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Showing posts with label Linkedin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linkedin. Show all posts

Wednesday, 31 August 2016

Why Should Marketers Consider Dynamic Ads On LinkedIn?

Why Should Marketers Consider Dynamic Ads On LinkedIn?
Are you a B2B marketer?
Want to deliver personalized messages to engage with your audience?
LinkedIn provides a great solution with its Dynamic Ads feature. In this article, let us see why marketers should consider Dynamic Ads for their B2B marketing.

There Are 4 Steps Leading To Success In Digital Marketing:

  1. Define your goal
  2. Target the right people
  3. Engage them with content
  4. Optimize your impact
Targeting and engaging with the right people are the steps that a marketer should concentrate more on. Because it is a well-known fact that message relevancy is the key factor, when it is about connecting with targeted users. The success or failure of a digital marketer is decided by the relevancy of their message. If marketers are not reaching the relevant users, they cannot make what they want.
Nowadays, the online user behavior cannot be predicted with a manual effort. On the other hand, the competition is increasing. You have to compete with many other marketers who also try to grab the attention of the users.
60% of the marketers say that reaching the right audience with a right message is their top priority in digital marketing. But many marketers are struggling with creating an engagement with their targeted users. Among the 433 million users in the community, it is a bit difficult to target the right people.

Dynamic Ads

To help its marketing users, LinkedIn has rolled out Dynamic Ads feature and now it makes some changes to this beautiful feature. With these new updates, marketers can have a new feel and they can place their calls-to-action and images prominently. So that, they can drive the engagement with the right users.
LinkedIn Dynamic Ads

Why LinkedIn Dynamic Ads?

There are three main things that you can do with the help of LinkedIn Dynamic Ads. They are
  1. Target the Right Audience Who Matter Your Business

LinkedIn gives you a form where you can select your targeted audiences. This contains a wide range of criteria for targeting. That includes company, skills, interests, location etc.
  1. Performance Measurement

Measuring performance is needed for any campaign. Unless you know the performance of the campaign, you cannot take a decision further. LinkedIn gives you precise metrics of your performance.
  1. Increase Your Follower Count

You can place calls-to-action like “Follow Company” which can get you new followers. So, you can easily increase your follower count on LinkedIn.
Place calls-to-action like “Follow Company” which increases your followers on LinkedIn
To know how better the results of LinkedIn Dynamic Ads would be, here we are giving you a success story of CA Technologies on LinkedIn. Take a look.

CA Technologies

CA technologies, a leading software solutions enterprise, wants to drive leads. It has developed a great content that is downloadable, targeting the high-level decision makers in the IT sector. Their challenge lies in getting clicks from these high-quality leads.
ca-technologies-linkedin-page
To drive leads for its enterprise software solutions, CA Technologies developed relevant, downloadable content targeted to high-level IT decision-makers. The challenge was getting these high-quality leads to convert from clicks.

What Did They Do?

They used the best in their marketing strategy. They used LinkedIn’s dynamic ads for their advertising. Dynamic ads link the member’s profile picture with the name and message of a brand. As per the Digital Marketing Head of the company, LinkedIn’s Dynamic ads are eye-catching and visually appealing. With the dynamic ads, they could promote their content in a better way as they were able to add more ad copy.
Linkedin-dynamic-ads3

What Was The Result?

CA Technologies got outstanding results for its dynamic ad campaign. The campaign has resulted in a conversion rate of 11.3%. The cost per lead was 68% less when compared to other social media platforms. On this great success, the digital marketing head of CAT says that they were pretty sure their content reached the right audience, resulting great conversion rates. And also said that they shifted their marketing budget to LinkedIn from other social platforms, owing to the great results.
Why Should Marketers Consider Dynamic Ads On LinkedIn?
If you are new to advertising on LinkedIn, dynamic ads can be helpful for you in delivering personalized content to your targeted users with creative ads. To create customized templates, marketers are using the native ad format. These templates can be populated dynamically with relevant content like skills, interests etc and profile images of the user who are viewing the ad. Depending on the contextual elements of what the user is viewing, the content can be optimized. 
Dynamic ads can achieve a variety of ad objectives such as driving conversions, getting new followers for your LinkedIn company or showcase page and display job notifications. 

Conclusion

Reaching the relevant users with relevant content is the main advantage that you can get with LinkedIn’s dynamic ads. You might be using the general ad features of LinkedIn. Though they help you in reaching a large number of users, we are not sure how many of them matter for your business. But with dynamic ads, you reach only the users who matter the most for you.
This is the thing that separates the dynamic ads from other ad features of LinkedIn.

Monday, 22 August 2016

Top 10 Profile Photo and Portrait Hacks Based on Science

girl with pearl earring - two views
Are you planning to shoot a new profile photo or publicity headshot? Or, are you trying to choose the best image from a group of possible shots? There’s some surprising science to help you plan your shoot and pick a winner.
The best thing about these tips is that their effect is almost always non-conscious. The viewer won’t consciously realize that your photo appears more trustworthy or more attractive because of the content or composition. And, your photographer probably doesn’t know most of them.

1. Profile Photo Lessons from da Vinci

Unless you are obsessive about art and portraiture, you probably never noticed that for centuries artists have preferred to show the left side of their subjects’ faces. 
One compilation of studies showed that for female subjects the bias ran as high as 78%. Male portraits were less skewed, but still showed at least a 56% bias toward the left side.
mona lisa the original profile photo
Scientists at Wake Forest University conducted a series of experiments that showed both conscious and non-conscious preference for images showing the left side of the subject’s face. The left-side preference was true both for verbal statements of preference as well as unconscious pupil dilation.
What’s going on? Our faces and expressions aren’t perfectly symmetrical, and part of the reason is that our right and left brain hemispheres don’t have identical functions. The right hemisphere controls the left side of our body and is also associated more with emotion. The conclusion of most scientists who have looked at the preference for left-side images is that the left side of our faces expresses more emotion.
left-right faces
One reason artists have chosen to portray men from the right side more often than women is that the less emotional right side may perceived as higher in dominance and self-control. Another study looked specifically at drawings by Leonardo da Vinci and found that subjects portrayed by right-side images were considered more “potent” and “active.”
Recommendation. Unless you feel a need to project self-control and power, use an image that emphasizes the left side of your face. It will make you slightly more attractive and, perhaps, approachable.
Study: one side of your face makes you look better. #Neuromarketing pic.twitter.com/6pAgM0X9qr CLICK TO TWEET

2. Keep Your Eye On Your Eyes

Want to be more attractive and trustworthy, at least in your profile photo? An image with larger pupils will do the trick. 
eyes - pupils
Subjects were asked to rate a video image of a person for trust. Unbeknownst to the subjects, the researchers digitally modified the size of the pupils of the person on the screen. Not only did the subjects rate that person as more trustworthy when that person’s pupils were larger, the subjects’ own pupils dilated to match the screen image.
Photo shoot lighting is often working against you from a pupil-size standpoint, as bright lights cause your pupils to shrink. So do pre-flashes for red-eye prevention.
Recommendation. When it comes to pupils, bigger is better. To increase trust, bump up the size of your pupils in your profile photo. Your photographer may be able to reduce the tiny pupil effect with low level modeling lights. Or, do what the scientists did – enlarge the pupils with digital editing tools.
Top 10 ways to hack your profile photo, based on science. #Neuromarketing pic.twitter.com/6pAgM0X9qr CLICK TO TWEET

3. What’s a Limbal Ring?

If you aren’t an opthamalogist or Jeopardy champion, you may not know what the limbal ring is. In fact, it’s the dark edge around the perimeter of your eye’s iris that forms the border with the white surrounding area. Another set of experiments (also described in Eyes Are The Door to Trust. Attractiveness, Too), showed that a thicker limbal ring made people more attractive to viewers of the opposite gender. The scientists postulated that a thicker limbal ring is a marker for youth and health.
limbal ring comparison
Recommendation.While you’ve got Photoshop open to tweak your pupil sizes, consider enhancing your limbal ring. It might make your profile photo bit more attractive. 

4. Can You Say Cheese?

Should you smile for your profile photo? Would a serious expression be better?
Obviously, this decision depends in part on the conscious image you want to portray. A candidate for a senior judicial position probably doesn’t want the photo to catch her in the middle of a huge guffaw. But, science can weigh in here, too.
One study by Brian Knutson looked at how the expression of the person in a photo affected perception of “dominance” and “affiliation.” These are two metrics used by psychologists interested in social organization. Affiliation is a positive characteristic, indicating factors like friendliness, openness, and a need to interact with others.
knutson emotio expression
Smiling images ranked high for both dominance and affiliation. That’s likely the quadrant most of us want to be in when viewed by potential customers, business partners, and so on. Images in which the subject showed anger or disgust also scored high for dominance but were low on affiliation. While such obvious displays of negative emotion aren’t common in headshots or social media images, a very stern/serious image would likely show similar characteristics.
Most of us wouldn’t choose a profile picture showing sadness or fear. Knutson’s work shows why: images with these emotions scored low both on dominance and affiliation.
Recommendation. Include a confident smile in your profile photo. By increasing your dominance and affiliation levels, you will seem like the kind of person others should connect to.

5. Trust Me, I’m Smiling

Smiling profile images are also good for trust. As I described in Unconscious Trust Formed in Milliseconds, a face with smiling mouth and slightly surprised eyebrows was found to be more trustworthy than neutral or scowling faces.
trust and faces
That post also references research on first impressions. While we form them in milliseconds, they can be surprisingly slow to change once formed.
Recommendation. If building trust is your goal, a small smile on your profile photo may be more effective than a big one. And, check your eyebrows. A look of slight surprise will curve them a bit to further maximize trust.
Research: smiling increases attractiveness and trust. #Neuromarketing pic.twitter.com/fsnaCAXBAD CLICK TO TWEET

6. Get Smart

Being seen as smart is usually desirable, and it turns out you can influence your perceived intelligence with your profile picture too. Once again, the answer is smiling. A 2014 study found,
Faces that are perceived as highly intelligent are rather prolonged with a broader distance between the eyes, a larger nose, a slight upturn to the corners of the mouth, and a sharper, pointing, less rounded chin.
small smile means smart
While some of these facial characteristics are out of your control, a small smile is easily achieved. 
One odd finding of this study was that viewers could actually predict the intelligence of male subjects from their photos, while for female subjects there was no correlation between predicted intelligence and actual IQ.
Recommendation. A small smile might make you seem smarter (and, as noted above, more trustworthy), while a bigger smile might boost your dominance and friendliness. Dial your smile up or down depending on the impression you are trying to make.

7. When Guys Shouldn’t Smile

There’s one domain where smiles work for women, but not for men – sexual attraction. One study, amusingly titled Happy Guys Finish Last, had subjects of one gender view photos of the other gender. The photos displayed different emotions. The subjects then rated how attractive the pictured people were. 
While happiness was the most attractive emotion for photos of women being viewed by men, it was one of the least attractive for men being viewed by women. Oddly, perhaps, shame and pride were almost equally attractive male emotions.
emotions and your profile photo
Recommendation. While smiles are almost always a positive for profile photos, men whose interests include dating should tone down the happy smile. Better yet, save the open smile for professional sites like LinkedIn and experiment with less happy imagery on dating sites. Women can smile regardless of their professional or personal objectives.

8. Look at Me!

Have you ever had a photographer tell you to look at something other than the camera? Her hand, perhaps, or a distant object? This may make for an artistic photo, but might not be your best profile picture choice. Scientists in the UK and Australia found that a direct gaze was most attractive.
Viewers preferred photos in which the subject looked directly at the camera and rated those subjects as more attractive. This bias for direct vs. averted gaze photos held both for attractive subjects and less attractive subjects. (I’m imagining an ad in the campus newspaper that said, “Unattractive people needed for psychology experiment. Apply with photo.”)
Gaze direction
The researchers attributed the direct gaze as a social cue indicating a desire to connect with the viewer.
Where should your eyes be looking in your profile photo? Science tells you. CLICK TO TWEET
Recommendation. Unless you’ve got a good reason to be gazing in another direction, look into the camera. You’ll be more attractive, regardless of how gorgeous/handsome you are. Or aren’t.

9. Cocktail Hour Photo Shoot?

This study result may surprise you. Researchers took photographs of subjects under three conditions of alcohol consumption: none at all, a low dose, and a high dose. (To be clear, it was the subjects consuming the alcohol, not the researchers. As far as we know.) The scientists then had other subjects evaluate the photos and rate the individual portrayed for attractiveness. 
Surprisingly, the subjects who consumed a modest amount of alcohol received the highest attractiveness ratings. The high dose alcohol subjects were the least attractive.
alcohol can make you attractive
Why does having a drink make you more attractive? The researchers speculated that the subjects might be slightly more relaxed, or that a facial flush added a bit of robust color to their image.
The right dose is an important factor, obviously, and depends on the weight of the individual. For more discussion, see Want to Be More Attractive? Science Says Have a Drink.
Recommendation. If you don’t have a problem with an occasional adult beverage, consider a “low dose” before your next photo shoot. Don’t overdo it, of course – check the chart below to get your optimal amount, and read my original post for more details.
optimum alcohol chart

10. Don’t be an Idiot

Science gives, and it takes away. Now that you have permission to savor that glass of pinot noir before your next photo shoot, I’m going to give you the negative side of alcohol as it relates to your profile pic. 
Your are likely a fun-loving person who lives life to the fullest. So, why not show that you aren’t 24/7 business by toasting your profile viewers with a nice glass of wine? In fact, you are better off drinking that beverage than using it in a profile photo. 
In my Forbes piece, Proof: Alcohol Makes You (Look) Dumb, I describe a study showed that subjects who viewed identical photos of people with and without alcohol rated the former as lower in intelligence.
wine-coke-none
The authors of the original study termed this phenomenon as the “Imbibing Idiot Bias.” They think that viewers associate alcohol with cognitive impairment. Even in the absence of any impaired behavior or even consumption, the cognitive damage contained in the glass transfers to its hapless holder.
Save the image of you enjoying a margarita in an amazing oceanfront cafe for your Facebook friends. Keep your profile pictures alcohol-free, unless you are a professional sommelier, micro-brewery founder, or have a similar reason to display your adult beverage savvy.

Bonus! 11. Model the Emotion You Want to Generate

We’ve already heard about the advantages of smiling. But, perhaps you want your viewers to experience a particular emotion. Maybe you want to make them angry, as many politicians strive to do with voters. In that case, a photo with that same emotion can have that effect.
angry woman
study in Sweden exposed subjects to very brief images of face icons with different expressions – happy, neutral, and angry. The images were shown for only 30 milliseconds, too slow to be consciously processed by the subjects. Nevertheless, the facial muscles of the subjects contracted to mimic the emotion they saw.
We know from work by Ekman and others that our facial muscles can change our emotional state to match, so getting a viewer’s face to scrunch in anger will tend to make them more angry than before.
The study also shows the surprising power of non-conscious image processing.
Recommendation. If you are trying to create a particular emotion in your viewers, wear a matching expression in your own photo to invoke the facial mimicry effect.
Top 10 ways to hack your profile photo, based on science. #Neuromarketing pic.twitter.com/6pAgM0X9qr CLICK TO TWEET
Your social profile photo or publicity headshot makes a bigger difference than you might expect. Take the time to optimize the details, and you’ll impress your viewers in the way you want and your business needs.

Monday, 14 March 2016

Quick Guide to the Perfect Social Media Profile

Guy Kawasaki - Quick Guide to the Perfect Social Media ProfileYou have less than five seconds to catch the attention of a would-be customer with your social media profile, so it’s imperative to make a big impression, fast. By capturing your brand’s story in pictures and embracing the beauty of brevity, you can build scan-friendly profiles that will make readers want to stick around, learn more about your brand, and click the “follow” button. Here are five tips that will help.
  • Tell your story in picturesMost forms of social media allow you to headline your profile with two major images: your avatar and a banner image. A brand avatar (the smaller, usually square or circle image) identifies your brand and should be your logo (or your face if you have celebrity status like Guy Kawasaki). The banner image (sometimes called a “cover image”) is the larger image that spans the width of your screen. This image describes your brand and should communicate what your startup represents. You can use a stock image that you’ve bought, but you can also create a banner for free or use a pre-built one from companies like Canva.com. Whatever you use, be sure it’s a high quality image and is the correct dimensions for the allotted space.
  • Craft a snappy taglineYour tagline or “mantra” should be two to four words that explain your startup’s purpose. A good mantra is short and memorable. Move beyond mission statements that are generally long and boring to something brief and catchy, like Starbuck’s tagline “Rewarding everyday moments” or Google’s “Democratizing information.” Your mantra should also be positive and selfless. Customers respond to brands that uplift them and inspire a better society, so use this as an opportunity to share what makes you passionate about your startup. “Get rich” is not a selfless mantra.
  • Give ‘em plenty of infoOnce you have a reader interested and looking for more information about your brand, give it to them! Make sure that you’ve offered full location and contact details as well as a more complete description of what you do and the benefits you provide. Provide as much information as you have space for, and be sure to include a website URL for those who’d like to continue to learn more about your business.
  • Use vanity URLsVanity URLs make your social channels easier to find and share, plus look a lot better than the default string of letters and numbers on marketing or other public-facing materials. You can get a vanity URL from Google+, Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter. If you can’t find instructions for choosing a vanity URL in the setting section of your social profile, a quick Google search should tell you how to do it.
  • Check it anonymouslyThe final test of your page is to view it as a random user would. Open an “incognito window” in your browser (for Chrome, right click the browser icon and select “New Incognito Window”) and type in your fancy new vanity URL. Viewing it this way will tell you exactly what would-be customers will find when they visit your profile. It’s a good idea to share this page with others at your startup to solicit feedback on whether your profile effectively communicates your brand identity in the five-second time frame most users will give you.
Social media is a critical part of your marketing strategy, so take care to get these critical basics right. You’ll reap the benefits of company visibility, audience building, and engagement, which eventually leads to paying customers and investors.

Monday, 5 October 2015

Linkedin Probably Owes You Money for Being Annoying

LinkedIn Probably Owes You Money for Being Annoying1
People join LinkedIn to help advance their careers (or at least feel like they’re trying). People do not join LinkedIn to receive an endless torrent of emails with this infamous line: “Hi, I’d like to add you to my professional network on LinkedIn.” A judge agrees, and now LinkedIn must pay.
After a class action lawsuit, LinkedIn just agreed to pay $13 million to users annoyed by the company’s overzealous email habits. If you were a member of LinkedIn’s so-called “add connections” program between September 2011 and October 2014, you’re eligible for a payout. You can submit a claim on this website.
But don’t go putting a down payment on that new boat quite yet. Each annoyed user will probably only get about $10. So at least you could get yourself a nice sandwich to help you recover from the years of spamming. Make it a Spam sandwich!

Sunday, 2 August 2015

Social Media Profits!... If you're not optimised, you're getting left behind!


Have you ever wondered how the experts are so good with Social Media and how they seem to have an endless flow of followers? Here's the secret..... Most of them don't do it themselves! Or at least have most of their tweets and posts automated or done for them, then just throw they're own in every now and again whenever they feel like it.

Now, you could see this as cheating or being very clever. Time is precious and the idea is to keep your audience engaged by keeping them up-to-date with whatever it is you do, whilst at the same time living your life. If people were to constantly post as much as they do on all forms of Social Media themselves, they wouldn't have time to do anything else. This is why if you're not having part of your Social Media automated or even utilising the opportunity it gives you and are in Business, then you're seriously getting left behind.

Here's a few useful figures to put into perspective:
- Facebook - passes 1.23 billion monthly active users! 945 million mobile users and 757 million daily users!
- Twitter - Over 600 million registered users! 316 million monthly active users and 500 million tweets sent per day!

That's just the top two Social Networks and the scary thing is, there's plenty more and they're still growing! Just think how much exposure this can give you and your Business, if you know what you're doing :)

If you're now thinking 'Hmmm, he's right. I'd love to save some time and dip in and out when it suits, whilst at the same time growing my Business.... But I don't know where to start?' Then don't worry! I've got it covered for you here ===> https://theincomefromhome.leadpages.co/socialmediaprofits/


Now as we're in the age of the internet, it is more important than ever that as well as for socialising, you use Social Media for Business. Ideally you'd have a separate account for both, Business and pleasure so that you can differentiate. Just imagine the possibilities of going to sleep, whilst your Business is still working in the background, building and growing your audience almost automatically. It's a win, win situation that will only increase your profitability.

No matter what field of Business you are in, Social Media should be on the brain as a way to reach millions of customers throughout the world. Even if you have a small local Business, don't think that this doesn't apply to you either, as with all Social Networks, you can target people specifically within your local area, the power of this is truly amazing.

It also doesn't mean that you just have your Business profiles were you constantly sell things, as that would more than likely deter people. Make sure you interact, ask questions, network with like minded individuals, always provide value in what you do and what you offer. Answer people's questions, as whatever field you are in, whether you think it or not, you will be an expert to someone who knows nothing about what you do.

Semi-automating your Social Media networks may sound like a daunting prospect, but it really isn't and is so simple. Not only that, it's also FREE if you know where to look and what to do. Don't get me wrong, you can also pay for these type of services if you wish to gain some advanced features that can come in handy, but in general the free versions offer everything you need to get started.

This is why I decided to create the 'Social Media Profits' ebook, for a simple, easy to follow guide on how you can utilise the world of Social Media for your Business. The majority of people get overwhelmed, don't know what to do for the best, whether to pay for things or not and what works and what doesn't. I've done all that for you, from start to finish. I've done all the hard work, made the mistakes myself, learned from them and fine tuned all in this one guide. 

Whether you're advanced or beginner, this will be taylor made for you! 

Don't get left behind, just click on the link & check it out ===> https://theincomefromhome.leadpages.co/socialmediaprofits/


Tuesday, 31 March 2015

How To Generate Leads with Linkedin




The LinkedIn world has gone ad crazy. Not just with regular ads, but with a new kind of social media ad that companies are eating up like candy.
With millions upon millions of members, LinkedIn proved to be such an attractive platform that its ad revenues hovered around $550-million by the third quarter of 2014 – a 45% growth over the previous year and all because of a new type of sponsored ads.
If you’re not using this feature, it’s time you should. According to an article in the Digital Journal’s B2B Network, paid ads on social media generate 25% more conversions than organic posts, and for B2B there’s no better platform than LinkedIn.
What’s In It for You
These sponsored ads – or what LinkedIn likes to call Direct Sponsored Content Ads – take paid social media advertising to the next level by dropping your ads into targeted member’s newsfeeds, even if they don’t “follow” your company.
These ads allow you to sponsor your own content, and then target the ad to fit your niche market. That market could be companies in a region of the country, or particular industries. You can also use filters to target (or exclude) CEOs and CFOs, for example.
It’s a beautiful thing. Face it, people like to work with people they know. So if you’re offering a great new service, doesn’t it just make sense to make sure your concentric circles of influence are in the loop?
Buckle Down if You Want Results
Clearly there are thousands of users who have figured out precisely how to take advantage of sponsored ads. But I suspect there are many who still shy away, simply because the process is so painstaking.
Part of the issue is that LinkedIn assumes you have piles of information at your fingertips when you start creating your ad. In truth, you need to go in fully armed if you want a streamlined experience.
How to Generate Leads with LinkedIn
Make sure you take care of these four critical items first, before you get started.
  • Check your administration privileges. Only administrators to create ads. Check with your team to get added. Once that’s done, the option “Advertising” appear in your account settings under your profile icon on the right.
  • Determine a budget for your campaign. You will need this information in Step 5 of creating the ad. You can set a total budget for the entire campaign. Charges are only incurred when people click your ad.
  • Determine what item on your LinkedIn page you want to “sponsor”. If you already have your item visible on LinkedIn, great. If not, you’ll need to create one. The post should link to your website page. It could promote an event, blog post, or news release – something that would attract interest or position you as a thought leader. Don’t forget to include an image.
  • Create a campaign tracking URL. Google URL builder will generate a uniquely identified URL so you can accurately measure success of your ad
Build Your Ad with Context
Direct Sponsored ads are more connected to the personality of your company, rather than the profile of your company. The reason is simple: each of these ads is going to appear above a post that appears on your page. So it’s personal.
These ads won’t appear on your company page, so you don’t have to worry about them looking out of place. But what targeted clients will see is both the URL you want them to link to (which may or may not also be on your LinkedIn page) and your CTA (call to action) – so the two pieces need to work together.
  1. Forget about your logo. This is not the time for you to use your company logo as an image. Save that for the regular ads that are more akin to what used to go into the newspaper. What you want to do is send a signal to your targeted industry that you understand them.
  2. Choose a sensible image. If you’re trying to attract the construction industry, choose an image that lets them know you understand their business. Think: what do they do, rather than what do you do.
  3. Write like you talk. You have 160 characters to work with, so make it meaningful. You want to compel your reader to click, but B2Bs might want to avoid puns. You want to sound like an insider rather than an outsider.
  4. Run, Review, and Repeat. Just because you think you’re ad is great, doesn’t mean anyone else does. After a couple of days, review the performance. Tweak your intro message, your image and even the content of your URL until you get the results you want.
Overcome LinkedIn’s Obtuse Interface
With so much revenue streaming in to LinkedIn, the company clearly isn’t concerned with those who find themselves stumbling around in the dark due to their platform’s utter lack of user transparency.
I say this because I’m one of those old fogies – a member of the generation that didn’t grow up with a keyboard glued to her fingertips (although I’ve been clocked at 89 wpm).
I have no patience to fast forward through nebulous YouTube videos in search of what I need. And as for the training tools on LinkedIn’s own site, they’re frequently masqueraded sales pitches that scurry past salient details.
I feel your pain.
Make Your Media Buy Count
Not so long ago, sales jumped in where marketing feared to tread. Today, social media marketing does much of the heavy lifting, so that your sales team can focus on what it’s truly good at: closing the deal with that perfect client your marketing efforts have brought in.
Figuring out how to conquer marketing tools like LinkedIn will help you expand your reach, and deliver the leads that work precisely for you.
If you find yourself struggling with the finer details, check out this full step-by-step guide to launching your first Direct Sponsored Ad campaign, and feel free to share it with your team.
Before you know it, you’ll have direct sponsored ads working for you, and your “links” will really count for something.