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Google Ads
0
min Read

Intro to B2B Google Ads: Crash Course For New Advertisers

Silvio Perez

Want to master Google Ads for B2B? 

We’ll dissect Google Ads from a 10,000 foot view in this guide. 

So you can walk away knowing: 

  • What is Google Ads? 
  • Is your ideal B2B buyer searching on Google? 
  • How can you get your ad seen on the top of Google?
  • How much does Google Ads cost?

So whether you’re a SaaS founder, performance marketer, or in-house marketer looking to: 

  • Scale demo and trial requests for your new B2B SaaS startup 
  • Run Google ads for clients or launch  campaigns internally
  • Work with  freelancers or agencies running your Google Ads 

It all starts here with the fundamentals, so let’s dive in! 👇

TABLE OF CONTENTS

What is Google Ads? 

Google Ads is an auction place. 

Or as I like to think about it, a battleground. 

Where you have thousands of advertisers competing against each other to show up on the top of Google when their ideal prospect searches for their products & services.

Google search results page for “email marketing software” with google search ads from Mailchimp, LinkedIn, and Brevo highlighted

With 8.5B + searchers happening per day on Google there is a very HIGH likelihood your ideal B2B buyer is using Google to find information, and research solutions. 

Is Your Ideal B2B Buyer Searching on Google?

Depending on the niche you’re in Google may or may not make sense. 

You can create a free Google Ads account and leverage the Keyword Planner to validate demand. 

All you need to do is research the ideal keyword your dream buyer would search and review the average monthly search volume and top of page bid estimates.

In the example below, I can see that for “email marketing software” there is:

  • 1,000 - 10,000 average monthly searches
  • $49.75 top of page bid estimate 

If your ideal keyword has > 100 searches per month, Google can be a worthwhile return on effort. 

Google Ads keyword planner displaying metrics for email marketing software keywords.

How Much Does Google Ads Cost?

Before diving into how much does Google Ads cost? 

With Google Ads you’re only charged on a cost-per-click (CPC) basis. 

Meaning you only pay Google if someone clicks your ad, so unlike traditional advertising you’re not being locked into a fixed contract and paying just for eyeballs (aka impressions). 

So in short if someone sees your Google Ad and doesn’t click, you won’t pay. 

This is what makes Google Ads so attractive, but extremely competitive.

Here’s two ways to find out how much Google Ads will cost for your ideal keywords:

1/ Review Top of Page Bid Estimates in the Google Ads Keyword Planner 

As shown in the previous step you can leverage the Keyword Planner to find bid estimates. 

In my experience these estimates are never 100% accurate and recommend adding 20% on top of the top of page bid estimate to be safe. 

For example, with the keyword of email marketing software we have a $49.75 top of page bid estimate, adding 20% makes it $59.70 allowing us a margin of error to better set expectations. 

Google Ads keyword planner highlighting bid estimates for email marketing software.

2/ Launch a Pilot Campaign for $100

Ultimately you’ll never know your real cost per click prices until launching. 

If you’re seriously considering Google Ads I recommend launching a pilot campaign for $100. 

The whole objective of this campaign is to understand; what is my REAL cost per click price? 

Here’s a simple cheat sheet for setting up this campaign: 

  • Campaign Name = {Region}_{KeywordTheme}_{MatchType}
  • Locations = {Your Target Country/Region/State}
  • Match Type = Exact
  • Bidding = Manual CPC

This setup will allow you to have the greatest control to discover your real CPC prices. 

How to Forecast Your Google Ads Budget

Once you know the following: 

  • Your quarterly sales goal 
  • Average cost per click
  • Opportunity win rate 
  • Revenue per sale 

You can easily forecast a daily, monthly, and quarterly budget using our Google Ads Budget Calculator based on worst, moderate, and best case scenarios. 

Give it a look, there’s a video tutorial on the page for you explaining the process. 

Google Ads budget calculator interface for estimating ad spend and ROI.

Why is Google Ads So Powerful?

Intention Is what makes search advertising so powerful  🤝

You can reach exactly the right person, in the right place, in the right location searching for your specific product or service. At that point all you have to do is show up and not mess things up.

I always say Google Ads is a blessing and a curse; they bless you with intent, and curse you with scale. 

Given your industry search volume will vary dramatically and it can become hard to scale. 

The key is to win Google’s Ad Rank game to offset competitors and rising click prices. 

Diagram of Google Ads ad rank factors like bid strategy and relevance.

How Can You Get Your Ad Seen on the Top of Google?

Every time you search for something on Google (or other search engines such as Yahoo, Bing, and Firefox) the results page you’re directed to afterwards is the Search Engine Results Page (SERP).

I like to think of the SERP as the Battleground in which Google Ads takes place. 

The SERP is Divided Between Paid and Organic Results.

The Google SERP usually has about 3-4 paid ads at the top and 3 at the bottom.

Google search results page showing both paid and organic results for “email marketing software,” highlighting the difference between ad types

Ad Rank Determines the Position of Your Ad on the First Page

Which determines if your ad is on top of the first page of or nowhere to be seen.

Your goal is to appear in the top 3 spots as click-through rates decline with lower positions.

screenshot of the Google search page for “email marketing software” with ads from Mailchimp, LinkedIn, and Brevo ranked by position

Higher Position Doesn't Always Mean Greater Cost

The remarkable thing about Google Ads is that you can be #1 on the page and pay less than your competitors who are in positions lower than you (hypothetical example below). 

A screenshot of a Google search result for “email marketing software” with ads from Mailchimp, LinkedIn, and Brevo, annotated with CPC values for each ad position.

If after reading this article you believe Google Ads is worth further exploration. 

Build on this fundamental understanding of Google Ads for B2B. 

Hope you found this useful! 

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:

✅  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 we timed it 😂)

B2B
0
min Read

B2B vs B2C Advertising: 8 Differences & Examples You Need To Know

Bryttney Blanken

Hey there new B2B marketer! 

Diving into the world of B2B advertising can be confusing and overwhelming. 

In this article I’m going to walk you through 8 differences between B2B & B2C you need to know. 

This article is part of our B2B learning track so if you’re serious about learning B2B advertising you’re in the right place! 

Let’s dive into it 👏

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

8 Biggest Differences Between B2B and B2C

In no particular order of importance, here are the 8 biggest differences between business-to-business (B2B) and business-to-consumer (B2C) advertising. 

The Cost of The Product

The first key difference between B2B and B2C is the cost of the product. 

B2B marketers call this the average deal size or average contract value depending on what is sold. 

Typically, B2B products are more expensive ranging from $1,000 to over $250,000.

How Purchase Decisions Are Made

In B2B buying, there will be more people involved in the purchase of the product compared to B2C where there is usually only one person involved.

This is often referred to as a buying committee, in B2B your job is to nurture, educate, and reach everyone in this group so they can collectively decide to purchase the product. 

The Average Sales Length

There are more people involved with purchasing the B2B product or service and the product is typically a more expensive purchase, the length of time to purchase that product is typically longer. 

Depending on the complexity of what is being bought, sales cycles can range from 30 days to 36 months. The higher and more complex the product or service is the longer the sales cycle typically is.

This is different from B2C because it can take me 30 seconds to buy something off an Instagram ad. 

I’m not sure if that’s a good or bad thing 🤣

Smaller Audience Sizes

With B2B advertising programs, you’ll be targeting smaller audiences across ad channels. 

Your audience will typically be less than 300,000 contacts with a focus on reaching the right person and company vs B2C where your audiences will typically be much broader than this since more people can purchase your product or service.

Different Distribution Strategies

Since you’ll be reaching a much more targeted audience, and you may be dealing with a specific budget – the ad channels you decide to use may look different than your B2C advertising counterparts. 

It all comes down to where your audience lives and breathes, digitally.

Believe me, I’ve been behind some powerful Facebook ads for B2B. But, you may think twice about using a TV commercial during the Super Bowl as a B2B marketer (well…unless you’re Salesforce!)

But again, this will all depend on your budget and the breath of your buyers.

Need to Support Multiple Sales Funnels

In B2B, your advertising campaigns will support and fuel multiple sales funnels and processes. 

The big three are product-lead, sales-lead, and a hybrid of both.

You can learn more about each revenue model in our B2B Advertising Guide. 

Team Sport, Not Individual

B2B advertising requires strategic alignment across multiple teams including sales, marketing, and customer success departments to support the buyer’s journey and close deals more effectively.

Given the fact that it’s not just about reaching a specific individual but also a company. 

This increases the importance and complexity of working across teams. 

diagram of a B2B team structure, with “B2B Team” at the top and branches leading to “Marketing,” “Sales,” and “Service,” each enclosed in blue circles

Go Further Than Just The First Conversion

The B2B sales processes are more complex and there's more buyers involved. 

Your advertising campaigns should be designed to help impact the entire buyer journey.

Not just the first conversion like B2C advertising.

b2b marketing funnel showing metrics for sales-led strategies

I hope you found this article helpful! 

Jumpstart Your B2B Marketing Career

If you’re serious about mastering B2B advertising then you definitely need to check out my free course that will teach you the foundational knowledge to becoming a high-performing B2B marketer who knows how to use advertising to drive legit business and revenue impact without the fluff or wasting your time and money learning the ropes the hard way.

  • Module 1: you’ll get a crash course in the B2Bverse and master terminology, sales processes, and working across teams.
  • Module 2: you’ll learn how to become your customer's psychologist and understand them deeply with buyer personas that allow you to craft effective messaging.
  • Module 3: you’ll master the B2B funnel and learn how to think like a CEO to identify performance bottlenecks and convert more leads into revenue.
  • Module 4: you’ll learn how to put it all together and build your go-to-market strategy that gets your ad in front of your dream buyers and converts attention.

‍This course was designed for absolute beginners in mind.

Accelerate your learning curve and start the course today for free.

B2B
0
min Read

How to Craft B2B Buyer Personas For Ad Targeting

Bryttney Blanken

Hey there B2B marketing grasshopper 👋

In this article, we're channeling our inner Mr. Miyagi from "The Karate Kid," because we're about to master the art of creating B2B buyer personas. 

Wax on, wax off style – but with less wax and more wisdom!

Let’s dive into it. 

TABLE OF CONTENTS:

What Is a B2B Buyer Persona?

Just like Daniel-san needed to understand his opponents in the All Valley Karate Tournament, it's important to understand your B2B buyer personas to win in the market. 

It's critical because these personas are your roadmap – they guide every marketing punch and kick you make.

If you don’t do this, your marketing efforts might be as off-target as Daniel-san trying to catch a fly with chopsticks on his first try. 

Mr. Miyagi teaching Daniel-san how to capture a mosquito using chopsticks

We're talking about misdirected resources and messaging that misses the mark, leaving your ROI down and out — so let's break it down, Karate Kid style:

What is a persona? It’s the semi-fictional characters that make up your target audience. It’s a great way to unpack who makes up your ideal customer profiles, called an “ICP”

3 Major B2B Marketing Personas

In B2B marketing there are 3 major personas or roles to understand in the sales process.

This is also referred to as a buying committee:

  1. Decision Maker – The person who makes the final decision to purchase
  2. Champion - A person who enthusiastically supports your product or service in their organization
  3. Influencer - A person who can influence other members of the buying committee
Three circular images showcasing b2b marketing personas labeled as "Decision Maker," "Champion," and "Influencer," each accompanied by a brief description below.

Your marketing and advertising efforts should address their needs and concerns when it comes to buying and using your product or service. 

Knowing what these personas are looking for will help you tailor your messaging to make your ads stand out.

For example: imagine your buyer persona 'Finance-Manager-Frank'. He's in his mid-40s, loves numbers more than karate, and is always on the lookout for tools that bring efficiency and balance. Where does he find his information? → LinkedIn and financial blogs

Knowing this, you’d be able to hone in your advertising strategy to use LinkedIn ads to demonstrate how finance managers find more efficiency from their investments by using your product.

How to Develop a B2B Buyer Persona

There’s 5 major segmentation buckets to consider when putting together a B2B buyer persona:

  1. Demographic Segmentation
    • Targeting potential customer based on their role (ex: Job Titles, Job Functions)
  2. Firmographic Segmentation
    • Targeting potential customers based on company traits (ex: Industry, Company Size)
  3. Geographic Segmentation
    • Targeting potential customers based on their company and physical location (ex:USA)
  4. Technographic Segmentation
    • Targeting potential customers based on the tech they use (ex: Slack, Teams) 
  5. Behavioral Segmentation
    • Fine tune your messaging based on your potential customers Jobs To Be Done, decision-making process, and more.

Within each segmentation, there’s key information you should collect to build your personas which will ultimately inform your advertising channel strategy, targeting, and messaging. 

Getting crystal clear on your buyer personas will also help you maximize your resources, build internal trust with your sales and service teams, and drive better results.

Let’s dive into the five segmentations in greater detail. 

The Five B2B Buyer Persona Segmentations:

Demographic

Target potential customer based on their role

  1. Role: Identify the job title and role they’re in and what level in their organizations they fall (individual contributor, middle management, or in the C-suite – chief roles including CEO, CFO, CMO, etc).
  2. Responsibilities: Identify all the key areas they oversee and manage. Pulls who they report to.

Firmographic

Target potential customers based on company traits

  1. Company Industry: ex: Technology, Manufacturing 
  2. Company Employee Size: ex: 500 - 1,000 employees 
  3. Company Revenue Size: $1,000,000 - $10,000,000 ARR

Geographic

Target potential customers based on their company and physical location

  1. Company Location: ex: United States, Canada
  2. Employee Location: ex: United Kingdom 

Technographic

Target potential customers based on the tech they use

  1. Tools: This breaks down the tools they use or need to do their jobs (ex: Slack, Teams)
  2. Company Competitors: list out any relevant competing technologies 

Behavioral

Fine tune your messaging based on your potential customers Jobs To Be Done, decision-making process, and more.

  1. Goals: This details how their job is measured by
  2. Jobs to be Done/Pain Points: This elaborates on the biggest challenges they face in their role
  3. Decision-Making Process: This goes into detail on who they need approval from when buying a new product/service, who signs the contract, who owns the budget
  4. Evaluation Process: This details how this persona typically decides on a product
  5. Objections & Concerns: this outlines what prevents them from making a decision 
  6. Consumption Habits: how do they gain information for their job and what social media networks do they use

B2B Buyer Persona Template

To help you put this into action get a free copy of my B2B Buyer Persona template in Module 2 - Lesson 2 of my B2B Advertising Foundations Course when you sign up for free.  With this template you will be able to easily map out your buyer persona across the five segmentations.

screenshot of the b2b buyer persona template from adconversion

Translating B2B Buyer Persona’s into Ad Targeting 

After completing the B2B Buyer Persona template you should be very clear on who you’re going after. 

Now you’ll want to review your persona’s segmentation and find possible targeting opportunities in the platforms you’re considering advertising on – your options will vary greatly by channel. 

Create a draft campaign in your ad platform of choice and review all of the audience targeting options available – sometimes you’ll need to get creative! (example below of LinkedIn Ads). 

linkedin ads manager targeting criteria selection menu with options to add audience attributes, including company demographics and education background.

And that my advertising friends is your way to craft a buyer persona you can use to identify the audiences you’ll be targeting in your B2B advertising.

Hope you found this article useful! 

Jumpstart Your B2B Marketing Career

If you’re serious about mastering B2B advertising then you definitely need to check out my free course that will teach you the foundational knowledge to becoming a high-performing B2B marketer who knows how to use advertising to drive legit business and revenue impact without the fluff or wasting your time and money learning the ropes the hard way.

  • Module 1: you’ll get a crash course in the B2Bverse and master terminology, sales processes, and working across teams.
  • Module 2: you’ll learn how to become your customer's psychologist and understand them deeply with buyer personas that allow you to craft effective messaging.
  • Module 3: you’ll master the B2B funnel and learn how to think like a CEO to identify performance bottlenecks and convert more leads into revenue.
  • Module 4: you’ll learn how to put it all together and build your go-to-market strategy that gets your ad in front of your dream buyers and converts attention.

This course was designed for absolute beginners in mind.

Accelerate your learning curve and start the course today for free.

LinkedIn Ads
0
min Read

5 Unconventional Ways to Use The LinkedIn Ads Library

Silvio Perez

Most marketers know the LinkedIn Ads library exists. 

And the basics of how to use it (ex: search a competitor and voila you’ll see their ads 🪄) 

You’re going to go beyond the basics in this article and learn. 

5 unconventional ways experts use the library to uncover insights and inspiration.

Let’s dive into it 👇

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Unconventional Way #1: Finding Conversation Ads Copy

When you open up the LinkedIn Ads Library you can search %FIRSTNAME% to see conversation ad copy examples from competitors and relevant brands.

Here’s how to find conversation ad copy examples step-by-step:

  1. Open up the LinkedIn Ads Library and search for a relevant competitor or brand.
linkedin ads library company search
  1. Enter %FIRSTNAME% under search by keyword and select your relevant country and date range filters. 
linkedin ads library filters
  1. From here you can browse all available variations based on your filters 🎉

 

linkedin ad library results

If you don’t see any conversation ad messages you’ll likely need to adjust your filters or it’s possible your competitors or the relevant brands you’re researching aren’t actively testing this ad format.

Unconventional Way #2: Identifying Localization Campaigns

Localization campaigns are when you advertise outside your primary language and draft ads, and landing pages relevant to a specific language. 

We’ve seen advertising outside of the English language a reduction in costs by up to 70%. 

If you have the potential to advertise outside of English it’s definitely worth testing. 

Here’s how to identify localization campaigns with the ad library:

  1. Open up the LinkedIn Ads Library and search for a relevant competitor or brand.
company search linkedin ad library
  1. Filter by all countries and uncheck your current target locations (ex: United States)
linkedn ad library country filters
  1. Browse through the results to identify different localization campaigns (look for ad copy that isn’t in your primary language, example below is an ad in German). 
udemy ads in linkedin ad library
  1. Click view details on the ad to identify the targeted locations. 
impressions by country in linkedin ads library

Write down any interesting target countries and/or languages your competitors are targeting that you might consider reaching with localization campaigns. 

Unconventional Way #3: Studying Competitive Offers

Let’s say you’re a B2B SaaS company looking to drive more demo requests. 

You can use the LinkedIn ad library to easily see ads from competitors or relevant brands that are also trying to drive more demo requests. 

The same is true if we’re talking about free trials, webinar registrations, ebook downloads, and anything else you can think of. 

Here’s how to study competitive offers with the ad library:

  1. Open up the LinkedIn Ads Library and search your offer in the search by keyword filter.
keyword filter in linkedin ad library
  1. From here you can browse various ad types that mention your offer within the ad copy. 
demo ad results in linkedin ad library
  1. You can repeat this process and narrow down your filters for further granularity. 
salesforce ads in linkedin ad library

Unconventional Way #4: Creative Concept Discovery

Most advertisers using the library will just look at the ad examples provided and not dig much further. 

Instead what you should do is look for patterns around creative concepts to understand your competitors creative strategy (or the relevant brand in question). 

Creative concept = the format of which the creatives are designed off 

Here’s 10 examples of creative concepts:

  1. Before & After
  2. UGC
  3. Meme
  4. Product Mockup
  5. Illustration (Drawings)
  6. Stats & Research
  7. Comedy Skit
  8. Animated
  9. Behind-the-Scenes
  10. AI Generated

Using the library take note of any patterns of creative concepts your competitor/brand in question might be repeating. If it’s significant you might want to consider testing a similar concept. 

Use your best judgement when labelling concepts and look for patterns. 

creative concepts in the linkedin ad library

Unconventional Way #5: Landing Page Tear Downs

When viewing ads in the library you can  click on the CTA button to open up the associated landing page the ad is driving traffic towards. 

The original UTMs are also still within the URL parameter so you can reverse engineer these to better understand your competitors ad strategy (learn how here)

With this valuable information you can tear down each page for inspiration. 

ad and landing page in linkedin ad library

Hope you found this article useful! 

See you in the next article or one of our free courses!

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:

✅  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 we timed it 😂)

LinkedIn Ads
0
min Read

LinkedIn Spotlight Ads In 2024: Are They Worth The Investment?

Silvio Perez

Should you invest in LinkedIn Spotlight Ads? 

In this article you'll learn: 

  • The pro's and con's of LinkedIn Spotlight Ads
  • How much LinkedIn Spotlight ads cost 
  • Examples of LinkedIn Spotlight ads
  • 3 LinkedIn Spotlight ad strategies 

By the end of this article you’ll know if this ad type makes sense for you.

Let’s dive into it! 👇

Contents

What are LinkedIn Spotlight Ads?

Spotlight ads are only seen on desktop devices and use a combination of your audience's LinkedIn profile data such as photo, company name, and job title to dynamically change based on the user. 

LinkedIn Spotlight Ad Specs

When creating a spotlight ad you’ve got the following options:

  • Ad headline = 50 characters 
  • Company name = 25 characters
  • Company Image = logo or image in JPG or PNG that is < 2 MB 
  • Background Image (optional) = 300x250 in JPG or PNG 

I’d personally recommend not adding a background image as it removes the ad description, and the users profile photo will not be shown, which defeats the purpose of this ad type 😅

4 Reasons to Invest In LinkedIn Spotlight Ads 

Reason 1: 74% Lower Cost Per 1,000 Impressions (CPM)

After reviewing $1,726,264.56 in spend by ad type for our B2B SaaS clients, we found linkedin spotlight ads have an average CPM of $5.23, 74% lower than single image ads. 

Reason 2: Increased Ad Recall

Spotlight ad placements are very “low key” and unintrusive. 

They only appear on Desktop and are served on the right side of the newsfeed. 

Given an average CPM of $5.23 and subtle placement you can rack large frequencies > 20 without negatively impacting your audience’s experience. 

The combination of high frequency and low impression costs = greater potential ad recall 

Reason 3: Low Creative Effort

Spotlight ads only require an image that is < 2MB making it an EXTREMELY low creative effort. 

Compare this to formats like single image, carousel, or even video ads. 

If you want more exposure without a ton of effort they’re an easy addition. 

Reason 4: Flexible Bidding Strategies

Spotlight ads allow you to multiple bidding strategies depending on your campaign objectives. 

  • Maximum delivery = LinkedIn will automatically adjust your bids for the most exposure
  • Cost cap = set a target cost per landing page click 
  • Manual bidding = set a specific bid per landing page click

With each of these bidding strategies you have flexibility to test and leverage the one that allows you the greatest exposure for the lowest cost. 

4 Reasons You SHOULD NOT Invest In LinkedIn Spotlight Ads 

Reason 1: 83% higher average CPC prices

After reviewing $1,726,264.56 in spend by ad type for our B2B SaaS clients, we found linkedin spotlight ads have an average cost per click of $7.93, 83% higher than single image ads. 

Reason 2: You want to generate the most conversions 

Spotlight ads have horrible engagement rates compared to other LinkedIn ad types. 

If your primary objective is to drive conversions then spotlight ads are not the ideal ad type to use. 

Reason 3: You’re trying to drive the most traffic to your site 

Spotlight ads have below average clickthrough rates compared to other ad types which makes using them to drive site traffic a poor use case of budget. 

Reason 4: You’re not already investing in other ad types

Spotlight ads are not a game changer ad type. They should be used in support alongside other more dominant ad types such as (image, video, or conversation). 

The best use of spotlight ads is remarketing, allowing you to stay top of mind at a low cost in front of the audiences that already know/like/trust you. 

3 LinkedIn Spotlight Ad Strategies Worth Testing

In no particular order, here’s 3 strategies worth testing with spotlight ads.

Strategy #1: Remarketing

The real advantage of spotlight ads are low distribution costs with an average CPM of $5.28.

This in combination with the fact that spotlight ads are a non-intrusive ad type on desktop devices and limited right-hand placements makes them great for remarketing. 

You can leverage spotlight ads to remarket: 

  • All website visitors
  • Company page visitors 
  • Past event attendees
  • Contacts of customers, and  leads in nurture

If you want to learn more about building a LinkedIn remarketing strategy check out our in-depth article on How to Build a Multichannel B2B Retargeting Strategy (Step-By-Step)

Strategy #2: Company Page Growth

Another potential strategy to test spotlight ads is growing your LinkedIn company page. 

You can leverage this ad type to drive visitors to view your page (which will then hopefully lead to a follower), check out this example from Aurora who is using a CTA of “Follow”. 

Strategy #3: Job Recruitment

Spotlight ads are available with the Job applicants campaign objective and given it’s dynamic element (automatically pulling the photo of the user) you can create personalized recruitment ads. 

I hope you found this article useful!

And as promised, now know if this ad type makes sense for you.

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:

✅  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 we timed it 😂)

Google Ads
0
min Read

Beginner’s Guide to Google Ads Competitor Analysis In 2024

Silvio Perez

Looking to research competitor's Google Ads? 

In this guide I'll walk you through how to find their best ads, and reverse engineer their strategy. 

Regardless of if your budget is as low as $10/day or $10,000/day, the same process applies. 

We’ll first focus on analysis in this guide and then dive into strategy. 

Let’s get into it! 👇 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

How to Find & Research Competitors Google Ads

Pablo Picasso once said “good artists copy, and great artists steal” taking inspiration from what works from your competitors and transforming it into  “your own” way is a sound approach. 

Just remember this can sometimes lead to a situation where everyone is copying each other and no one has any real idea of what their doing in the first place 😅

Ultimately beating your own baseline performance is what you should obsess about. 

With this disclaimer out of the way, you first need to know what competitors you want to research. 

You can find who you’re up against with the auction insights report in Google Ads. 

Find this report by navigating to Keywords > Auction Insights within your Google Ads account. 

  • Sort this report by Impression Share to understand how visible you are against your competitors for your targeting criteria (ex: keywords, locations, audiences). 
  • Review the Top of page rate as well to understand how often you and your competitors appear within the top 3 positions of Google. 

Now that you have an understanding of who your competitors are. 

Let’s dive into the free and paid tools you can use to conduct Google Ads competitor analysis. 

Free Tools to Find Examples of Competitors Google Ads

Each of the following competitor analysis tools can be used for free, leverage whichever resonates. 

Google Ads Transparency Center

Source: https://adstransparency.google.com/ 

The Google Ads Transparency Center was released on March 29,  2023 as a way to help you quickly and easily learn more about the ads you see on Search, YouTube and Display.

Since the release of this tool it’s become an absolute goldmine for Google advertisers. 

Here’s how you can leverage the Google Ads Transparency Center for competitor analysis:

1. Visit the Google Ads Transparency Center and enter your competitors domain URL 

2. Scroll down to see the most recent Search, YouTube, and Display ads

When scrolling through the results take note of the following:

  • Number of total ads to understand how active your competitor is. 
  • The language the ads are written in to know if your competitor is running localization strategy.
  • The primary keyword your competitor is trying to target in the ad copy.
  • {Parameters} in the ad copy to know if your competitor is using dynamic search ads or keyword insertion.

3. Once you find an interesting ad click on it to reveal the target location 

  • Click on the show anywhere button to reveal the target location for the ad. 

Armed with this information you can decide if you want to advertise to these same regions. 

If you only used 1 tool for Google Ads competitor analysis I’d recommend the  Transparency Center. 

ISearchFrom

Source: https://isearchfrom.com/ 

If you’re planning to advertise somewhere you’re not physically located and want to know which competitors are bidding on your target keywords, ISearchFrom is a great free tool to use. 

Here’s how you can utilize ISearchFrom for google ads competitor analysis:

1. Visit ISearchFrom and enter your target country and keyword

2. Review the ads to uncover advertisers in your target location you might not be aware of 

From this simulated result for someone “physically” located in the United Kingdom I can see Coursera is advertising on google ads courses in this region. 

From here I can leverage the Transparency Center to uncover more ad examples from them. 

Again this is a great tool for finding competitors you’re not familiar with in locations you’re not in. 

Paid Tools to Find Examples of Competitors Google Ads

Each of the following competitor analysis tools can be used for a fee,  use whichever resonates and fits your budget.

SpyFu

Source: https://www.spyfu.com/ 

Price: $39-$79/month

If you’re looking for a simple tool to review examples of competitors Google Ads copy, target keywords, and landing pages.

SpyFu is a great tool to start off with, here’s how you can use it. 

1. Visit SpyFu and enter your competitors domain 

2. Review your competitors estimated Google Ads budget and quantity of paid keywords

3. Navigate to “PPC Research > PPC Keywords” to see all paid keywords 

4. Head to “PPC Research > Ad History” to see all competitor ad examples by keyword

5. Uncover other top competitors “PPC Research > Competitors” you might know of

With this one tool you can get estimates of competitors' Google Ads budgets, review keywords, ads, and uncover opportunities across new competitors you might not know of. 

Other paid tools: 

There’s no shortage of paid tools you can use to research your competitors.

Here’s a list of some others worth exploring: 

Don’t get hung up on the tools.

Achieving the end outcome is ultimately key. 

Now that you know how to find and research your competitors Google Ads.

Let’s walk through how to break down their strategy. 

How to Break Down Your Competitors Google Ads Strategy

Knowing what keywords and ad copy your competitors are using is a great starting point. 

But getting answers to questions like:

  • How are my competitors structuring their campaigns? 
  • How are they allocating budget? 

are crucial insights that can separate you from them. 

1. Reverse Engineering URL Parameters

Once you know your competitors landing pages, which you can get from: 

  • Searching keywords in Google and clicking on their ads
  • Reviewing landing page URLs in SpyFu’s Ad History report

You’ll want to review their UTM parameters to get insights on the goal of this campaign, target keyword, and anything else around how it was set up. 

URL Parameter Example #1 - Zoho

For example, I searched CRM software and clicked on this ad from Zoho:

When reviewing the URL post click I can see the following parameters:

/?network=g&device=c&keyword=crm%20software&campaignid=14928929712
&creative=552506800726&matchtype=e
&adposition=&placement=&adgroup=130022006802&gad_source=1
&gclid=Cj0KCQjw3tCyBhDBARIsAEY0XNlAKXey
TKDzEJQDpeNh2giI4p8sVSnWKqsvlND5bvZa_J
q62wCqSFoaAsc1EALw_wcB 

By reviewing the URL structure I can gather the following information:

  • Network = g | they’re advertising on Google Search
  • Device = c | they’re running ads on Desktop devices
  • Keyword = crm software | they’re bidding on crm software
  • Matchtype = e | they’re using exact match 

URL Parameter Example #2 - Freshworks

Let’s use one more example to drive this home with the Freshworks ad that was underneath Zoho:

?tactic_id=6071454&utm_source=google-adwords&utm_medium=FSales-Search-InsideEU-FSE-RLSA-New
&utm_campaign=FSales-Search-InsideEU-FSE-RLSA New&utm_term=crm%20software&device=c
&matchtype=p&network=g
&gclid=Cj0KCQjw3tCyBhDBARIsAEY0XNkaG_AiGqCRYj-AEcuQcnvJS_3eI0bS6jIKu_
M7JRmqOYwSIGwuc6UaAvYqEALw_wcB&gad_source=1 

Here’s what I’m able to gather from the URL structure:

  • Source = google-adwords | they’re advertising on Google Search
  • Campaign  = FSales-Search-InsideEU-FSE-RLSA-New | they’re advertising in the EU and running a remarketing list for search ads campaigns.
  • Term = crm software | they’re advertising on the keyword crm software
  • Device = c | they’re bidding on desktop devices
  • Matchtype = p | they’re using phrase match

With this information you can start to get answers into how your competitors are structuring their campaigns and it’s freely available and ready for those advertisers that are savvy enough to look.

2. Keyword Classification 

How are your competitors allocating budget?

Now you’ll never know the answer to this question with absolute certainty but with some manual work here’s how you can try and piece together a sense of their strategy allocation. 

You’ll need one of the paid tools listed above in order to perform this keyword analysis. 

I’ll be using SEMRush for the sake of demonstration but the general process is the same across tools. 

1. Export all of your competitors paid keywords into a CSV 

2. Filter the Last Seen column by the most recent month to see active keywords 

3. Add a new column called “Theme” and classify each keyword by campaign theme. 

This step can take some significant time but can be well worth the effort to understand your competitors keyword strategy and budget allocation priorities. 

With your custom column of “campaign theme” you’ll want to manually classify each keyword. 

Here’s the four campaign themes you’ll utilize for classification:  

  • NonBrand = high-intent keywords that don’t include your brand name
  • Brand = keywords containing your brand name
  • Competitive = keywords that represent your competitors
  • Content = keywords that are informational and research oriented 

Watch this video for a deep dive on how to perform this advanced classification:

4. Summarize your classified keywords into a pivot table to understand your competitors strategy and budget priorities 

From here we can make some assumptions about what is working for our competitors. 

  • 87% of Udemy’s keywords are NonBrand, 9% Brand, 4% Content, and barely 0% Competitive. 
  • It’s safe to assume that the majority of the budget is supporting NonBrand, followed by Brand, Content, and ultimately Competitive. 

Based on this allocation I might want to focus on NonBrand first given the volume of investment Udemy seems to be spending on it, and avoid competitive keywords to start. 

This isn't 100% exact science but an advanced way to research your competitors Google Ads. 

Need help calculating your stating Google Ads Budget? 

If you’re in need of help calculating your starting Google Ads budget check out our calculator

Hope you found this article useful! 

See you in the next article or one of our free courses!

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Guides
0
min Read

How To Get Your Ad Budget Approved In 2024

Silvio Perez

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. 

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: 

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

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:

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. 

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:

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…..? 😅

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. 

If you want to dive deeper into B2B advertising check out some of our other top articles:

Thanks for reading, good luck on getting your budget approved!

(you got this) 🎉

Learning from the Pros
0
min Read

Top 10 LinkedIn Tips on Mastering Objectives & Bid Strategies

Ali Yildirim

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

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.

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. 

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:

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:

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:

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.

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.

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.

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. 

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

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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Blueprint
0
min Read

How to Build a Multichannel B2B Retargeting Strategy (Step-By-Step)

Silvio Perez

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:

  • LinkedIn 
  • 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: 

  • LinkedIn Ads 
  • Meta (Facebook & Instagram)
  • X (Twitter)
  • YouTube

Minimum Budget:

  • $1,000/month (for 1 channel)

Recommended Targeting:

Channel Remarketing Audience Timeframe
LinkedIn Ads
  • All website visitors
  • All company page visitors
  • All document interactions
  • All past event attendees
  • All lead gen form opens and submits
  • All single-image ad interactions
  • All 25-97% video viewers
  • All pricing, demo, trial & case study visits
  • All meeting no-shows
  • All closed lost contacts
30, 90, 180 days
Meta (Facebook & Instagram)
  • All website visitors
  • All Facebook page visitors
  • All Instagram page visitors
  • All past event attendees
  • All lead gen form opens and submits
  • All 25-95% video viewers
  • All pricing, demo, trial & case study visits
  • All meeting no-shows
  • All closed lost contacts
30, 90, 180 days
X (Twitter)
  • All website visitors
  • All 50-100% video viewers
  • People who saw your tweets
  • Followers of your X (Twitter) profile
  • All pricing, demo, trial & case study visits
All time (Can't segment timeframe for X)
YouTube
  • All website visitors
  • All YouTube video viewers
  • All YouTube subscribers
  • All pricing, demo, trial & case study visits
30, 90, 180 days

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

  1. Create a free LinkedIn Ads account 
  2. Navigate to the “Analyze” → “Insight Tag” section
  3. Choose how to install your tag (recommend Google Tag Manager aka GTM)
  4. In Google Tag Manager, create a new tag type with LinkedIn Insight and fire on all pages
(Image: example installing LinkedIn Insight tag in Google Tag Manager) 

How to Install the Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Ads Pixel In 6 Steps

  1. Create a free Facebook Ads account
  2. In the Ads Manager navigate to “Events Manager” → “Connect Data Sources”
  3. Connect “Web” as a new data source and name your pixel (ex: Meta Pixel)
  4. Select your new pixel under “Data Sources” and navigate to “Overview”  → “Setup Pixel”
  5. Choose how to install your pixel (recommend Google Tag Manager aka GTM)
  6. In Google Tag Manager, create a new tag type with Custom HTML  and fire on all pages
(Image: example installing Meta Pixel in Google Tag Manager) 

How to Install the X (Twitter) Ads Pixel In 4 Steps

  1. Create a free X (Twitter) Ads account
  2. In the Ads Manager navigate to “Events Manager” → “Add Event Source”
  3. Install with “Pixel code” and allow 1st-party cookies
  4. In Google Tag Manager, create a new tag type with Custom HTM  and fire on all pages
(Image: example installing Twitter Pixel in Google Tag Manager) 

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. 

  1. Create a free Google  Ads account
  2. In the Ads Manager navigate to “Audience Manager” → “Your Data Sources”
  3. Select “Google Ads Tag” → “Edit Source” 
  4. Select “Tag Setup” recommend “Use Google Tag Manager” and copy your ID
  5. In Google Tag Manager, create a Google Ads Remarketing tag and fire on all pages
(Image: example installing Google Ads Pixel  in Google Tag Manager) 

Once complete, confirm all pixels are installed correctly on your website with GTM Preview:

(Image: example debugging tags with Google Tag Manager preview)

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:

Timeframe Assumption
0 - 30 days Most likely to convert and engage since they’ve recently engaged with your brand.
31 - 90 days Second likely to convert and engage since they’ve engaged with your brand in the past.
90 - 180 days Least likely to convert and engage since they haven’t engaged with your brand for a while.

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:

Segment Timeframe Description
1 All website visitors 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has visited your website.
2 All company page visitors 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has visited your LinkedIn company page.
3 All document interactions 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has interacted with your document ads.
4 All past event attendees 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has RSVP’d for your past LinkedIn events.
5 All lead gen form opens and submits 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has opened or submitted your lead forms.
6 All single-image ad interactions 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has interacted with your single image ads.
7 All 25-97% video viewers 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has watched 25-97% of your video ads.
8 All pricing, demo, trial, and case study bouncers 30 days Anyone that has viewed your intent pages and left.
9 All meeting no-shows 30 days Anyone that booked a meeting and didn’t attend.
10 All closed lost opportunities 90, 180 days Any contacts from lost deals.

Top 9 Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Ads retargeting segments: 

Segment Timeframe Description
1 All website visitors 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has visited your website.
2 All Facebook page visitors 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has visited your Facebook company page.
3 All Instagram account visits 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has visited your Instagram company page.
4 All past event attendees 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has RSVP’d for your past Meta events.
5 All lead gen form opens and submits 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has opened or submitted your lead forms.
6 All 25-95% video viewers 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has watched 25-95% of your video ads.
7 All pricing, demo, trial, and case study bouncers 30 days Anyone that has viewed your intent pages and left.
8 All meeting no-shows 30 days Anyone that booked a meeting and didn’t attend.
9 All closed lost opportunities 90, 180 days Any contacts from lost deals.

Top 5 X (Twitter) Ads retargeting segments: 

Segment Timeframe Description
1 All website visitors All time
(Can’t segment timeframe for X)
Anyone that has visited your website.
2 All 50-100% video viewers All time
(Can’t segment timeframe for X)
Anyone that has watched 50-100% of your video ads.
3 People who saw your tweets All time
(Can’t segment timeframe for X)
Anyone that has seen your tweets organic or paid.
4 Followers of your X (Twitter) profile All time
(Can’t segment timeframe for X)
Anyone that follows your X (Twitter) profile.
5 All pricing, demo, trial, and case study bouncers All time
(Can’t segment timeframe for X)
Anyone that has viewed your intent pages and left.

Top 4 YouTube Ads retargeting segments: 

Segment Timeframe Description
1 All website visitors 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has visited your website.
2 All YouTube video viewers 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has watched 50-100% of your videos.
3 All YouTube subscribers 30, 90, 180 days Anyone that has subscribed to your YouTube channel.
4 All pricing, demo, trial & case study bouncers 30 days Anyone that has viewed your intent pages and left.

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:

Exclusions Description
1 All thank you page visits Anyone that visited your form thank you page.
2 All lead gen form submits Anyone that has submitted your lead forms.
3 All existing customers Any contacts of existing customers.
4 All competitors Anyone that works at your competitors' companies.
5 All partners Any existing partners that shouldn’t be included.
6 Poor fit titles or job functions Anyone who works in roles you don’t support.
7 Irrelevant company sizes Anyone that works at orgs with employee counts.
8 Lookalike of disqualified leads Anyone similar to your disqualified leads.

Top 9 Meta (Facebook & Instagram) Ads Exclusion Audiences: 

Exclusions Description
1 Age ranges < 21 Anyone that isn’t older than 21 years old.
2 All thank you page visits Anyone that visited your form thank you page.
3 All lead gen form submits Anyone that has submitted your lead forms.
4 All existing customers Any contacts of existing customers.
5 All competitors Anyone that works at your competitors' companies.
6 All partners Any existing partners that shouldn’t be included.
7 Poor fit titles Anyone who works in roles you don’t support.
8 Irrelevant industries Anyone that works in industries you don’t support.
9 Lookalike of disqualified leads Anyone similar to your disqualified leads.

Top 6 X (Twitter) Ads Exclusion Audiences: 

Exclusions Description
1 Age ranges < 21 Anyone that isn’t older than 21 years old.
2 All thank you page visits Anyone that visited your form thank you page.
3 All brand unsafe keywords Any content keywords you don’t want to show for.
4 All brand unsafe handles Any profile content you don’t want to show for.
5 All existing customers Any contacts of existing customers.
6 Lookalike of disqualified leads Anyone similar to your disqualified leads.

Top 6 YouTube Ads Exclusion Audiences: 

Exclusions Description
1 Age ranges < 25 Anyone that isn’t older than 25 years old.
2 All thank you page visits Anyone that visited your form thank you page.
3 All existing customers Any contacts of existing customers.
4 Kids YouTube channels Any YouTube channels for children.
5 Music YouTube channels Any YouTube channels hosting music videos.
6 Foreign YouTube channels Any YouTube channels outside your language.

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 😂

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…)

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:

Asset Timeframe Description
1 Product Marketing 30 , 90 Content that focuses on promoting the capabilities of your product.
2 Social Proof 30 , 90 Content that promotes your product through others' words and results.
3 Thought Leadership 90, 180 Content that educates your target audience and positions you as an expert.
4 Offers 30, 90 Any other type of ad where you’re asking your target audience to convert.

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)

(Image: example of a social proof ad)

Thought Leadership

(Content that educates your target audience and positions you as an expert)

(Image: example of a thought leadership ad)

Offers

(Any other type of ad where you’re asking  your target audience to convert)

(Image: example of an offer ad)

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:

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.

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)

(Image: Example of 30D remarketing campaigns built in LinkedIn)

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

(Image: Example of 90D remarketing campaigns built in LinkedIn)

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

(Image: Example of 180D remarketing campaigns built in LinkedIn)

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

(Image: Example of 30D offer bouncer campaigns built in LinkedIn)

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.

(Image: Example of selecting manual placements in Meta)

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)

(Image: Example of 30D remarketing campaigns built in Meta)

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

(Image: Example of 90D remarketing campaigns built in Meta)

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

(Image: Example of 180D remarketing campaigns built in Meta)

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

(Image: Example of 30D offer bouncer campaigns built in Meta)

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

(Image: Example of all time remarketing campaigns built in X)

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

(Image: Example of all time offer bouncer remarketing campaigns built in X)

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)

(Image: Example of 30D YouTube remarketing campaigns built in Google Ads)

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

(Image: Example of 90D YouTube remarketing campaigns built in Google Ads)

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

(Image: Example of 180D YouTube remarketing campaigns built in Google Ads)

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

(Image: Example of 30D YouTube offer bouncer campaigns built in Google Ads)

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. 

Conclusion & Free Courses

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