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Marketing your business on linked in
1. Marketing Your Business on
PRESENTS
Marketing Your Business on
Company Banner
Recent Updates
Current Employees
Job Listings
Custom Content
Employee Quotes
Product/Service Listing
Company Intro
2. Marketing Your Business on
With more than 187 million members, 2.6 million Company Pages, and a million Groups, LinkedIn is the largest professional social
network in the world. Its first goal has been to help members find job opportunities and network with other professionals. Companies
have also found great success using LinkedIn to find new employees in a cost efficient way. More recently, like-minded professionals
have started to engage in insightful conversations around various industries, products, and services. And now new enhancements to
the social network are creating unprecedented marketing opportunities for brands.
LinkedIn revolutionized the way professionals interact with their networks. With the newly redesigned Company Pages, brands now
have a way to interact and engage with LinkedIn members. LinkedIn has created a central hub where brands can highlight their unique
identity, promote content and events, create awareness around products, and aggregate employment opportunities. These features are
enabling companies to create a brand presence on LinkedIn where they can market to and engage with their audience in a new and
powerful way.
LinkedIn’s focus on expanding company engagement opportunities now allows brands to manage their marketing presence in an
integrated way using Company Pages, Targeted Status Updates, and Ads. Digital marketing teams can now fully incorporate LinkedIn
into their multichannel, social media marketing strategy. And with the largest professional network in the world now integrating
marketing opportunities for companies, the ability to reach, connect, and engage with key professionals and social customers is greater
than ever before.
It’s now time to turn your LinkedIn presence into something that represents your brand and engages your audience. There are key steps
you can take to help make LinkedIn an effective marketing channel starting today. This paper outlines four ways to make LinkedIn a
powerful marketing channel for your company. In the next pages, you’ll learn concrete ways to:
1. Create a strong company page
2. Grow your LinkedIn audience
3. Reach more members with LinkedIn Ads
4. Engage your LinkedIn community
The world’s largest professional network has matured past the days when brands focused on recruiting and networking opportunities.
Now companies can combine the techniques outlined below to leverage the unique marketing opportunity newly introduced by
LinkedIn.
The Importance of Your Company Page
Prior to the updated Company Pages, many brands created and maintained multiple Groups to segment and engage with their audience.
With Company Pages, visitors now have a central location to learn who your company is and what solutions they offer. Groups can
go back to serving their primary use case of bringing professionals together to discuss similar business challenges, experiences, and
ideas for the purpose of collaboration and networking. These conversations between brands and Groups are still very important and
can generate valuable engagement. But when a brand’s marketing team wants to talk about the company, their own products, their
events, and their promotions, its Company Page is the best place for them to showcase this information.
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3. Marketing Your Business on
1. Creating Your Company Page
Your Company Page is now the center of your LinkedIn universe where you can market your company. It is a designated space where
you can market your products, demonstrate your value, and show off your creative identity to the greater LinkedIn community. There
are four main section tabs: Home, Careers, Products & Services, and Insights.
Home
The Home tab is the first thing a visitor sees when visiting your Company Page. The top
of this section features a 640 x 220 customizable banner. Directly below the banner,
visitors can see all of company’s recent Status Updates, which give them an idea of the
type of content they will see if they decide to follow your company.
Careers
Company Pages and added capabilities for brand engagement don’t change the fact
that LinkedIn is still the premier social network for engaging both passive and active
job seekers. Now, when your company posts a job on LinkedIn, it automatically posts
on your company’s Career tab. When members visit this section of your Company
Page, the postings will be prioritized by relevance to that user, taking into account their
experience and background. The tab also displays employees of the company that are
already in the visitor’s network. Various types of rich content including videos, photos,
and customizable modules can give potential recruits a good idea of what it’s like to be
a member of your team. Keep in mind that portions of the Career tab require a paid
subscription. Visit linkedin.com/jobs/post, to learn more.
Products & Services
The Products & Services section of your LinkedIn Company Page provides a number
of opportunities to share information about your brand. The first step is to create a
compelling introduction that encompasses your identity and your brand’s products and
services. The LinkedIn Company Page edit tool will then allow you to create a section for
each of the products and services you want to feature. The more thorough and complete
you can be in describing your offerings, the more awareness and understanding you
will be able to build over time. Adding in photos, videos, your website URL, and other
rich media will help increase your SEO and give visitors a complete understanding of
what you can offer them.
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4. Marketing Your Business on
After creating your various Products and Services, you can do a few things to increase
the likelihood that the right LinkedIn member will see the appropriate product or
service. For example, reach out to your existing network and ask them to recommend
your products. These recommendations will be featured when members visit your
page.
Additionally, you can choose to segment your LinkedIn audience by creating up to 30 distinct audience segments. For each segment,
you can specify the order of your products and services, allowing you to highlight relevent offerings. When segmented members visit
the Products and Services section of your Company Page, they will see your offerings in the order you specified.
Insights
The Insights tab on your Company Page is automatically populated with various facts about your company. It highlights the employees
that have new titles, recent departures, employees with the most recommendations, and other companies that shared visitors viewed.
While you can’t add or change information in this section, it helps provide viewers with a more complete overview of your company.
2. Growing Your Community
Once your LinkedIn Company Page is published and personalized, it is time to start growing your community to help amplify company
communication and engagement with followers. Increasing your Company Page’s followers in turn increases the organic reach across
the LinkedIn members who see posts from your company on a regular basis
To jumpstart your following on LinkedIn, take advantage of the built-in network that you already have. PowerFormula.net found that
57% of LinkedIn users have between 100 and 300 first-degree connections. This vast, extended audience is incredibly valuable to your
company, so turn them into followers by asking your employees to follow your company and share your content with their network.
Along the same lines, ask your employees to embed a “Follow Company” button or a LinkedIn page URL on their outbound email
signature. These tactics should help activate your extended network.
As a marketing organization, there are many options to promote your LinkedIn presence and grow your followers. Start by including
“Follow Company” buttons on all websites and landing pages that are relevant. By cross-promoting LinkedIn content on Facebook,
Twitter, and other social channels, you can also start engaging those audiences. An email announcement and introduction to your
updated LinkedIn Company page is another way to connect your existing community to a new location they can connect and engage
with relevant content and activities. For organizations that need to increase their community quickly, LinkedIn allows brands to
purchase followers from their target audience. This services is available through the LinkedIn Marketing Solutions team. Visit http://
marketing.linkedin.com, for more information.
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5. Marketing Your Business on
3. Reaching More Members with LinkedIn Ads
Organic community growth tactics will help grow your LinkedIn audience with existing communities and audiences, but LinkedIn also
offers paid opportunities to target and connect with members in entirely new market segments. Imagine the possibilities if you could
get your marketing message or company presence in front of the members that fit your target market best, based on company size,
industry, function, seniority, or geography. LinkedIn offers a variety of ads and options for companies to do just that. Moreover, you do
not need a large budget to get started, as these ads can be very cost effective.
There are two main types of ads within LinkedIn. While their configuration and targeting options are similar, they have two distinct
goals: building your community through brand awareness and lead generation.
LinkedIn Ads to Grow Your Community
Ads can help accelerate the growth of your community. LinkedIn allows
you to target ad locations on different tabs within your LinkedIn Company
page. To grow followers, brands have many options as to where to direct
engagement. For example, some brands choose to point visitors to their
Home page with a brand identity message where others use a product
related message in the text and direct ads to the Products & Services page.
LinkedIn Ads to Generate Leads
LinkedIn Ads are effective for all types of companies, but they are especially effective for Business-to-Business (B2B) companies. One
of the perpetual challenges for B2B marketers is: how do you market to the people behind the businesses, not to the company itself?
This can be very difficult to do on the web, but it can be especially trying on social networks where the professional and personal lines
are blurred. For B2B marketers, it’s likely that the majority of their audience is on LinkedIn for professional reasons, therefore ads are
more effective here than on most social sites.
When creating ads, LinkedIn gives you the option to point to a 3rd party
website or landing page in order to capture lead information. Ad content can
range from a 30-second video to images and assets relating to your brand.
There’s also a feature called “collect lead” that allows LinkedIn members to
flag your company and ask for more information. When flagged, the LinkedIn
Ad administrator receives an email with that person’s LinkedIn profile
notifying they requested more information.
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6. Marketing Your Business on
Planning Your Ads
When your company is ready to start running LinkedIn ads, it is important to strategically
plan out what type of campaign you want to run. Is your goal brand awareness or lead
generation? Which assets, websites, videos, or landing pages will support your goal?
Those answers will determine how you create your ads. Notice you can also create
different variations of the same ad. This allows you to test the creative assets and text
of an ad to see what content is most effective at engaging your audience.
After determining the text and creative for your ad campaign, the audience can be more precisely targeted. LinkedIn allows you to
target ads according to location, company, job title, school, skills, Group, gender, or age. Targeting by Group may also be helpful if there
are popular LinkedIn Groups within your industry.
The last step is to set your daily budget (minimum of $10 daily) and select whether you’d like to pay by CPC (cost-per-click) or CPM
(cost-per-thousand-impressions). LinkedIn suggests CPC and gives you a suggested bid range. You can select a specific end date for
your campaign, or choose to keep it running continuously.
Measuring Ad Success
Once your campaigns have started running, it is important
to analyze their efficacy. LinkedIn provides metrics to
measure success including clicks, impressions, leads, and
CTR. You can view these results by individual campaign,
or in aggregate. The graph below shows combined results
for a customized date range and a series of metrics (clicks,
amount spent, impressions, etc.). Determining goals and
success metrics before running campaigns will help make
analyzing the results more efficient.
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7. Marketing Your Business on
4. Engaging Your Community
In addition to growing your audience, generating leads, and promoting campaigns,
engaging your existing LinkedIn community should be an ongoing opportunity and
priority. Because LinkedIn serves a business community, brands can focus on quality
over quantity. To start, plan two or three posts weekly that will be engaging, relevant,
and timely for your audience. These posts might include relevant content such as
company news, marketing assets, or 3rd party articles. Like on other networks,
aiming to include links and thumbnail images helps increase engagement.
Brands with a larger follower base and specific messages relevant to particular audience segments should consider targeting their
Status Updates whenever possible. Status updates can be targeted to followers based on attributes like title and industry. While your
targeted updates will reach a subset of your total audience, content that caters to them can increase the likelihood that members will
interact with it. Targeted followers tend to like, share, or comment on updates more often. Whether you choose to target your posts or
stick with broadcasting, it’s important to keep an eye on your base of followers as audiences can change and shift over time.
Measuring Engagement
LinkedIn provides a variety of reports out of the box for Company
Page administrators. As you plan your LinkedIn content, sometimes
weeks in advance, it is important to know who your audience is. If
you are posting Status Updates to your entire follower base, select
content that may resonate with a large portion of your followers
based on their industry, their titles, and their education. Alternatively,
if you are targeting updates, you will want to target content for your
most important segments. For example the report below shows that
30% of followers have a “Senior” title and 19% of their followers are
in the Marketing and Advertising industry. When creating content,
it will be important that this company doesn’t focus solely on the
Marketing and Advertising industry since the Computer Software
and Information Technology industries also account for a large part
of their follower base.
Follower Demographics for The Company
The same analysis can be done when looking at Company Page
visitor statistics. Here, page visitors are distributed differently than
their followers, with more than 25% of their visitors coming from
the Computer Software industry. This insight helps guide decisions
around what content and information is resonating with which
audiences, and can be helpful in determining what can be done to
attract new segments.
Page Visitor Demographics for The Company
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