LinkedIn Ads for B2B Campaigns
Overview
LinkedIn Ads offer targeting capabilities unavailable on Meta or Google, making them particularly effective for B2B lead generation. The ability to target by specific company name, job title, and uploaded contact lists means campaigns reach verified decision-makers rather than probabilistic lookalike audiences. The tradeoff is higher CPM, but ROI on qualified leads typically justifies the cost.
A complete, active company page is a prerequisite — a sparse page with no followers undermines ad credibility when prospects click through.
Why LinkedIn Over Meta/Google for B2B
| Capability | Meta | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Target by company name | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ |
| Upload CRM contact list | ✅ | Limited | Limited |
| Target by job title/seniority | ✅ | Limited | ❌ |
| Cost | Higher CPM | Lower | Variable |
| Lead quality (B2B) | High | Medium | Medium |
LinkedIn's unique value: if a client has a CRM list of 500 target contacts, that list can be uploaded directly and ads will be served specifically to those individuals if they have matching LinkedIn profiles.
Campaign Structure
LinkedIn Ads follow a three-tier hierarchy, similar to Meta:
Campaign Group
└── Campaign (targeting, budget, objective)
└── Ads (creative variants for A/B testing)
- Campaign Group — top-level container; set lifetime budget here to cap total spend
- Campaign — defines audience targeting, objective, and schedule
- Ads — individual creatives; run multiple ads per campaign for A/B testing
Budget approach: Use a lifetime budget at the campaign group level to prevent overspend. Alternatively, set a continuous run from a start date if the client has an ongoing monthly budget.
Ad Formats
Ranked by engagement performance:
- Video — highest engagement; keep under 30 seconds
- Carousel Image — second highest; good for multi-feature or multi-step storytelling
- Single Image — solid baseline; least effective of the three but still viable
Each ad includes:
- Introductory copy (the post text)
- Headline
- Call-to-action button (e.g., "Learn More," "Download")
- Destination URL
- Company page attribution (the "Promoted" label is the only ad indicator in-feed)
Targeting Options
- Company targeting — specify exact company names to reach employees at target accounts
- Job title / seniority — reach decision-makers directly
- Contact list upload — import a CSV from a CRM; LinkedIn matches profiles and serves ads only to those individuals
- Location — geographic targeting is available at country, region, or city level
- Interests / skills — broader targeting similar to Meta, less precise for B2B
Campaign Objectives
Set the objective at the campaign level:
- Brand Awareness — maximize impressions and LinkedIn page visits
- Website Visits — drive traffic to a specific URL
- Lead Generation — collect leads via LinkedIn's native lead gen forms (no landing page required)
- Conversions — track specific on-site actions via the LinkedIn Insight Tag
Boosted Posts vs. Ad Campaigns
| Boosted Post | Ad Campaign | |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | General brand awareness | Targeted lead generation |
| Targeting control | Limited | Full |
| Goal setting | Basic reach/engagement | Specific conversion goals |
| Setup complexity | Low | Higher |
Rule of thumb: Boost organic posts to extend reach on content that's already performing well. Use dedicated ad campaigns when there's a specific conversion goal and a defined target audience.
Conversion Tracking
LinkedIn supports two tracking methods that can be used together:
- UTM parameters — append to destination URLs for attribution in GA4 or other analytics platforms
- LinkedIn Insight Tag — a pixel added to the client's website; enables native conversion tracking and retargeting within Campaign Manager
Set up conversion actions (e.g., form submission, page visit) in Campaign Manager to track goal completions directly in the LinkedIn dashboard.
Company Page Requirements
Before launching ads, the client's LinkedIn company page should have:
- Profile image and banner/background image
- Completed "About" section and company overview
- At least some posting history (not a blank page)
- Follower base (even modest) for credibility
A sparse page signals low legitimacy to prospects who click through from an ad.
Client Examples
- Citrus America — active LinkedIn ad campaign; action item to update trademark symbol from ™ to ® in ad creative. Karly Oykhman managing. ([1])
- Cordwainer — LinkedIn announcement post planned post-launch; Sebastian Gant assigned. ([2])
Related
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