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LinkedIn Video Ads: Relevance, Specs, and Use Cases

linkedin video ads on mobile

On YouTube, a keyword-targeted pre-roll ad might show the same video to a CEO and an intern.

On Facebook, an ideal customer may log on to see photos of a new nephew, not to check out a 30-second demo of your SaaS product.

LinkedIn has the potential to resolve both shortcomings:

  1. You know much more about who’s on the other end of an ad.
  2. You have a pretty good idea of why they’re on LinkedIn—to improve their career or company.

LinkedIn ads offer the benefits of video content and the granular targeting of a B2B-centric platform. They also come with higher costs and LinkedIn-specific platform limitations.

Fundamentally, there’s nothing unique about a video for a LinkedIn ad. The same video content likely works well in other channels. But there are technical and strategic keys to smart deployment.

The growth of B2B video marketing

An eMarketer study estimated that, in 2018, 25% of U.S. digital ad spend went to video. That represented 30% growth, totaling nearly $28 billion in ad spend. (The growth also outpaced their forecast from the prior year, which suggested that video would reach 17% of digital ad spend by 2021.)

Those ad-specific stats pair with the ongoing shift toward video as the primary medium on the Internet. Cisco’s VNI forecast estimates that 82% of all Internet traffic will be video in 2022. (It’s already above 75%, according to the same research.)

Video content allows advertisers to tell a more complex story than text or images alone. It also has high engagement rates. A Facebook study suggested that video content generates five times the engagement (“gaze,” officially) as static content.

Facebook, Twitter, and Snapchat have thus far dominated the market in video ad spend on social media. But LinkedIn owns the lucrative B2B audience.

As AJ Wilcox notes in his course on LinkedIn ads, 72% of the Fortune 1000 are B2B companies. That means that there’s plenty of business to be won—even if LinkedIn views come at a higher cost (more later).

LinkedIn research on the UK market in 2018 also highlighted the growth—and perceived value— of B2B video:

  • 62% of B2B marketers rate video as the most important format for content;
  • 26% of B2B marketers plan to spend more than £300,000 ($395,000) on video advertising;
  • 78% of B2B marketers believe that video “helps them identify higher quality leads”;
  • 57% believe video “drives a higher volume of leads.”

Principles of a successful video ad

LinkedIn suggests a wide spectrum of video types to accommodate various budgets. A sizable budget is perhaps most vital for LinkedIn ad spend. (Image source)

We’ve written about optimizing videos several times before. This post focuses on deployment rather than production, but here are high-level takeaways from those posts:

  • Quality = attention span. As Seinfeld said, “There is no such thing as an attention span. There is only the quality of what you are viewing.”
  • Stay on brand. Don’t copy the style of a popular video (especially a “viral” one) if you’re trying to drive home your unique value proposition or establish your brand.
  • Plan it out. A one-minute video needs only about 150 words. You need a straight-to-the-point script and an agreed-upon storyboard for the accompanying shots.

Great video ads are concise—and flexible. Some of the best research on video ads comes from other platforms (since they have more data). For YouTube pre-roll ads, Google recommends segmenting video ad campaigns into three phases:

  1. Tease. A 6-second video to “seed the idea.”
  2. Amplify. 15- and 30- versions to grow reach and impact.
  3. Echo. A return to 6-second ads to reinforce the past message.

The strategy, according to Google, improves ad recall (and, undoubtedly, YouTube revenues).

The format isn’t directly applicable to LinkedIn, but there’s a broader takeaway. A successful campaign needs to break video messaging into chunks that can capture busy top-of-funnel scrollers (short videos) and more engaged middle- and bottom-of-funnel viewers (longer videos).

For video ads, Blitzmetrics CEO Dennis Yu outlines a four-step structure:

  1. Hook. Capture attention within the first 3 seconds.
  2. Ignite Pain/Pleasure. Identify problem or opportunity in 3–15 seconds range.
  3. Describe Solution. Explain what you offer and why it will help viewers from 15–50 seconds.
  4. Call to Action. Leave them with an actionable next step in the final 10 seconds.

LinkedIn reports that viewer attention drops after 10 seconds. That means you have less than that amount of time to “hook” a viewer. The internal report also notes that “videos under 30 seconds reported a 200% lift in view completion rates.” (A caveat from the study: Some longer-form videos drove an equal number of clicks as their shorter counterparts.)

Just as LinkedIn videos perform differently than YouTube pre-roll clips, they have unique technical and targeting requirements, too.

LinkedIn video ads: tech specs, targeting, metrics, and cost

LinkedIn began beta testing video ads in October 2017. (For years prior, it was possible to include YouTube links within text- or image-based Sponsored Content.) In March 2018, LinkedIn video ads became available to all companies.

Native video ads appear within LinkedIn news feeds. Unlike YouTube pre-roll videos, the ads are less likely to appear as interruptions. Nielsen data on a B2C campaign found that native ads are more effective in driving “brand consideration”:

These are the technical, targeting, and cost considerations for rolling out a LinkedIn video ads campaign.

LinkedIn video ad tech specs

LinkedIn video ads can have two places of origin:

  1. Sponsored Content campaign from content posted to your Company page.
  2. Direct Sponsored Content campaign with video not published elsewhere.

The benefit of the latter is to deliver more targeted messages. Several versions of a video, for example, might target a segment of your customer base or be part of an account-based marketing strategy.

LinkedIn has a dedicated page with a full list of technical specs for LinkedIn video ads. Here are the highlights:

  • Video length can range from 3 seconds to 30 minutes.
  • Filesize must be between 75KB and 200 MB.
  • File format must be MP4.
  • Videos must have a horizontal layout.
  • Frame rate must be less than 30 frames per second.

By default, LinkedIn video ads play without sound. Hard-code subtitles to get your message across without the audio.

LinkedIn video ad targeting

LinkedIn’s targeting capabilities—by company name, job title, etc.—are a big reason why Linkedin has become a popular, if expensive, platform for B2B advertisers. If you’re new to LinkedIn targeting, you can find introductory guides here or here.

LinkedIn targeting for video ads is no different than targeting for other Sponsored Content. Combinations (multiple characteristics) and exclusions (without certain characteristics) are both possible.

One limitation for LinkedIn video ads is the inability to retarget video viewers. As Wilcox laments:

Part of the reason why advertisers haven’t embraced it yet is we don’t have the ability to retarget video viewers yet. Once LinkedIn releases this functionality, I think it will be much easier to make the case for video ads on the platform.

The inability to retarget video viewers doesn’t preclude lead generation. LinkedIn offers Lead Gen forms that overlay Sponsored Content, which removes the need for visitors to go to a separate landing page.

At the same time, if video viewers never leave LinkedIn, they won’t generate hits to your site to allow you to track post-viewing behavior.

LinkedIn video ad metrics

Compared to the B2C world, B2B attribution faces two challenges:

  • Sales often take place offline.
  • The sales cycle may last for months, or more than a year.

Both are limitations on how much video metrics can tell you. You’ll almost certainly endure gaps between LinkedIn behavior and the close of sales.

That said, here are the core metrics for LinkedIn video ads:

  • An impression includes 1 second of video play;
  • A paid view is 2 seconds of video play “with 50% of ad unit in view” or “a click on the CTA, whichever comes first” (an “organic” view of Sponsored video content is 3 seconds);
  • LinkedIn records the number of views as well as the percentage of the video watched at intervals of 25%, 50%, 75%, and “complete” (at least 97%);
  • The completion rate (completions divided by views, multiplied by 100);
  • Average cost per view;
  • Number of clicks to view the video in full-screen mode.

LinkedIn video ad costs

LinkedIn advertising isn’t cheap. In case studies, LinkedIn touts cost-per-view metrics as low as $0.06, but, as Wilcox notes, that can add up quickly. Facebook cost-per-view metrics, for example, average around $0.02. A difference of $0.04 is a 3X price increase.

The takeaway? Find out what works on other platforms, Wilcox argues. Then, migrate a refined strategy to LinkedIn:

The biggest mistake with LinkedIn video ads is to be testing video on LinkedIn first. The costs are 3–6X higher than video views on Facebook, so the most efficient use of your dollars is to test your creative on Facebook (or YouTube) first, and then bring over the creative that performed best.

What works well for Sponsored Content videos on LinkedIn? There are five core use cases.

5 use cases for LinkedIn video ads

“I haven’t seen truly great video ad campaigns yet,” Wilcox admitted. “The format is pretty new, so it’s still a bit of the wild, wild, west.” That hasn’t stopped some pioneering (and deep-pocketed) brands from venturing into unfamiliar territory.

As noted earlier, LinkedIn video ads don’t require a wholly different approach to video marketing. The B2B video examples below were distributed on LinkedIn or other social channels, as well as YouTube.

The key is to ensure that the pricey views on LinkedIn will be worth it:

  1. Test your creative.
  2. Know exactly who you want to reach.
  3. Know what you want those viewers to do.

If you hit those targets, you’re more likely to get a strong return on ad spend, whether your goal is brand awareness, product trials, or another use case.

1. Brand spots

The aforementioned LinkedIn survey suggests that “building brand awareness is the most common driver for investing in B2B video content.” In B2B, for better or worse, that often takes the form of quirky commercials from serious companies.

A KLM spot, which had a nearly 34% view rate, featured employees magically transitioning from corporate attire to festive sweaters:

There’s certainly a risk in the original becoming formulaic: every “boring” B2B company suddenly coming to life in video spots. Still, some, like Zendesk, have committed to the concept, with a series of creative brand spots that also hit on their core message:

Zendesk makes software for improving the relationship between businesses and their customers. Because relationships are complicated.

Does it work? The video has more than 216,000 views on YouTube—a useful (and largely free) testing ground for videos before an investment on LinkedIn.

Brand spots are useful for recruiting, too.

2. Recruiting

LinkedIn offers the chance to connect with customers—or potential employees. Its targeting allows recruiters to go after specific job titles or companies that are a potential match.

BambooHR ran LinkedIn ads explicitly targeting those who, perhaps, felt burnt out at their current startup. The ad infused additional aspects of company culture into their promise of 40-hour work weeks and work-life balance:

https://youtu.be/7WH8uxXXe9o

3. Case studies and testimonials

The high price tag of LinkedIn video ads and robust targeting entice some to go further down the funnel with B2B video spots. It certainly helps if you partner with a highly regarded video production company, as Slack did in 2014.

While the spot precedes LinkedIn video ads, it weaves a humorous narrative into a customer testimonial: targeting pain points, showcasing the product, and entertaining viewers.

For its LinkedIn video ad campaign, Philips used a more straightforward approach. They highlighted how their technology helps deliver medical care at a children’s hospital. The choice showcases the product and the positive impact of the brand. (Note the dual-language captions.)

To watch the video on LinkedIn, click here.

In a LinkedIn video ad for their annual conference, MicroStrategy deployed two tactics:

  1. Blended conference features with a testimonial of the experience.
  2. Included a discount in the copy to aid attribution.
To watch the video on LinkedIn, click here.

4. Product announcements and demos

Video ads have obvious potential for the B2B SaaS world. It’s difficult (or uninteresting) to convey the functionality of a SaaS product via text or still images.

At the same time, a formal video demo may not capture audience attention, especially at the top of the funnel. In 2016, Hootsuite blended entertainment into a product update by parodying Jimmy Kimmel’s popular “Mean Tweets” segment. (So well, apparently, that the video has since been removed due to copyright issues.)

Hootsuite CEO Ryan Holmes read expletive-laden tweets about the Hootsuite interface—the entertaining portion—while using that hook as a way to announce the upgraded UI:

WP Engine went with a visually impressive but more traditional campaign. They tease aspects of the user interface while pumping up excitement with high-tempo music and bright colors:

To watch the video on LinkedIn, click here.

Silver Peak ran LinkedIn video ads for their SD-WAN platform. The spot was clever. Poking fun at 1980s styles likely resonated with the age demographic for their target audience. It also ended with a call to action to visit a microsite for the campaign.

To watch the video on LinkedIn, click here.

5. Real-time feedback on messaging

Posting video ads on LinkedIn has one more alluring potential: feedback from the target audience. Likes and comments offer qualitative feedback on the video content—a passive way to conduct market research on social media.

That information is especially valuable if the video is used for YouTube pre-roll or TV spots, which don’t offer the benefit of viewer feedback.

It’s not the primary benefit. LinkedIn is too expensive (though sponsored videos can generate organic views in addition to paid ones). But it adds potential value to the investment.

Conclusion

“Video is absolutely incredible at getting people to accelerate from the top to the bottom of the funnel rapidly,” Wilcox told me. “It might take several touches with guides and webinars to get someone to know, like, and trust your brand, but a well-produced video can do it in less than a minute.”

The potential is recognized but not yet realized. As more ad budgets shift toward video, LinkedIn video ads will be increasingly relevant. Added relevancy, however, is likely to continue to drive up costs that already outpace other channels.

A retargeting capability may add more potential value to ad engagements. Still, a tested video strategy—one with engaging, relevant content and a clear call to action—offers the best chance for getting value from an investment in LinkedIn video ads.  

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  1. Fascinating stuff Derek. Would be interesting to see how this worked for software since it would have to be a more abstract video and not just the product.

    1. Avatar photo

      Thanks, Alex. The WP Engine video showcases the software functionality a bit.

      The ability to show how software functions is probably a benefit of using video. The challenge, perhaps, is targeting an audience that’s already interested enough to sit through a video demo.

      We’re probably a few months away from everyone’s case studies rolling out (since LinkedIn video ads have been available to everyone for only about a year, and many of the early adopters were massive brands).

      This is one of those posts that will be well deserving of an update sometime soon.

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