Like any form of digital marketing, pay-per-click (PPC) advertising can be a game-changer for the companies that effectively leverage it, but it’s also continually changing. That means forward-leaning marketers need to keep their noses to the ground, testing which trends reflect significant inflection points, and which are little more than hype.
Several marketing threads and emerging technologies are coming together this year to change the way PPC is leveraged, and the way PPC advertising managers work. For example, although marketing automation isn’t new, the use of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning became more pervasive last year, with an increasing number of marketers automating many mundane and time-consuming PPC tasks—things like A/B testing, email marketing (as it relates to PPC) and keyword selection.
That trend changed the role of PPC managers who now had time to pursue more campaign-critical tasks. High on their list of priorities was a more granular targeting of audience and a more effective construction of buyer personas. This included an extension of PPC’s utility from lead generation to lead nurturing, with ads now targeted at consumers at every stage of the buyer’s journey.
But as compelling as those trends are, there’s one more that promises to fundamentally change what it means to do PPC. Until recently, that’s meant, almost exclusively, 2 principal marketing channels: Google Ads and Facebook advertising.
So dominant were those players in fact that the most contentious arguments were over which was better, or as in the case of WordStream, whether marketers should view them as essentially adversarial or complementary. That, too, is changing this year.
It bears repeating that PPC advertising is, if you do it right, remarkably effective. For one thing, site traffic funneled through sponsored ads convert on average 50% more than those that come from organic traffic. For another, small startup businesses on average see a 200% return on investment (ROI) for every dollar they invest in PPC ads.
Given that kind of marketing potential, it was only a matter of time before other companies showed up to challenge the big guys on the block, one of the reasons this year we’re seeing a lot more sponsored ad spending on Amazon, TikTok, Snapchat, Pinterest—and LinkedIn. For a variety of reasons, among this group of “upstart” PPC players, LinkedIn shows the most promise across a wide swath of industries, this because of the consumers who make up its active user base. Consider for example these revealing metrics from HubSpot:
And, as AdEspresso points out, LinkedIn, once the darling of the B2B world, shows equal promise for B2C bAnd, as AdEspresso points out, LinkedIn, once the darling of the B2B world, shows equal promise for B2C businesses and nonprofits:
“LinkedIn Ads is a B2B advertising juggernaut, giving you an edge and a chance to connect with audience members who may be more inclined to keep scrolling past when they’re scrolling through their Facebook feeds and see your ad, but who are happy to engage when they’re in a business mindset. LinkedIn Ads aren’t just for B2B companies, however; B2C companies, nonprofits, universities, and most other types of organizations can also use this ad platform for specific purposes to great success, including to find the right applicant for a job opening.”
The nuances of LinkedIn PPC advertising are many—too many to fully vet here. Suffice it to say that LinkedIn does many of the same things for business as Google Ads and Facebook, and it does them just as well (some might argue better). Among its chief benefits for PPC marketers are the following 3:
Although marketers are, as noted above, increasingly viewing PPC as a complete sales funnel solution, for the lion’s share PPC still means meeting what they say is their number one marketing challenge, namely, generating more leads. Like Facebook, LinkedIn has a robust set of tools to simplify lead generation, and to increase the odds it’s effective.
For example, its lead gen forms are easy to use and even enable automated form completion based on information already in the system. In addition, LinkedIn will let you establish granular targeting criteria and select from among several ad formats.
LinkedIn’s robust analytics platform (Website Demographics) does many of the things you can do using Google Analytics. For example, when prospects go to your company page on LinkedIn, you can gather key demographic information as well as behavioral data about their activity on your company’s website—a major advantage.
With LinkedIn, you’ll be able to collect and analyze the data most relevant to your marketing campaigns, whether they’re B2B or B2C. For example, B2B businesses can get information about industry, number of employees, location and job titles to inform more effective ad campaigns.
Effective ad targeting is critically important to successful PPC advertising campaigns, and LinkedIn, with its Matched Audiences feature, enables powerful ad targeting. You can, for example, target B2B ads to key decision-makers within an organization, prospects who’ve visited your website and email subscribers.
The utility and versatility of LinkedIn’s ad targeting options help businesses achieve many of their top-level marketing objectives. For example, marketer’s who’ve used Matched Audiences have seen (on average):
The bottom line is this: PPC advertising, and the digital marketing landscape more generally, is a brave new world for businesses of all kinds, one that is challenging, at time confusing, and full of enormous promise for those who understand how to navigate it. Said differently, when effectively leveraged, digital marketing can take your business to the next level. That’s where we can help, giving you the guidance and expert advice you need to succeed.
So, what will it look like in the near future? Networks may change the way they operate in the near future. But we will see a majority of marketing professionals feel confident in their ability to navigate such changes by adjusting their digital marketing strategies, exploring new networks, and meticulously planning where to spend the bulk of their marketing dollars over the next two years. According to the ‘DIGITAL MARKETING AD SPEND STUDY‘ by Ignite Visibility, a large majority (90.6%) of 200 marketing professionals surveyed feel confident in their ability to manage the changes occurring in the digital marketing environment in the right way.
To learn more about the ways our PPC, SEO, content marketing, conversion rate optimization, growth-driven design and analytics services can make your business more visible—and more profitable—contact us today.
Your site’s speed is a snow-ball. It culminates somewhere into your brand’s ultimate profitability, impact,…
It’s not a choice or a perk anymore. But working from home, still comes with…
Engaging, high-quality content is always in demand, no matter what industry you're in. Your content…
Marketing for B2B companies has always been challenging. The vast majority of marketing techniques and…
In the world of digital marketing, marketers make a habit of separating myth from reality—of…
Generating quality leads has become a core marketing goal for many B2B organizations. As sales…