610 million users in 200 countries worldwide—that’s how big LinkedIn has become since it launched in 2003 with a mission to connect the world’s professionals and make them more productive and successful.
In 2019, those connections grow by two professionals every second.
LinkedIn is now the world’s most-viewed professional news feed. That’s pretty impressive. You want to be seen on the most-viewed professional news feed. Especially since new members engage by 50% more every year (twice as many people this year like, comment, and share information compared to last year), views on the LinkedIn feed are up 60% from last year, and 80% of all B2B social media leads come from LinkedIn.
LinkedIn is booming! It is the #1 B2B social media platform. It makes sense to capitalize on that engagement.
But how many of those 610 million professionals are your ideal customer? And what kind of return will you get by advertising to your ideal customer (once you figure out who that is)?
Guh! Who wants to play the “buyer persona” game? Not me. You wrack your brain to break down the demographics the best you can without a demography degree, and you hope you have it right. But what if it isn’t Mustard in the Game Room with the Wrench?
LinkedIn advertising takes the guess work out of the game for marketers with “ideal customer / target audience criteria. So you can drill down with direction and zero in on the person who will buy your thing. LinkedIn puts you on the sidewalk next to your customer—holding an umbrella for her in the rain. Dollars in the right spot!
LinkedIn helps marketers reach the right audiences through both organic and paid opportunities. In fact, LinkedIn tells you to use organic content to drive paid ads.
The higher your organic reach, the more it amplifies your paid efforts (you invest in your highest-performing organic content). Luckily, LinkedIn has great analytics to help you see what the organic part is doing so you can highlight the chunk that’s outperforming and thrust it into news feeds and personal mailboxes.
It goes like this:
Look at your organic content (long-form posts that are authentic with strong headlines), see what parts of that content are performing the best, and promote that content with a paid ad. Scale it up!Your organic content is your pulse. Your ads create awareness of the content that caused adrenaline-spiking heartbeats.
Who is engaging with what? What content fell flat and what got a lot of comments? The post that was a message-magnet is the post you promote. Invest in that. And tell your employees to spread the word about that material, using their industry expertise to dig deeper into it.
But you’re skeptical because you’ve read how Google Ads don’t pan out if you haven’t picked the right keywords. Or maybe you’ve run a Google Ad and it flumped. And it cost you.
It’s worth paying for an ad that puts you in front of your ideal customer in a matter of hours. That’s what LinkedIn does well.
The paid route in LinkedIn has a better ROI than Google Ads.
On average U.S. customers drive a 6.1% conversion rate from LinkedIn Ads, an impressive number. [The] average conversion rate for B2B advertisers on Google search is 2.58%. Globally our customers are performing even better [converting] traffic to their landing pages at 9% from LinkedIn ads.
LinkedIn Sponsored Content and Sponsored InMail will jump-start your paid strategy.
75% of LinkedIn Sponsored Content engagement happens on mobile devices. You design these ads for phones.
Use LinkedIn sponsored ads to promote your posts, generate B2B leads, announce events, gain more followers, and increased qualified traffic.
A text ad is a smaller version of a LinkedIn Sponsored Content Ad. Instead of a banner image or video, however, you have one 50-pixel x 50-pixel thumbnail. Same rules apply.
Make sure your 50x50 block of real estate is high contrast so eyes are pulled toward it. You get to try out a few different Text Ad versions (A/B split testing), which is awesome! And you can choose from four formats (horizontal, long, square, or tall). But! It is very important to note that Text Ads are only available on desktops.
Text Ads are your budget option. Use them for quick and easy brand awareness and B2B lead generation. But don’t wave them off as too basic. Hubspot saw its click-through-rate (CTR) improve by 60% (compared to other social networks) using LinkedIn Text Ads.
InMail Ads are not plastered on the page. They are delivered directly by email to anyone in the LinkedIn network. They are used to send personal “you’re invited!” invitations to VIP events and webinars, generate qualified B2B leads, drive downloads, and communicate value to carefully-picked targets straight to their inbox.
InMail Ads are custom greetings tailored to high-level people. These are the influential figureheads that make the decisions. The subject line becomes very important. Make the offer and benefit clear and keep the tone casual, like you’re talking to a friend. An InMail Ad is a one-on-one conversation between you and an executive, so know who that executive is, what she does, and why she would care about what you’re saying. Tie your target to the context of your message. Make her excited about your invitation.
InMail ads send with a branded banner and a call-to-action button. Common CTAs as the recipient to:
Once you know what ad you’re going to try, building it is easy.
Click the Work icon in the top right of your toolbar.
A LinkedIn Product box pops up. Choose Advertise.
You’ll hop to the LinkedIn Marketing Solutions page. Click the Create Ad button. Follow the prompts!
You get what you pay for. Is it better to spend a little bit on a B2C Google Ad that does less for you, or a bit more for a targeted B2B LinkedIn Ad that delivers?
In the US HubSpot customers using ads paid around $5.74 per click on LinkedIn, they only paid $3.35 per click on AdWords.
Ask yourself if you can afford a LinkedIn Ad campaign. Or, better, ask yourself if you can afford not to. The cost per click is higher than Google, but the B2B conversion rates are also higher. A conversion will cover the cost of the ad.
LinkedIn Ads work in an auction environment. Bids for CPC ads can be high because you’re dealing with a smaller audience compared to Facebook or Google. The neighbourhood has pricier plots of land, but your neighbours are more like you.
B2B sales are of higher value than B2C sales, and companies are willing to spend more to acquire customers: more value, higher price tag.
What bid should you make for your ads?
Start by bidding 20% below the suggested bid (but don’t go below the minimum bid). Set a daily budget, a total budget, and your maximum bid. You can start and stop your ads at any time, and you will never pay more than the price you bid.
LinkedIn ads are inch-for-inch the best way to spend your B2B engagement money. It’s a more focused environment than Google Ads where, try as we might to nail our keywords, our best efforts can deliver “spray and pray” ad-hoc results.
LinkedIn ads are not only easy to create, measure, and fine-tune (see what’s converting in the Campaign Manager and put more attention there!), but they exist on an invaluable B2B ad platform that guides its users, step-by-step, toward getting seen by the right companies.
Start simple. Choose the ad you want to run (Text, Sponsored Content or InMail), craft something worth looking at, watch your campaign for what’s working, and generate the kind of returns that make you glad you spent a bit more out of the gate. No risk, no gain! (they say). LinkedIn Ads are calculated risks with bigger gains.
Happy converting.