks associated with increasing the ad budget?
Acknowledge potential risks by presenting a risk mitigation plan. This could include strategies like phased budget increases, continuous performance monitoring, and predefined criteria for scaling back if certain KPIs aren’t met. Demonstrating proactive risk management can build stakeholder confidence.
What if my initial pilot campaign doesn’t yield strong results?
If a pilot campaign underperforms, analyze the data to identify areas for improvement. Adjust variables such as targeting, ad creatives, or bidding strategies, and consider running a second pilot. Use these learnings to refine your approach before requesting a larger budget.
How do I align my ad budget request with broader company objectives?
Ensure your proposal clearly connects the ad spend to company goals like revenue growth, market expansion, or brand awareness. Illustrate how the investment will contribute to these objectives, using data and projections to support your case.
What are some common pitfalls to avoid when presenting a budget proposal?
Avoid using jargon that stakeholders may not understand, overloading the presentation with excessive data, or failing to anticipate potential objections. Practice your presentation to ensure clarity and conciseness, and be prepared to address questions confidently.
How can I demonstrate the potential ROI of the proposed ad budget?
Utilize tools like the Google Ads Budget Calculator to forecast potential returns based on different budget scenarios. Present these projections along
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Top 10 LinkedIn Tips on Mastering Objectives & Bid Strategies
Looking to increase your return on ad spend (ROAS) on LinkedIn?
Your bidding strategy and campaign objective play a critical role.
Here’s my 10 tips from over $10 million investment in LinkedIn paid ads.
(In no particular order, they all matter)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Tip #1: The Power Behind Manual Bidding
- Tip #2: Fine-Tuning Your Bids
- Tip #3: Aligning Ad Type & Offer with Objectives
- Tip #4: The Optimal Objective for Thought Leader Ads
- Tip #5: When to Leverage Video Views Objective
- Tip #6: Match Your Content to the Most Suitable Objective
- Tip #7: Take Advantage of Document Ads
- Tip #8: Scale Conversions with Conversation Ads
- Tip #9: Top 3 Objectives for Single Image Ads
- Tip #10: When to Avoid Reach Objective (Brand Awareness)
- Conclusion:
- Resources for Mastering B2B Advertising
Tip #1: The Power Behind Manual Bidding
Unlike automated bidding, which leaves bid amounts at LinkedIn's discretion, manual bidding allows advertisers to set clear cost boundaries.
This ensures that your campaign expenses align with your budgetary constraints and campaign goals, offering a level of precision that automated bidding simply can't match.
By specifying the maximum amount you're willing to pay for clicks, the manual bidding places you in the driver's seat.
The LinkedIn algorithm, while powerful, may not always allocate your budget most economically when given full control.
Start collecting data quickly for your new campaign by bidding above the minimum threshold recommended by LinkedIn.
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When to Consider Automated Bidding:
Automated bidding can be the best choice for specific situations, such as focused Account-Based Marketing (ABM) or retargeting campaigns with small audiences.
Once the campaign starts spending and there’s a benchmark, you can switch to manual bidding to regain full control.
Tip #2: Fine-Tuning Your Bids
A successful manual bidding requires daily checks on your spending against your budget to avoid overbidding or underbidding.
This is a straightforward yet insightful process, comparing the previous day's spend against the current daily budget to adjust your bids for optimal performance.
The Process of Bid Adjustment:
By subtracting your daily budget from the previous day's total spending, you gain clear insights into your bidding strategy's effectiveness.
A negative result suggests underbidding, where you're not fully utilizing your daily budget
While a positive result indicates overbidding, where you're potentially overspending.
Previous day spent - allocated budget = + number indicated bid is too high
The previous day spent - allocated budget = - number indicated bid is too low”
One challenge of manual bidding is finding the sweet spot where your bid is high enough to consume your daily budget fully but not so high that it leads to inefficient spending.
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Side note:
If your audience size is too small, even a high bid will not cover the campaign’s full budget.
Tip #3: Aligning Ad Type & Offer with Objectives
LinkedIn ad campaigns' success deeply depends on the alignment between the chosen ad type and the content you're promoting.
Understanding the nuances of each ad + offer and matching it to the applicable objective is key to maximizing engagement and conversion rate.
Selecting the Right Ad Type for Your Objective:
Video Ads:
When promoting video ads, gravitate towards the Video View or Engagement objectives.
These objectives are designed to maximize viewership and interaction with your video content, making them ideal for capturing and retaining audience attention.
Example of a video ad:
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Document Ads:
The Engagement objective tends to yield the most success for document ads, which include PDFs, presentations, and other downloadable content.
Keeping document ads ungated and focusing on engagement allows your content to reach a broader audience, enhancing brand visibility and thought leadership.
Example of a document ad:
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Single Image Ads:
Engagement and Website Traffic objectives can be effective when using single-image ads.
Your choice depends on whether your primary goal is to foster interaction with the ad or drive traffic to your website or landing page
Example of a single image ad:
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Tip #4: The Optimal Objective for Thought Leader Ads
If you're looking to boost your presence and authority on LinkedIn, thought leader ads present an attractive option.
These ads turn organic content from individual profiles into sponsored messages, maintaining the authentic voice and personal touch that resonates with audiences.
These campaigns can achieve lower costs per engagement by leveraging the engagement objective, enhancing their effectiveness and reach.
Understanding Thought Leader Ads:
Personal Touch:
Unlike standard ads that originate from company pages, thought leader ads come from personal profiles, offering a humanized approach to advertising.
This method harnesses the inherent trust and relatability of individual thought leaders, amplifying their messages across targeted audiences on LinkedIn.
As of March 2024, businesses can promote content from any connected user on LinkedIn with Thought Leader posts, as opposed to just verified employees.
Seamless Integration:
To the audience, thought leader ads appear as regular posts but with the added benefit of targeted reach and visibility.
This seamless integration into the newsfeed portrays a natural engagement experience, hence fostering higher engagement rates compared to traditional ad formats.
Implementation and Best Practices
The success of thought leader ads hinges on selecting organic content that has already demonstrated shares and engagement.
By sponsoring high-performing posts, you capitalize on proven interest and ensure your ad budget is allocated to content with the highest potential return.
Pro tip:
When creating a new single-image campaign, you can click “browse existing content” to find the post by searching for the LinkedIn member and sending a request for approval.
Since these ads will not be sent to a landing page, it’s best to place the intended page link in the first comment and pin the comment.
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Tip #5: When to Leverage Video Views Objective
When promoting video ads, selecting the Video View objective will increase the likelihood of getting the highest percentage of videos watched at the lowest cost.
This objective is designed to maximize the number of views your video receives, optimizing for visibility and engagement among your target audience.
Creative Specifications:
For video creatives, the recommendation is to use a square format (1080x1080 pixels) and include captions.
This format is not only visually appealing but also takes up the most space in the feed property.
Cost Efficiency and Performance:
The cost for video views on LinkedIn typically ranges from 10 to 15 cents per view.
While this might be higher compared to other platforms like YouTube, which has been gaining traction in B2B sectors for its cost-effectiveness, LinkedIn's targeted audience can justify the investment.
Best Practices for Video Campaigns on LinkedIn:
Starting with the lowest feasible cost per view (CPV) in your bidding strategy can help manage costs while assessing the content's performance.
Adjustments can be made based on initial results to find the optimal balance between reach and budget efficiency.
Tip #6: Match Your Content to the Most Suitable Objective
Understanding the type of content you're promoting determines the most effective objective and ad type for your campaign.
For event promotions, for example, certain ad formats have proven to yield higher results and drive registrations at a lower cost.
Let’s break down what type of assets yield the highest results for this example:
Lead Generation Forms (LGF):
The premier choice for driving event registrations.
Lead-gen forms provide a seamless and streamlined user experience, with pre-populated forms making the conversion process as frictionless as possible.
The convenience of instantly filling out forms within the LinkedIn platform significantly increases conversion rates for registrations.
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Pro tip:
To improve the performance of LGF, it's best to keep the number of custom fields below three.
While leveraging pre-populated fields can maintain high conversion rates, adding more than two custom questions or actions can deter completions.
Event Ad Format:
This is one of the most effective ad types for event registries, but it is important to note that it cannot be combined with any of the conversion objectives.
Unique to this type of ad is the inclusion of social proof directly within the ad, such as the number of people who have shown interest or are planning to attend the event.
While its conversion rate may not match that of Lead Generation Forms, the added visibility and credibility from social proof make Event Ads a valuable tactic.

To learn more about promoting events, dive into these articles below:
- 4 Unique LinkedIn Ad Strategies to Drive More Webinar Registrants
- 10 Insider Tips on Event Promotion From $1M+ In Ad Spend
Website Conversion:
Directing users to a landing page for event registration is generally less preferred due to higher costs and lower conversion rates compared to previous tactics.
Exceptions exist, such as directing traffic to a calendar link or for specific targeting scenarios, but overall, this method is seen as less efficient for event promotion.
Design and Copy Considerations:
For campaigns opting to use landing pages, prioritizing copy over design is key.
The hero section, or above-the-fold content, is critical in capturing user interest.
Ensuring message consistency between your ads and landing page, alongside efficient conversion tracking, will set you up for success.
To learn more about landing page best practices, dive into the article below by Pedro Cortés:
10 Proven Landing Page Tips To Boost Your Conversion Rates
Pro-tip:
Streamlining Campaign Tracking with Dynamic URL Parameters:
LinkedIn's introduction of dynamic URL parameters at the campaign level presents a major leap forward in simplifying and enhancing tracking capabilities.
This feature allows marketers to set up the tracking once for the entire campaign, eliminating the tedious process of manually tagging each ad with unique UTM parameters.
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Tip #7: Take Advantage of Document Ads
Document ads have proven highly effective for marketers looking to deepen engagement and build a robust retargeting pool.
They typically have impressive click-through rates, often reaching 6-7% or higher.
The best results from document ads are seen when paired with the engagement objective.
Users who interact with this ad type demonstrate a clear interest in your content, making them ideal candidates for subsequent, more targeted marketing efforts.
For more information on setting up your first document ads, check out this guide provided by LinkedIn
Tip #8: Scale Conversions with Conversation Ads
Conversation ads offer a unique, direct method of engaging with your target audience by delivering messages right into their LinkedIn inboxes.
These ads are billed on a cost-per-send basis, making it crucial to manage bids effectively to maximize both reach and budget efficiency.
Start your bid as low as possible and make adjustments depending on how well it’s pacing.
A good starting point is a $1 bid.
Due to LinkedIn’s second-price auction model for convo ads, they typically keep the actual cost close to the average historical cost per send.
This model charges you just enough to outbid the next highest bidder, not the maximum amount you're willing to pay.
Adaptation to Platform Changes:
Despite recent updates like the focus inbox change on LinkedIn, conversational ads have continued to perform well.
The direct nature of these ads keeps them effective, maintaining their status as a top-performing ad type.
Best Practices for Conversational Ads:
Because convo ads are more intrusive than other ad types, it’s important to ensure your targeting is precise. This precision prevents user annoyance and increases the likelihood of engagement.
The content of your conversation ads should be compelling and offer clear value to a specific job function.
Pro-tip:
The sender should resonate with the target audience for the highest credibility.
Choosing someone with a similar job function or an industry expert/influencer can immediately boost credibility.
For additional tips on convo ad’s best practices, check out this post by AdConversion
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Tip #9: Top 3 Objectives for Single Image Ads
Single-image ads are versatile and can be tailored to meet various objectives, but understanding which objective to prioritize can have a noticeable impact on the effectiveness of your campaigns.
Lead Generation:
The primary objective for many single-image ad campaigns is lead generation.
LinkedIn’s Lead-gen focuses on gathering user information through forms that are pre-populated with LinkedIn profile data, making it easier for users to submit their information without leaving the platform.
Engagement:
The second most common objective for single-image ads is engagement.
This objective aims to maximize interactions such as likes, comments, and shares.
It's particularly useful for increasing brand visibility and engagement within your target audience.
Fostering interactions also enhances the organic reach of your ads through the network effects of user engagement.
The visual appeal and message of your single-image ad should resonate with your audience and encourage interaction.
Regular testing and adaptation of your ad creatives can help maintain high engagement levels.
Website Visits:
The third objective focuses on driving traffic to your website or specific landing pages to achieve conversions.
Whether your goal is to increase sign-ups, sales, or another conversion action, directing users to your website allows for more detailed tracking and nurturing of potential leads in your sales funnel.
Tip #10: When to Avoid Reach Objective (Brand Awareness)
Brand awareness, which prioritizes impressions and broad visibility, often comes under scrutiny due to its cost implications and lower engagement metrics compared to other objectives.
The reach objective operates on a cost-per-impression (CPM) model, where you are charged each time your ad is displayed, regardless of user interaction.
This can lead to higher expenditure without the guarantee of equivalent engagement or conversions.
The inherent nature of paying for mere visibility rather than actionable engagement makes this objective less appealing for many advertisers seeking tangible returns on their investment.
This objective is also inefficient for retargeting.
Building retargeting audiences requires not just impressions but meaningful interactions that signal interest or intent.
The reach objective's focus on maximizing views rather than fostering engagement makes it less effective for gathering a meaningful contribution toward the retargeting pool.
Conclusion:
In this article, we covered 10 actionable tips for matching the most suitable objectives and bidding strategies to your LinkedIn campaigns.
Whether it’s choosing manual bidding to control costs, aligning ad types with your marketing objectives, or understanding when to leverage specific ad formats, each tip offers a pathway to better performance.
By implementing these top 10 tips, you can navigate through the complexities of LinkedIn paid ads with greater precision and efficiency.
I hope you found this article insightful and that it leads to successful outcomes for your future campaigns.
If you’d like to reach out or get more tips, please connect with me via LinkedIn.
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%2520(1).jpeg)
Here's what you'll learn in each course:
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People Also Ask
How can I determine the optimal bid amount for my LinkedIn ad campaigns?
Begin by setting bids slightly above LinkedIn’s recommended minimum to gather initial data. Monitor daily performance, adjusting bids to ensure your budget is fully utilized without overspending. Regular analysis helps in finding the balance between cost-efficiency and achieving desired reach.
What are the best practices for aligning ad creatives with specific campaign objectives?
Ensure that your ad format and content match your campaign goals. For instance, use Video Ads with the Video View objective to maximize engagement, or Document Ads with the Engagement objective to share downloadable content effectively. Aligning creatives with objectives enhances campaign performance.
How do I choose between manual and automated bidding strategies?
Manual bidding offers control over costs, allowing precise budget management, while automated bidding leverages LinkedIn’s algorithm for potentially broader reach. For Account-Based Marketing (ABM) or retargeting campaigns with small audiences, automated bidding can be effective. However, starting with manual bidding can provide valuable insights and control.
What factors should I consider when selecting the appropriate campaign objective?
Identify your primary marketing goal—brand awareness, lead generation, website traffic, etc. Choose objectives that align with these goals and consider the ad formats that best support them. For example, use the Engagement objective for Thought Leader Ads to boost authority and reach.
How can I effectively measure the success of my LinkedIn ad campaigns?
Track key performance indicators (KPIs) such as click-through rates (CTR), conversion rates, cost per click (CPC), and return on ad spend (ROAS). Regularly analyze these metrics to assess performance and make data-driven adjustments to your strategies.
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How to Build a Multichannel B2B Retargeting Strategy (Step-By-Step)
With long sales cycles staying top of mind is half the battle when it comes to B2B.
In this blueprint you’ll learn how to build a multichannel B2B retargeting strategy across:
- Meta (Facebook & Instagram)
- X (Twitter)
- & YouTube
So you can stay omnipresent and convert users across channels.
I know you’re going to love it, let’s get started! ❤️
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Recommended Channels
- Step 1: Confirm Your Remarketing Pixels are Installed
- Step 2: Create all possible retargeting segments by time frame
- Step 3: Adjust targeting and exclusion parameters
- Step 4: Align on retargeting content and offers
- Step 5: Build all Relevant Retargeting Campaigns
- B2B Retargeting FAQ
- Launch Checklist
- Conclusion & Free Courses
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Recommended Channels:
- LinkedIn Ads
- Meta (Facebook & Instagram)
- X (Twitter)
- YouTube
Minimum Budget:
- $1,000/month (for 1 channel)
Recommended Targeting:
Step 1: Confirm Your Remarketing Pixels are Installed
This is a mandatory first step, and something that needs to be done first.
These pixels are how the ad platforms are able to track users activity and provide you the ability to remarket them with various campaigns and offers.
Even if you’re not planning to advertise soon on any channels, I HIGHLY recommend creating a free ad account and installing that platform pixel on your site to start building your remarketing pool.
Here’s what this will look like for each channel.
How to Install the LinkedIn Ads Pixel In 4 Steps
- Create a free LinkedIn Ads account
- Navigate to the “Analyze” → “Insight Tag” section
- Choose how to install your tag (recommend Google Tag Manager aka GTM)
- In Google Tag Manager, create a new tag type with LinkedIn Insight and fire on all pages
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How to Install the Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Ads Pixel In 6 Steps
- Create a free Facebook Ads account
- In the Ads Manager navigate to “Events Manager” → “Connect Data Sources”
- Connect “Web” as a new data source and name your pixel (ex: Meta Pixel)
- Select your new pixel under “Data Sources” and navigate to “Overview” → “Setup Pixel”
- Choose how to install your pixel (recommend Google Tag Manager aka GTM)
- In Google Tag Manager, create a new tag type with Custom HTML and fire on all pages
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How to Install the X (Twitter) Ads Pixel In 4 Steps
- Create a free X (Twitter) Ads account
- In the Ads Manager navigate to “Events Manager” → “Add Event Source”
- Install with “Pixel code” and allow 1st-party cookies
- In Google Tag Manager, create a new tag type with Custom HTM and fire on all pages
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How to Install the Google Ads Pixel In 5 Steps
By installing the Google Ads pixel you’ll be able to remarket to website visitors on YouTube because Google owns YouTube and all campaigns are created in the same ads manager.
- Create a free Google Ads account
- In the Ads Manager navigate to “Audience Manager” → “Your Data Sources”
- Select “Google Ads Tag” → “Edit Source”
- Select “Tag Setup” recommend “Use Google Tag Manager” and copy your ID
- In Google Tag Manager, create a Google Ads Remarketing tag and fire on all pages
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Once complete, confirm all pixels are installed correctly on your website with GTM Preview:
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Remarketing audience size requirements for Meta, YouTube, LinkedIn & X (Twitter)
- Meta (Facebook & Instagram) = 1,000 audience members
- YouTube = 100 audience members
- LinkedIn = 300 audience members
- X (Twitter) = 100 audience members
Now that you’ve installed all the pixels for the platforms you’re interested in you’ll need to allow the pixels time to build your cookie pool to meet audience minimums.
I’ve seen it take 7-30+ days depending on monthly engagement or traffic volumes for the retargeting segment you’re trying to build (ex: website visits, video views, post engagement, etc..).
Step 2: Create all possible retargeting segments by time frame.
Once your remarketing audience has met minimums it’s time to build your segments.
This step will vary depending on how large your retargeting audience is.
In a perfect world we’ll want to create retargeting segments for the following timeframes:
The advantage of creating retargeting segments by time frame is:
✅ Easily see which cohort performs best
✅ Allocate more budget to the top performing time frame
✅ Align offers and messaging accordingly
Watch this video to better understand the thought process behind leveraging different remarketing segments by timeframes:
In addition to testing timeframes we want to combine as many relevant remarketing segments together in each cohort so we can scale up our overall audience size (more on this in Step 4).
Depending on the channel you’re advertising on, the available remarketing segments will vary.
Here are my go to choices for each channel below.
Top 10 LinkedIn Ads retargeting segments:
Top 9 Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Ads retargeting segments:
Top 5 X (Twitter) Ads retargeting segments:
Top 4 YouTube Ads retargeting segments:
Depending on your audience sizes you might not be able to use shorter timeframes.
If that’s the case, default to the next longest one:
For example:
❌30 days < 1,000 audience size? Try 90 days
❌90 days < 1,000 audience size? Try 180 days
❌180 days < 1,000 audience size? Hold off on remarketing until your audience sizes build
Build out each relevant remarketing combination for the channels you want to advertise on.
Step 3: Adjust targeting and exclusion parameters.
Equally important to who you’re targeting is who you exclude.
With all your retargeting segments created it’s clear who you’re going to target.
Now it’s time to get clear on who you’ll exclude for each cohort (e.g. 30, 90, 180 days).
Exclusion audiences allow you to remove users who aren’t a good fit for your targeting.
Here’s my go-to exclusions by channel.
Top 8 LinkedIn Ads Exclusion Audiences:
Top 9 Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Ads Exclusion Audiences:
Top 6 X (Twitter) Ads Exclusion Audiences:
Top 6 YouTube Ads Exclusion Audiences:
Feel free to remove and add the exclusions that make sense for your business and who you’re ultimately trying to reach with your retargeting campaigns.
By no means should you only use the ones I outlined above, some will make sense others won’t.
Once you’re clear on who you’ll exclude it’s time to align on content and offers.
Step 4: Align on retargeting content and offers.
Now that you’re clear on who you’ll target and exclude for each cohort. Let’s chat about what content and offers you’ll want to show them.
First things first, don’t make the mistake of only showing offers to people in your remarketing audience. This is the equivalent of following someone all day asking them to buy something.
This is what Corporate Bro has to say about that 😂
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Recommended B2B Remarketing Budget Allocation:
Avoid leaving a bad impression and potentially hurting your brand by also adding content in the mix.
50% of your remarketing budget should go towards adding value to your audience, and 50% goes towards asking them to convert on something (ex: Demo, Trial, Event, etc…)
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With this budget allocation you’re rotating offers and content equally to your remarketing cohorts (e.g. 30, 90, 180 days) and letting the users decide which asset they're interested in.
Which leads us to common remarketing mistakes you’ll want to avoid.
4 Common Mistakes to Avoid with Retargeting:
1. Only promoting offers
Avoid a pitch fest and split your remarketing budget 50/50 between content and offers as outlined above.
2. Retargeting on assumption instead of action
Don’t create these crazy retargeting flows where someone must do X then Y and finally you’ll give them Z. This kills your retargeting audience size and you’re assuming that you’ll be correct 3/3 times (idk about you but I’m not great at guessing).
Instead show them everything equally (content and offers) and then once they decide to click on an ad, watch a video etc… you can now create unique campaigns to remarket off that activity (now you’re no longer assuming they are interested).
3. Not using all available retargeting segments
Don’t rely on 1 segment alone like a website visitor segment. Instead combine multiple segments together with an OR statement in the same timeframe to scale up your overall retargeting audience so you have more flexibility to layer filters.
4. Failing to refresh creative to offset fatigue
There’s nothing worse than seeing the same ad 1,000 times. This can be easily avoided by creating a workflow to refresh your creatives on a monthly basis.
Just changing the creatives for the same offers and content will create a new experience for users and help offset ad fatigue.
Watch this video to learn more about how to monitor and overcome ad fatigue:
When we talk about remarketing content and offers equally – what exactly does that mean?
- White papers?
- Webinars?
- Tutorials?
- Demos?
- Trials?
The list goes on, and on…
There are 1,000s of offers and content you could potentially promote.
To help simplify and conceptualize this, here are 4 useful remarketing buckets inspired by Canberk Beker, Global Head of Paid Media at Cognism from episode 2 of Behind the Ads.
Recommended Remarketing Buckets by Timeframe:
B2B Retargeting Ad Examples:
Product Marketing
(Content that focuses on promoting the capabilities of your product)
Social Proof
(Leveraging others words and results in our ads)
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Thought Leadership
(Content that educates your target audience and positions you as an expert)
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Offers
(Any other type of ad where you’re asking your target audience to convert)
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Armed with your content and offers by time frame there’s one last step to do.
Step 5: Build all Relevant Retargeting Campaigns.
After going through steps 1-4 you should be clear on:
- Which channels you’re going to advertise on
- What retargeting segments you’ll leverage
- Which exclusion audiences you’ll block
- What content/offers you’ll showcase
Let’s wrap up with how these campaigns should be built.
B2B Retargeting Campaign Structure:
Here’s what the retargeting campaign structure will look like at 10,000 feet:
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Couple of important call outs:
Every campaign has its own unique timeframe and retargeting bucket.
This makes pacing, optimization, and reporting really easy.
All retargeting segments within the same timeframe are grouped together as an OR.
This allows you to scale your retargeting audience size overall within the cohort.
Combine segments together with OR not AND.
Naming conventions are clear and consistent from the campaign to ad level.
This allows you to easily find your campaigns and reporting on performance.
Here’s how to build these campaigns out for each channel.
How to Build LinkedIn Retargeting Campaigns:
Make sure to disable Audience Expansion and the LinkedIn Audience Network for all LinkedIn retargeting cohort campaigns.
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This will prevent LinkedIn from serving your ads to people not in your retargeting audiences and outside of the LinkedIn platform.
Create the following campaigns in the LinkedIn Ads campaign manager across whichever timeframes are applicable for your account:
Cohort #1: 30-Day LinkedIn Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (30D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (30D) | Image | Awareness
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (30D) | Video | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (30D) | Carousel | Engagement
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Brand Awareness, Engagement, Video Views
- Conversion focus = Lead Generation or Conversion
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences (layer titles or function if possible):
- All website visitors (30D)
- All company page visitors (30D)
- All document interactions (30D)
- All past event attendees (30D)
- All lead gen form opens and submits (30D)
- All single-image ad interactions (30D)
- All 25-97% video viewers (30D)
- All closed lost contacts (30D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Maximize delivery
- Conversion focus = Manual CPC
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial)
.png)
Cohort #2: 90-Day LinkedIn Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (90D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (90D) | Image | Awareness
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (90D) | Video | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (90D) | Carousel | Engagement
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (90D) | Image | Awareness
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Brand Awareness, Engagement, Video Views
- Conversion focus = Lead Generation or Conversion
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences (layer titles or function if possible):
- All website visitors (90D)
- All company page visitors (90D)
- All document interactions (90D)
- All past event attendees (90D)
- All lead gen form opens and submits (90D)
- All single-image ad interactions (90D)
- All 25-97% video viewers (90D)
- All closed lost contacts (90D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Maximize delivery
- Conversion focus = Manual CPC
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership
.png)
Cohort #3: 180-Day LinkedIn Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (180D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (180D) | Image | Awareness
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (180D) | Video | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (180D) | Carousel | Engagement
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (180D) | Image | Awareness
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Brand Awareness, Engagement, Video Views
- Conversion focus = Lead Generation or Conversion
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences (layer titles or function if possible):
- All website visitors (180D)
- All company page visitors (180D)
- All document interactions (180D)
- All past event attendees (180D)
- All lead gen form opens and submits (180D)
- All single-image ad interactions (180D)
- All 25-97% video viewers (180D)
- All closed lost contacts (180D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Maximize delivery
- Conversion focus = Manual CPC
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership

Optional: 30-Day LinkedIn Offer Bouncers Campaign
If you have the audience size available creating an offer bouncer campaign that shows personalized creative to folks who visited your intent pages and didn’t convert is worth testing.
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | {Offer Name Bouncers} (30D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | Demo | Demo Page Bouncers (30D) | Conversation | Lead Gen
Recommended Objectives:
- Conversion focus = Lead Generation or Conversion
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences (layer titles or function if possible):
- All pricing, demo, trial, and case study bouncers
- All meeting no-shows
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Conversion focus = Manual CPC
Ads: Offers
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How to Build Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Retargeting Campaigns:
Highly recommend selecting manual placements of feeds and stories for Facebook & Instagram with creative in the correct dimensions to prevent your ads from appearing in the wrong formats.
Also don’t recommend delivering on the Audience Network or Video Feeds based on our past results, and make sure to not to run on Reels unless you have unique creative for that placement.
Always make sure your creative matches the placement it appears for.
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Create the following campaigns in the Meta Ads campaign manager across whichever timeframes are applicable for your account:
Cohort #1: 30-Day Meta Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (30D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (30D) | Image | Awareness
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (30D) | Video | Sales
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (30D) | Carousel | Traffic
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Awareness, Traffic, Engagement
- Conversion focus = Leads or Sales
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (30D)
- All Facebook page visitors (30D)
- All Instagram page visitors (30D)
- All past event attendees (30D)
- All lead gen form opens and submits (30D)
- All 25-95% video viewers (30D)
- All closed lost contacts (30D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Maximize reach of ads, link clicks, engagement, or views
- Conversion focus = Maximize number of conversions or leads
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial)
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Cohort #2: 90-Day Meta Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (90D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (90D) | Image | Awareness
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (90D) | Video | Sales
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (90D) | Carousel | Traffic
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (90D) | Image | Engagement
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Awareness, Traffic, Engagement
- Conversion focus = Leads or Sales
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (90D)
- All Facebook page visitors (90D)
- All Instagram page visitors (90D)
- All past event attendees (90D)
- All lead gen form opens and submits (90D)
- All 25-95% video viewers (90D)
- All closed lost contacts (90D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Maximize reach of ads, link clicks, engagement, or views
- Conversion focus = Maximize number of conversions or leads
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership
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Cohort #3: 180-Day Meta Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (180D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (180D) | Image | Awareness
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (180D) | Video | Sales
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (180D) | Carousel | Traffic
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (180D) | Image | Engagement
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Awareness, Traffic, Engagement
- Conversion focus = Leads or Sales
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (180D)
- All Facebook page visitors (180D)
- All Instagram page visitors (180D)
- All past event attendees (180D)
- All lead gen form opens and submits (180D)
- All 25-95% video viewers (180D)
- All closed lost contacts (180D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Maximize reach of ads, link clicks, engagement, or views
- Conversion focus = Maximize number of conversions or leads
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership

Optional: 30-Day Meta Offer Bouncers Campaign
If you have the audience size available creating an offer bouncer campaign that shows personalized creative to folks who visited your intent pages and didn’t convert is worth testing.
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | {Offer Name Bouncers} (30D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | Demo | Demo Page Bouncers (30D) | Image | Leads
Recommended Objectives:
- Conversion focus = Leads or Sales
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All pricing, demo, trial, and case study bouncers
- All meeting no-shows
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Conversion focus = Maximize number of conversions or leads
Ads: Offers
.png)
How to Build X (Twitter) Retargeting Campaigns:
With X (Twitter) we don’t have the ability to filter by time frame so we’ll create the following campaigns in the ads manager:
Cohort #1: All Time (Twitter) Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (All Time) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (All Time) | Image | Reach
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (All Time) | Video | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (All Time) | Carousel | Engagement
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (All Time) | Image | Reach
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Reach, Video Views, Engagement, Website Traffic
- Conversion focus = Conversions or Keywords
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (All Time)
- All 50-100% video viewers (All Time)
- People who saw your tweets (All Time)
- Followers of your X (Twitter) profile (All Time)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content or conversion focus = Autobid
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership

Optional: All Time X (Twitter) Offer Bouncers Campaign
If you have the audience size available creating an offer bouncer campaign that shows personalized creative to folks who visited your intent pages and didn’t convert is worth testing.
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | {Offer Name Bouncers} (All Time) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | Demo | Demo Page Bouncers (All Time) | Image | Conversions
Recommended Objectives:
- Conversion focus = Conversions or Keywords
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All pricing, demo, trial, and case study bouncers
- All meeting no-shows
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content or conversion focus = Autobid
Ads: Offers
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How to Build YouTube Retargeting Campaigns:
Create the following campaigns in the YouTube Ads campaign manager across whichever timeframes are applicable for your account:
Cohort #1: 30-Day YouTube Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (30D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (30D) | In-Stream | Views
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (30D) | In-Stream | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (30D) | In-Stream | Views
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Get views
- Conversion focus = Drive conversions
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (30D)
- All YouTube video viewers (30D)
- All YouTube subscribers (30D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Max CPV
- Conversion focus = Maximize conversions
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial)
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Cohort #2: 90-Day YouTube Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (90D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (90D) | In-Stream | Views
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (90D) | In-Stream | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (90D) | In-Stream | Views
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (90D) | In-Stream | Views
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Get views
- Conversion focus = Drive conversions
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (90D)
- All YouTube video viewers (90D)
- All YouTube subscribers (90D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Max CPV
- Conversion focus = Maximize conversions
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership

Cohort #3: 180-Day YouTube Retargeting
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | Remarketing (180D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | PM Content | Remarketing (180D) | In-Stream | Views
- EX: USA | Demo | Remarketing (180D) | In-Stream | Conversions
- EX: USA | Social Proof | Remarketing (180D) | In-Stream | Views
- EX: USA | Thought Leadership | Remarketing (180D) | In-Stream | Views
Recommended Objectives:
- Content focus = Get views
- Conversion focus = Drive conversions
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences:
- All website visitors (180D)
- All YouTube video viewers (180D)
- All YouTube subscribers (180D)
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Content focus = Max CPV
- Conversion focus = Maximize conversions
Ads: Product marketing content, social proof, offers (ex: Demo, Trial), thought leadership

Optional: 30-Day YouTube Offer Bouncers Campaign
If you have the audience size available creating an offer bouncer campaign that shows personalized creative to folks who visited your intent pages and didn’t convert is worth testing.
Campaign Name: {Location} | {Offer} | {Offer Name Bouncers} (30D) | {Ad Type} | {Objective}
- EX: USA | Demo | Demo Page Bouncers (30D) | In-Stream | Conversions
Recommended Objectives:
- Conversion focus = Drive conversions
Recommended Daily Budget: $25-$100/day
Recommended Audiences (layer titles or function if possible):
- All pricing, demo, trial & case study visits
Recommended Bid Strategies:
- Conversion focus = Maximize conversions
Ads: Offers
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B2B Retargeting FAQ
There’s no shortage of questions around implementing successful retargeting campaigns.
We completely understand the complexity (especially when it’s your first time building them).
Here’s 5 of the most common retargeting questions we hear from clients:
How long does it take to build a retargeting audience?
- 7-30+ days depending on monthly engagement or traffic volumes for the retargeting segment you’re trying to build (ex: website visits, video views, post engagement, etc..)
How many channels should you advertise on?
- Focus on one advertising channel at a time when you have a limited budget (ex: < $3,000/month) master it and then expand to other channels over time.
How do you calculate your starting retargeting budget?
- $25-$100/day is a general rule of thumb you can follow as it’s enough to support the average costs per platform and coverage for small retargeting audiences when starting out.
How does retargeting work?
- Leveraging first party and third party data ad platforms are able to track user behavior in-app and out of platform allowing you to remarket to them based on past behavior.
How often do you need to refresh creatives for retargeting?
- A smaller audience size (ex: < 50,000) typically requires more frequent creative refreshes vs a larger one (ex: > 50,000) to prevent ad fatigue. At minimum you should aim to refresh ad creatives on a monthly basis to stay ahead of ad fatigue.
Launch Checklist
We’ve covered quite a bit in this blueprint!
Here’s a checklist we put together to help you easily reference when launching your retargeting campaigns to make sure you don’t forget anything and avoid common pitfalls.
- LinkedIn Retargeting: Launch Checklist
- Meta Retargeting: Launch Checklist
- X (Twitter) Retargeting: Launch Checklist
- YouTube Retargeting: Launch Checklist
Conclusion & Free Courses
Hope you received a tremendous amount of value from the blueprint! 🎉
If you’re serious about mastering B2B advertising then you definitely need to join 1,000+ B2B marketers leveling up their paid advertising skill sets in AdConversion.
Every one of our on-demand courses are:
✅ 100% free access.
✅ Taught by vetted industry experts.
✅ Have workbooks, resources, and templates.
✅ 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 I timed it 😂)
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Insider Benchmarks From $1,041,978 In YouTube Ads Cost Data
If you’ve ever asked yourself:
- How much does YouTube Ads cost?
- What’s a good view rate for YouTube Ads?
- What’s a good CTR for YouTube Ads?
We analyzed $1,041,978 In YouTube Ads data from 2023-2024 to find the answers.
Now It’s important to stress that benchmarks and stats should not be seen as law.
Use these benchmarks and stats as helpful starting point for perspective.
But ultimately you should hold yourself accountable to your own results.
The data set is comprised of the following sample:
- Companies with > $10,000 in YouTube spend
- Historical performance from 2023-2024
- 100% B2B SaaS organizations
For my fellow nerds 🤓 you can review and play with the anonymized data set here <<
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Let’s jump into the insights!
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- How much does YouTube Ads cost?
- Average Cost Per Click (CPC)
- Average Cost Per Thousand Impressions (CPM)
- What’s a good view rate for YouTube Ads?
- What’s a good CTR for YouTube Ads?
- Additional Resources
How Much Does YouTube Ads Cost?
Average Cost Per View (CPV)
The average cost per view for YouTube in-stream ads is $0.05, ranging from $0.01-$0.19.
A view is only counted if someone watches at least 30 seconds of your video.

Average Cost Per Click (CPC)
The average cost per click for YouTube Ads is $3.56, ranging from $0.05 - $10.71.

Average Cost Per Thousand Impressions (CPM)
The average cost per thousand impressions (CPM) for YouTube Ads is $9, ranging from $1 - $23.

What’s a Good View Rate for YouTube Ads?
The average view rate for YouTube in-stream ads is 29.24%, ranging from 3.47% - 51.39%.

What’s a Good CTR for YouTube Ads?
The average clickthrough rate for YouTube in-stream ads is 0.51%, ranging from 0.09% - 1.64%.
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Additional Resources
If you’re looking to uplevel your paid advertising skill set check out our free on-demand courses and join 1,000+ B2B marketers leveling up their skill sets.
If you want to dive deeper into B2B advertising check out some of our other top articles:
- B2B Advertising in 2024: The Definitive Guide
- How to Build a Multichannel B2B Retargeting Strategy (Step-By-Step)
- How to get LinkedIn-like Targeting with YouTube Ads for B2B
Hope these benchmarks and stats gave you some insight on YouTube Ads.
As mentioned at the beginning of this article benchmarks should only be used as a starting point.
Your performance and beating your current benchmarks is ultimately all that matters most.
People Also Ask
How can I optimize my YouTube Ads to achieve a lower Cost Per View (CPV)?
To reduce CPV, focus on creating engaging content that resonates with your target audience. Utilize precise targeting options to reach viewers more likely to engage with your ad, and experiment with different ad formats to determine which yields the best performance.
What factors influence the Cost Per Thousand Impressions (CPM) for YouTube Ads?
CPM is affected by factors including audience demographics, geographic location, industry competition, and seasonal demand. Understanding these elements can help in strategizing your ad placements and budgeting effectively.
How does the bidding strategy impact the overall cost of YouTube Ads?
Choosing between bidding strategies like Cost-Per-View (CPV) and Cost-Per-Thousand Impressions (CPM) can significantly influence ad costs. Selecting a strategy that aligns with your campaign objectives—whether focusing on views or impressions—can optimize spending.
What are some best practices for achieving a higher click-through rate (CTR) on YouTube Ads?
Enhance CTR by crafting compelling ad creatives with clear calls-to-action, ensuring relevance to the target audience, and conducting A/B testing to refine ad elements. Monitoring performance metrics allows for continuous optimization.
How can I effectively measure the return on investment (ROI) for my YouTube Ad campaigns?
Calculate ROI by comparing the revenue generated from the ad campaign to the total ad spend. Utilize tracking tools to monitor conversions and assess the profitability of your campaigns, adjusting strategies as needed to improve outcomes.
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10 Proven Landing Page Tips You Can Apply Today To Boost Your Conversion Rates
Increase your SaaS landing page conversions with strategies you can apply today.
I’ve had the pleasure of crafting more than 100+ landing pages for top SaaS brands.
Here are my top 10 tips and landing page best practices for increasing conversion rates.
(In no particular order, they all matter)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Tip #1 - Showing the “Aha Moments” in the Hero Section
- Tip #2 - Switching from “Call to Action” to “Call to Value”
- Tip #3 - The Art of Showcasing True Value
- Tip #4 - Contrast: The Psychology Behind Decision-Making in SaaS
- Tip #5 - The Art of Show vs Tell
- Tip #6 - Increase Conversion by Selling Indirectly
- Tip #7 - Showcasing the Crucial 20% That Truly Resonates
- Tip #8 - Minimizing Risk to Maximize Conversion
- Tip #9 - How to Find Those “Aha Moments”
- Tip #10 - The Three Pillars for an Effective Landing Page
- Bonus Tip: Enhance Your Mental Reference
- Conclusion
- Resources for Mastering B2B Advertising
Tip #1 - Showing the “Aha Moments” in the Hero Section
Unlike traditional approaches that cram the hero section with exhaustive product details, the most effective strategy is to spark curiosity.
The hero's purpose transcends mere product selling; it's about unveiling those 'aha' moments that resonate deeply with the audience, compelling them to explore further.
'Aha' moments are those instances of sudden insight or discovery that leave a lasting impression on the audience.
In the hero section, showcasing these moments effectively can be the difference between a visitor bouncing off the page and one who stays to learn more.
For example, rather than just stating that a product simplifies a complex process, demonstrating this transformation through a brief, engaging visual or interactive element can be far more compelling.
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The Case for Clarity and Creativity:
Consider a tool that converts audio instructions into a polished presentation.
A straightforward statement like "You talk, we'll write" paired with a generic AI-themed image does little to convey the true potential of the product.
A more effective strategy would involve a dynamic display of an audio clip evolving into a complete slide deck right within the hero section.
This visual demonstration not only clarifies the product's purpose but also instantly showcases its efficiency and innovative approach, making the value proposition clear and compelling from the outset.
Tip #2 - Switching from “Call to Action” to “Call to Value”
A compelling call to action (CTA) is effective not just because it tells users what to do, but because it clearly shows the value they'll get from taking action.
This principle is particularly relevant when discussing how to entice potential users to engage with a SaaS product, whether through booking a demo, signing up for a trial, or merely exploring the features of a tool.
The Strategy of Value-Driven CTAs:
A common misstep in crafting CTAs is the assumption that a straightforward directive—such as "Sign up for free" or "Book a demo"— suffices to motivate action.
However, this overlooks the critical need to communicate the unique benefits that await the user.
We need to shift from a generic call to action to one that vividly presents a 'value proposition'.
For instance, rather than merely inviting potential customers to "book a demo," a more effective approach would illustrate what they can expect to gain from that demo, such as “Book a 30-Minute Demo & Walk Away With 5 Tailored Tips”
Tailoring Experiences to Overcome Skepticism:
Marketers need to ensure that CTAs are not just gateways to product features but also to experiences that address the visitors' needs and concerns.
Particularly in industries where customers are overwhelmed with choices, standing out requires demonstrating immediate and tangible value.
Practical Example:
A service offering insights into optimizing YouTube ad placements might offer a "Free consultation to uncover 10 high-impact ad placements you're missing."
This approach directly speaks to the user's desire to gain an advantage and assures them of receiving valuable insights regardless of their decision to commit to the service.
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Leveraging Trust Through Transparency and Results:
Trust plays a major role in converting users from interested observers to active participants. This trust can be significantly bolstered by transparency and evidence of potential results.
A case in point involves a service that automates customer feedback collection, where the CTA emphasizes the realistic outcomes users can expect, such as "Join our trial and see how businesses gain 10+ new reviews in just a week."
Such a statement not only sets clear expectations but also addresses common concerns around efficacy and value for time spent.
Tip #3 - The Art of Showcasing True Value
The debate between emphasizing features versus benefits has long been a topic of discussion.
However, a more profound approach focuses on selling outcomes—a strategy that transcends the traditional split by aligning a product's capabilities directly with the customer's success.
This method does not just highlight what the product can do or the advantages it offers but rather, it shows the tangible impact it will have on a user's objectives, such as enhancing profitability, efficiency, or operational insights.
For example, instead of stating that an analytics tool provides comprehensive data analysis (a feature) or delivers actionable insights (a benefit), outcome-based selling would focus on how it enables businesses to identify and rectify inefficiencies in their ad spend, ultimately increasing ROI.
Crafting an Indirect Promise:
One of the critical nuances of this approach is the subtlety of the promise being made.
Directly stating that a product will lead to more revenue or savings might trigger skepticism. Thus, the art lies in painting a scenario that leads the customer to reach these outcomes naturally.
By detailing the insights or efficiencies a tool provides, customers begin to see the path to increased profits or reduced costs themselves, making the conclusion feel like their discovery rather than a bold claim from the company.
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Practical Example:
Consider a service that offers AI-driven call answering for small businesses. Rather than simply stating it answers calls, the marketing message could focus on the outcome:
"Never miss a sale again with our AI receptionist, ensuring you capture every opportunity, 24/7."
Such framing not only addresses the immediate feature but also connects it to a desirable business outcome—increasing sales by capturing every call.
Tip #4 - Contrast: The Psychology Behind Decision-Making in SaaS
Mastering the subtle technique of drawing contrasts does more than just emphasize a product's strengths;
It vividly contrasts the potential customers' current challenges with the brighter prospects that the right solution can offer.
Fundamentally, selling through contrast means outlining the challenges or limitations customers currently face and comparing these with the transformative benefits the product can provide.
The effectiveness of this strategy lies in its ability to magnify the perceived value of a solution, making the switch or become not just logical but, essentially, inevitable.
Crafting Compelling Contrasts:
Creating compelling contrasts requires a deep understanding of the customer's current struggles and how they align with the unique capabilities of the SaaS solution.
This involves asking probing questions that uncover pain points and limitations of current tools or processes and demonstrating how the product not only addresses these issues but also offers additional, unforeseen benefits
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Tip #5 - The Art of Show vs Tell
Transcend beyond the superficial allure of adjectives like "fast," "easy," or "better," which, while enticing, often fall short of conveying the true essence and capability of a product.
Demonstrating Value Through Evidence:
The key lies in demonstrating value through clear, undeniable evidence.
For instance, showcasing a time-lapse video of creating a 25-email sequence in 15 minutes delivers a powerful, visual affirmation of the tool's efficiency.
This method not only captures attention but also dispels doubts by providing a visual benchmark for the tool's capability.
The Synergy with Earlier Strategies:
"Show, don't tell" beautifully complements earlier discussed strategies like focusing on outcomes and creating contrast.
It provides the tangible proof that underpins these approaches, ensuring that the marketing message is not just heard but felt and understood.
The landing page below has a short video demonstrating the value to prospects.
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Tip #6 - Increase Conversion by Selling Indirectly
The ability to sell outcomes indirectly is not just a tactic; it's an art form.
The essence of this approach lies in the subtle but powerful shift from telling prospects about the benefits of a product to showing them the tangible impact it can have on their operations, revenue, or efficiency.
Direct claims often invite skepticism, whereas indirect suggestions inspire imagination and belief.
The Power of Indirect Selling:
Direct selling, especially when it involves bold claims like being the "number one CRM for a niche," tends to be met with skepticism.
Prospects are bombarded with similar claims daily, making them numb to such assertions.
The challenge, therefore, is to engage their imagination and lead them to the conclusion that your product is the superior choice without explicitly stating it.
This involves painting a picture of the outcomes in a way that the prospect can see themselves achieving these results with your product.
Practical Example:
Consider the scenario of a dental practice missing calls—and thereby potential business—outside of office hours.
Instead of merely stating that an AI receptionist tool can save them money and time, the narrative is constructed around the loss incurred when calls go unanswered.
By quantifying the potential loss (e.g., "every missed call could cost you a thousand dollars"), the message effectively highlights the cost of inaction.
This approach leverages the fear of loss, a potent motivator, making the solution offered by the product not just desirable but necessary.
Another innovative approach is using analytics and user feedback mechanisms within the product itself to remind users of the value they're missing by not upgrading.

Tip #7 - Showcasing the Crucial 20% That Truly Resonates
The effectiveness of a landing page can significantly influence a company's conversion rates.
Simplicity is one of the most important components of a successful landing page, yet it is often overlooked.
Rather than bombarding potential customers with every detail and feature of the product, present just enough information to pique interest and guide visitors to the next step.
The primary goal of a landing page is not to sell the product in its entirety but to entice visitors with a compelling overview that encourages them to explore further.
Say more with less:
- Show, Don't Overwhelm: overloading a page with information can deter potential leads.
- Simplify the Decision-Making Process: by offering a snapshot rather than a deep dive, companies can make it easier for prospects to decide and engage further with the product.
- Address Key Objections Proactively: incorporating elements that address key objections can transform a passive viewer into an active lead.
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Every potential customer comes with a set of preconceived notions and concerns that could hinder their willingness to engage with a product.
Successful landing pages anticipate these objections and address them upfront.
This proactive strategy serves two purposes:
- Reassures visitors that their concerns are recognized
- Positions the company as attentive and customer-centric.
For instance, if a common objection is the perceived complexity of integrating a new software tool into existing workflows, a landing page might feature testimonials from users who found the process straightforward and supported.
This kind of social proof can alleviate concerns and motivate visitors to take the next step.
Practical Example:
Consider a SaaS product designed to enhance project management.
Instead of listing every feature and tool available, focus on showcasing how it simplifies project tracking, enhances team collaboration, and leads to better project outcomes.
Use visuals and brief case studies to demonstrate the benefits.
This method not only captures interest but also sets the stage for visitors to discover more by trying the product themselves.
The Role of the Landing Page in the Sales Process:
The landing page itself is not the end goal but a means to an end.
The ultimate objective is to guide visitors toward making a decision.
So, the landing page should be designed with this goal in mind, ensuring that the call-to-action (CTA) is clear, compelling, and aligned with what visitors are seeking.
This concept extends to product-led growth companies, where even free products require a degree of selling.
In this context, the landing page must convincingly communicate the value of trying the product, addressing any barriers to action, such as time investment or skepticism based on past experiences with similar tools.
Tip #8 - Minimizing Risk to Maximize Conversion
Removing perceived risk is often more straightforward and impactful than detailing the outcome.
This approach centers on simplifying the decision-making process for potential users by alleviating their concerns and highlighting ease of use.
The Challenge of Clarifying Outcomes:
Clarifying the outcome a product or service offers can be a complex task, requiring precise language and a deep understanding of the audience's needs and expectations.
It involves not just stating what the product does, but also communicating its value in a way that resonates with potential users.
This can be particularly challenging when dealing with innovative or complex solutions where the benefits are not immediately apparent.
Easing the Path to Conversion:
Contrary to the complex process of defining outcomes, mitigating risk for the user often follows a more straightforward path.
It involves clear, actionable steps that directly address common concerns and barriers to entry.
Possible actions include:
- Enhancing Call to Actions
- Addressing Objections Proactively
- Showcasing Practical Examples
Removing risk transforms the decision-making process from a calculation into an opportunity.
When potential users feel that they have nothing to lose and everything to gain, the barrier to taking the next step lowers significantly.
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Tip #9 - How to Find Those “Aha Moments”
Identifying “ Aha Moments” requires a deep understanding of the user experience, often achieved through collaboration with teams directly interacting with customers, such as sales and support.
Once identified, these moments should be prominently featured on the landing page.
This could involve detailed case studies, interactive demos, or succinct bullet points that directly address common questions or concerns.
For instance, if a product offers unprecedented ease of use, showing a quick video of someone setting up a complex task in minutes can be incredibly persuasive.
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Practical Example:
Illustrating how a product can solve a problem in a way that no other can, such as automating a task that typically takes hours into just a few clicks, can instantly communicate its value.
Practical examples not only aid in understanding but also help potential users envision themselves benefiting from the product.
Tip #10 - The Three Pillars for an Effective Landing Page
Creating an effective landing page is like constructing a building.
It requires a solid foundation and supportive pillars to ensure stability and function.
There are three critical pillars that, when thoroughly crafted and harmonized, can significantly enhance the page's effectiveness and conversion rates.
These pillars are:
- Results: the promise of value
- Perceived Superiority: standing out from the competition
- Risk Mitigation: lowering the barriers to adoption
This approach ensures that every element of the landing page works in harmony to support the ultimate goal:
Driving conversions and achieving business objectives.
Bonus Tip: Enhance Your Mental Reference
Just as artists draw from a vast mental library of images and concepts to create something novel and breathtaking, landing page designers and copywriters must build their own collection of inspirational references.
This mental database enables them to recognize and apply successful elements from various sources, combining them in innovative ways that resonate with their specific audience.
How to build your mental reference:
- Curate Examples: actively seek out and save examples of landing pages, ads, copy, and designs that catch your attention. some text
- Tools like Pinterest or dedicated design inspiration websites can be invaluable.
- Tools like Pinterest or dedicated design inspiration websites can be invaluable.
- Analyze What Works: don't just collect examples; study them.some text
- What makes a particular landing page effective?
- How does it engage its audience?
- How are the visuals and copy aligned to convey a compelling message?
- Learn from Various Industries: broaden your horizons by exploring successful landing pages across different sectors.
- Stay Updated: the digital landscape is ever-evolving, and so are the trends in landing page design and copywriting. Keeping up-to-date with the latest trends ensures your mental reference is not only vast but also relevant.
Conclusion:
In crafting effective landing pages, the key lies in simplicity, clarity, and focusing on the product's true value.
By enticing users with outcomes rather than overwhelming them with features, addressing their concerns upfront, and demonstrating the tangible benefits they stand to gain, companies can significantly boost conversions.
This holistic approach, from spotlighting product essence to leveraging contrast and indirect selling, transforms landing pages from mere entry points into powerful catalysts for customer engagement and success.
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People Also Ask
How can I effectively measure the success of my landing page optimizations?
Utilize analytics tools to monitor key performance indicators (KPIs) like conversion rates, bounce rates, and average session duration. A/B testing different elements can also provide insights into what changes resonate with your audience.
What are common pitfalls to avoid during landing page optimization?
Avoid cluttered designs, slow load times, and unclear calls-to-action. Ensuring mobile responsiveness and aligning content with user intent are also crucial to prevent high bounce rates.
How often should I update or test my landing pages?
Regularly review performance metrics and conduct A/B tests, especially when introducing new products or campaigns. Continuous optimization helps maintain relevance and effectiveness.
What role does SEO play in landing page optimization?
Incorporating relevant keywords, optimizing meta tags, and ensuring fast load times can improve search engine rankings, driving more organic traffic to your landing page.
How can I personalize landing pages for different audience segments?
Use dynamic content to tailor messages based on user demographics, behavior, or referral sources, creating a more personalized and engaging experience.
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10 Insider Tips on Event Promotion From $1M+ In Ad Spend
Looking to boost registrations for your next event?
I’ve been a part of a team that has driven 10,000+ registrations for events like Ascend, and Innovation Day.
Here are my top 10 event promotion best practices for increasing registrations through paid ads.
(In no particular order, they all matter)
TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Tip #1: The Four-Stage Framework for Event Marketing
- Tip #2: Utilizing Partnerships & Internal Networks
- Tip #3: Mastering Segmentation & Efficiency
- Tip #4: Remarketing Mastery: Capitalizing on Targeted Engagement
- Tip #5: Cross-Channel Integration
- Tip #6: Geo-Targeted Ads: Precision Marketing for Event Success
- Tip #7: Gamification: Turning Engagement into a Competitive Advantage
- Tip #8: Display Advertising & Maximizing Visibility
- Tip #9: Remarketing Campaigns: Sharpening the Focus for Better ROI
- Tip #10: Mastering ROI: The North Star of Marketing Success
- Conclusion
- Resources for Mastering B2B Advertising
Tip #1: The Four-Stage Framework for Event Marketing
Maximizing ROI on event marketing demands more than just throwing money at promotions.
It requires a carefully structured budget across four critical stages:
- Pre-Event
- Event-Day
- Post-Event
- Repurpose-Phase
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Let’s break down each stage.
1/ Pre-Event: The Hype Machine:
The goal here is to generate buzz and build anticipation. It's about investing wisely in creating brand awareness with assets like videos, static images, that get people excited and start conversations.
The aim? To discover what truly resonates with your audience.
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2/ During the Event Day: Capturing Attention:
As the event unfolds, there's a golden opportunity to keep marketing with timely emails and live updates.
It's not just about informing; it's about keeping the engagement needle moving by reminding attendees of the value they're getting, right as it happens.
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3/ Post-Event: Leveraging Assets:
Post-event, the focus shifts to capitalizing on the event's content.
Recorded sessions and dedicated landing pages become key tools in extending the event's lifecycle.
How? By marketing these assets to both attendees for reinforcement and to those who missed out, providing them a chance to engage.
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4/ After The Event - The Repurpose Phase:
Finally, we enter the "Repurpose-Phase," where content from the event transcends its original context.
This is where smart marketers reuse and recycle event content in ads or promotions for future events, turning one-time efforts into long-term assets.
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Budget distribution:
Whatever your budget may be, the principle remains the same—allocate strategically.
Invest heavily in the “Pre-Event Phase” to find your audience's pulse and save a portion for the "Repurpose Phase" to fuel future events.
This staggered approach not only maximizes exposure at each stage but also ensures that registrations and engagement peak when it matters most.
Practical Budgeting Example
With a $1,000 budget, consider allocating $600 towards the Pre-event phase to test and refine your marketing approach.
Reserve $200 for live engagement during the event, and use the remaining $200 to promote your post-event content and seed future events, ensuring your marketing efforts continue to bear fruit long after the event has concluded.
Tip #2: Utilizing Partnerships & Internal Networks
When your marketing budget seems like a drop in the ocean, it's time to get creative with what you have.
Even with $5,000 in hand, there's a wealth of untapped potential lying within your LinkedIn connections and internal team networks.
Strategic Content Sharing:
Kickstart your campaign by encouraging your team to engage with your event posts on LinkedIn.
This simple action can significantly boost your visibility, pushing the algorithm into recognizing your content's importance.
Influencer Collaboration:
Whether it's through LinkedIn, Instagram, or niche forums like Reddit, reaching out to influencers with a teaser of your event will extend your reach beyond your immediate circle.
Pro-tip:
Offer influencers engaging assets like short videos to make sharing easier and more appealing. The goal is to make your event resonate within their networks, amplifying your message through trusted voices in the community.
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How to Craft Influencer Outreach:
Semrush: When faced with promoting an event with limited resources, leveraging Semrush to identify key content creators in your domain can be a game-changer.
Once you find out which websites are most suitable, cold emails to these targeted individuals proposing collaboration opportunities can open doors to new audiences.
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LinkedIn Strategies: Joining LinkedIn groups and engaging with active members can also unearth opportunities for partnership.
It's about finding mutual benefits, even if it comes with a price tag.
Influencers typically have set rates, so budget accordingly. However, when reaching out directly to content creators or platforms, there's more room for negotiation.
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Boosting Organic Posts: Another proven method is enhancing your LinkedIn posts organically through employee engagement before opting for paid promotions.
Remember, it's not just about spending money but making every dollar work smarter.
Example of Boosting an organic post for LinkedIn
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For additional tips on promoting events, check out this LinkedIn post by AdConversion.
Tip #3: Mastering Segmentation & Efficiency
Let’s start with critical pitfalls to steer clear of.
Broad targeting equals wasted effort.
Dial into the specifics of your audience to ensure your content reaches the right eyes and ears.
- Segmentation is Non-negotiable: Specificity in targeting not only enhances engagement but also optimizes your budget by focusing on the most promising prospects.
- Creativity within Constraints: Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good. "Good Enough" can often be your best starting point. Launch with what you have, then adapt and improve.
- ROI vs. ROE: While ROI (Return on Investment) reigns supreme, don't overlook the ROE (Return on Effort).
Evaluate the potential returns against the effort required. Sometimes, the simplest strategies yield the best results without exhaustive planning and resource allocation.
Pro-tip:
- Launching event promotion comes with its share of delays and edits. Start early and simplify.
- Overcomplicating creative requests can bottleneck the process, jeopardizing your timeline.Embrace minimalism in your initial creative assets.
- Focus on refining the message rather than getting lost in the design details. There will be room to iterate and enhance based on real-world feedback.
Tip #4: Remarketing Mastery: Capitalizing on Targeted Engagement
After laying the groundwork with audience segmentation, remarketing emerges as the strategic follow-through that ensures your message continually reaches those most likely to act.
It’s about reconnecting with website visitors, video-view watchers, image interactors, etc.
Reaching to those who demonstrated interest but haven't yet taken the desired action.
By targeting these engaged users with specific, relevant ads, the probability of conversion (registration) significantly increases.
If you want a crash course on remarketing check out this 35-page blueprint on How to Build a Multichannel B2B Remarketing Strategy by Silvio Perez.

Tip #5: Cross-Channel Integration
Using just one platform for event promotion is like whispering in the midst of a loud crowd.
The essence of cross-channel integration lies in presenting a unified brand narrative across various platforms.
From LinkedIn's precise targeting capabilities to the broad reach of YouTube and the personal touch of Meta's networks, each channel plays a critical role in amplifying your event's visibility.
Pro tip: Check this article to learn how to get LinkedIn-like targeting on YouTube ads for B2B.
Platform-Specific Strategies: A Closer Look:
YouTube: Leveraging YouTube for its vast audience and cost-effective view rates turns your event promotion into an engaging visual narrative.
Here, remarketing shines, allowing you to reconnect with interested viewers through compelling video content.
- LinkedIn: With unmatched segmentation options, LinkedIn stands out for B2B event promotion. Tailoring your message to reach specific professional demographics ensures your event resonates with the right audience.
- Meta: Often underestimated in B2B contexts, Meta (Facebook and Instagram) offer a unique space for testing and remarketing. Here, the personal intersects with the professional
Navigating the Creative Challenge:
A common hurdle in cross-channel marketing is content creation, especially video for platforms like YouTube.
The solution? Creativity and repurposing. Utilize existing assets, from high-engagement talks to website walkthroughs, and repurpose them into new video content with minimal effort.
Think of content as modular components that can be assembled and reassembled to suit different platforms.
A blog post can transform into an infographic, a webinar clip, or a social media snippet, maximizing your content's reach and lifespan.

Tip #6: Geo-Targeted Ads: Precision Marketing for Event Success
For events that offer both in-person and virtual attendance options, geo-targeted ads stand out as a proven tactic.
By targeting potential attendees within a specific radius of the event location, you ensure that your advertising dollars are spent on those most likely to attend in person.
Example of Meta’s radius targeting:

Measuring the Impact of Geo-Targeted Campaigns:
Leveraging tools like Gradual allows for detailed tracking of event registrations, distinguishing between virtual and in-person sign-ups.
This segmentation is key in evaluating the effectiveness of geo-targeted campaigns, providing insights into lead quality and audience relevance.
Creative and Tactical Considerations:
While geo-targeting primarily focuses on the pre-event phase, its implications for brand visibility are vast.
Creative tactics, such as mobile digital billboards, can also play a role in maximizing local awareness, even in relation to competitors' events.
Pro-tip
- For events with significant local interest, consider augmenting your digital geo-targeting with physical advertising moves.
- This can create a buzz around your event and ensure your brand remains top-of-mind among your target audience.
Tip #7: Gamification: Turning Engagement into a Competitive Advantage
Gamification: A strategy to break through the noise!
By switching up event promotion into an interactive and competitive experience, you not only capture attention but also foster a sense of community and excitement around your event.
Practical Example
- Offering a free drone to the attendees with the most referrals turns the event sign-ups into an engaging competition.
- This not only increases exposure but also incentivizes participants to become advocates for the event, effectively turning them into an extension of the sales team.
Operationalizing Gamified Content:
Using tools like Gradual, attendees receive a virtual ticket upon registration, complete with a unique referral link for sharing on social platforms.
This system not only simplifies sharing but also tracks referrals back to the source, enabling a competitive leaderboard to emerge.
Tip #8: Display Advertising & Maximizing Visibility
Stepping beyond traditional advertising channels can lead to remarkable visibility.
Display advertising, mainly used through Google Display Network or programmatic ads, holds untapped potential when approached through direct publisher partnerships.
Direct Publisher Engagement:
The strategy here isn’t just to place ads but to place your event promotions on websites specifically relevant to your niche.
By using tools like SEMRush to identify these niche publishers and reaching out directly, you can secure ad placements that speak directly to an engaged audience.
The Operational Dynamics:
Differentiating from the wide net cast by typical display networks, focusing on publisher partnership involves negotiating directly with site owners.
This can range from pop-up ads to dedicated ad slots on their site, leveraging their audience for your event’s gain.
Reducing Variables for Success:
The common pitfalls of display advertising come from an overwhelming array of variables. From ad dimensions and placements to the diversity of websites.
By choosing a direct partnership with publishers, you drastically reduce these variables, focusing on what matters most: context and audience relevance.
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Tip #9: Remarketing Campaigns: Sharpening the Focus for Better ROI
We touched on the importance of remarketing in tip #4 but this is such an easy win for most brands that it deserves emphasizing. Since users have interacted with the brand before, remarketing can be ideal for high-intent offers such as "demos" or "free trial". The initial challenge often lies in cultivating a large enough audience size.
Start by building broad prospecting campaigns to stir interest and engagement across your target demographics. This boosts awareness and seeds your remarketing pool with individuals who have shown an initial interest in your offerings.
Remarketing should be viewed not just as a conversion approach but as a nurturing mechanism. With the ability to promote a mix of content—from event announcements to demos and trials—remarketing can support the entire customer journey, especially in B2B contexts where sales cycles are longer.
If you want a crash course on remarketing check out this 35-page blueprint on How to Build a Multichannel B2B Remarketing Strategy by Silvio Perez.
Tip #10: Mastering ROI: The North Star of Marketing Success
Knowing your numbers and directly tying marketing efforts to revenue generation and pipeline acceleration is fundamental. The ultimate measure of marketing’s effectiveness lies in its ability to influence revenue.
Every campaign, ad, and event should be scrutinized through the lens of its potential to contribute to the bottom line. This requires a deep understanding of your audience, the sales cycle, and the points at which marketing interventions can make a tangible difference.
Operationalizing ROI-Focused Strategies:
Quantitative Analysis: Adopt a data-driven approach to every marketing initiative.
This means setting clear, measurable objectives upfront, rigorously tracking performance, and continually refining tactics based on empirical evidence of what works.
- Strategic Alignment: Ensure that marketing activities are fully aligned with broader business goals. Collaboration with sales, product development, and customer success teams can provide valuable insights that help tailor marketing efforts for maximum impact on revenue and pipeline progression.
- Cultivating a Business Mindset: Transitioning from a pure marketing perspective to thinking like a CEO involves a broader appreciation for how marketing activities contribute to the overall health and growth of the business.
It’s about seeing beyond immediate metrics to understand the strategic importance of marketing as a driver of long-term success.
Conclusion
In this article, we covered 10 actionable tips for promoting your next successful event through paid ads.
Just to highlight a few key points, we talked about the 4 pillars of event promotion and how to distribute your budget in each phase, utilizing partnerships & internal networks, audience segmentation, and thinking like an investor to maximize your return on investment (ROI) and return on effort (ROE).
Each of the 4 event planning stages plays an important role, from generating buzz and capturing live attention to extending the event's influence and repurposing its content for future efforts. The power of partnerships, strategic content sharing, and influencer collaborations cannot be overlooked. It’s an effective way of broadening reach without proportionally increasing spend.
Remarketing and audience segmentation are essential for converting initial interest into conversions (registrations), while cross-channel integration expands your digital footprint to reach your audience on all key platforms.
I hope you got a ton of insights from this article and wish you fruitful results for your next events.
Resources for Mastering B2B Advertising
If you’re serious about mastering B2B advertising then you definitely need to join 1,000+ B2B marketers leveling up their paid advertising skill sets in AdConversion.
Here’s 4 reasons why you should consider joining. Every one of our on-demand courses are:
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People Also Ask
How can I effectively measure the success of my event promotion campaigns?
Utilize key performance indicators (KPIs) like registration numbers, attendance rates, engagement levels during the event, and post-event feedback. Tools like Google Analytics and social media insights can help track these metrics.
What are some common pitfalls to avoid in event promotion?
Avoid neglecting audience segmentation, underestimating the importance of follow-up communications, and failing to allocate sufficient budget across all promotional phases. Ensuring a balanced approach can prevent these issues.
How can I leverage user-generated content to enhance event promotion?
Encourage attendees to share their experiences on social media using a dedicated event hashtag. Feature this content in your promotional materials to build credibility and engage potential attendees.
What role does influencer marketing play in promoting events?
Collaborating with industry influencers can expand your event’s reach and add credibility. Influencers can share event details with their followers, potentially increasing registrations.
How can I ensure a seamless transition from online promotion to on-site engagement?
Maintain consistent messaging across all platforms and provide clear information about the event schedule, location, and activities. Utilize event apps or social media groups to keep attendees informed and engaged before and during the event.