• Facebook Flyers vs. LinkedIn Direct Ads

    For those that have yet to advertise through Facebook’s self-service program, I would almost urge you to stop reading (almost) and give it a try.  I have long been bullish on their monetization prospects, and it is a rare opportunity to test drive a self-service platfom that has scale, yet in so many ways is still in its infancy. There is a possible misconception, that Facebook advertising either a) doesn’t work or b) only works for B2C companies like applications trying to get more users.  Given its unique targeting and almost ubiquitous  usage, I decided to spend some money in order to advertise LeadsCon.com. In addition, I began advertising the same on LinkedIn. Here is my experience.

    Targeting check facebook linkedin-sm

    Both LinkedIn and Facebook offer unique targeting options. Few sites have the data that theses sites do, which makes up that targeting foundation. Even Google, which still stands as the gold standard, can’t match (without getting into some real trouble) the same level of gender and demographic specificity. Between these two social networks, which targeting you prefer, will depend on what you want to advertise. Overall, given it is a new, more flexible platform, Facebook offers a much greater range of options. The one in particular that I like is the ability to target by company. LinkedIn has the data, but they haven’t made it available yet. Below is a screenshot of the LinkedIn targeting page. Besides not allowing an option for company, the biggest weakness is the restriction with respect to how many targeting selects one can select. They allow you up to three. My guess is that such a restriction has to do with their not wanting to segment the audience too small. Facebook on the other hand, allows you to practically advertise to a single person if desired.

    LinkedIn Direct Ads Targeting

    According to LinkedIn, my audience is almost 550,000 people. Good for them but no so good for me where specificity over reach matter. Here is a screenshot of the parallel screen in the Facebook process.

    Facebook Ads - Targeting

    My audience here is less than 15,000. That’s fine with me, and if anything, I suspect it’s actually inflated.

    Next up in the evaluation process is what the user sees and how the process was for me to set up.

    Ad Unit / Creative Shown check facebook linkedin-sm

    Both companies have a long, long way to go before their platform’s scalability matches that of their audience. Facebook in particular will benefit greatly once they open up an API for ad creation. It’s a very manually process for both, more so for Facebook only because they allow you to slice and dice the audience so well. It makes you want to test. There are a handful of third-party tools which in effect just take your data points then enter them onto the Facebook site as if they were you. That speeds things up, but the entire process is the equivalent of a lead generator giving leads to a client by having to fill out the client’s form for each lead they collected, instead of being able to post the data directly.

    As for the ad creation process, both are relatively straightforward.  First-up Facebook.

    Facebook Design Ad

    And now, LinkedIn’s:

    Linkedin-Directads-Design ad

    Both, let you copy existing ads for use in a new ad, which is very helpful especially if you have some specific targeting options selected.  The one thing we won’t really discuss which has become relatively standardized is the ability to run a variety of different products/services under one account. As a commerce platform though, Facebook is the winner here because they designed their system around supporting multiple campaigns.  I can run many ads for LeadsCon and many ads for something unrelated but have them visually separated and reported differently. Not so with the current LinkedIn platform.  As for the ads themselves:

    LinkedIn Ad Facebook LeadsCon Ad

    Despite the personal touch of the LinkedIn ad, whose language tries to increase the trust and value of the ad by inserting a level of accountability, I prefer the Facebook one. Facebook has two big advantages.
    1) Size of the image – much bigger, and
    2) Amount of text – you can say much more than you can with LinkedIn. And LInkedIn doesn’t help you as you create the ad by letting you know how many characters can go on each line.

    Pricing check facebook linkedin-sm

    While you could make a case that Facebook snuck out a close victory on each of the previous rounds, this one doesn’t even come close. Both sites share similar pricing models in that you can pay either on a cost per click basis or on a cost per thousand basis. The sites differ dramatically on those minimums. Facebook uses their own algorithm to determine minimum cpc’s and cpm’s. In the end, the company tries to hit an effective revenue per thousand, so paying per click becomes more affordable for those with higher click through rate ads. A high click through rate means you don’t need as high of a click cost for them to hit their target. The better your perform, the more impressions you see. It’s the same market place dynamics we see in any competitive ad landscape. The nice with Facebook is that the cost to start playing is relatively affordable. They are willing to show your ad without them necessarily making a lot. If your ad doesn’t perform well initially, then it will quickly lose impressions, and the only option becomes to increase the payout or design a new ad that will presumably yield a higher effective return for Facebook.

    With Facebook on my B2B ad, the estimated cost per click came in at a not too cheap $.70. Were I to pay on a CPM instead of a CPC basis, I could have paid in the $.50. I chose CPC and set the minimum bid to several dollars though knowing they would need some room to play with if I were to get any distribution. Here is a snippet. It’s still a modest spend despite my having a $100 limit. There are alas only so many people who will click on a LeadsCon ad.
    Facebook CPC/CPM

    LinkedIn has dramatically higher pricing – good for LinkedIn but not as immediately good for me, especially given the less granular targeting. My ad shows to a broader group for more money. As for pricing, the minimum CPM is $3.00. The minimum CPC is $2.00. Doing the math, if you ad will get a better than 0.15% CTR, pay on a CPM. If not, do CPC. I didn’t think I would beat that CTR but I still chose CPM. Chosing CPM wasn’t a great choice as we can see from the below:
    LinkedIn DirectAds CPC/CPM

    Results x-mark facebook x-mark linkedin-sm

    Unfortunately for me, both Facebook and LinkedIn suck so far for promoting LeadsCon. Despite the call to action of potentially free admission, none of the clicks have yielded in a short form submission. I have created several different landing pages, both single step and multi-step with the same overall result. While I potentially haven’t hit statistical significant, at $2/click+, it’s already hitting pocketbook significance.

    • transfs
      Hi Jay,

      I ran a Facebook vs. LinkedIn advertising experiment and came up with the same results you have above. Our target market was also B2B, but Facebook seems to be working relatively well since we do the minimum spend. We had a hard time deciding to go with CPM or CPC, at the end I chose CPM in order to get our brand name out.

      Thanks for the great article.

      Best,

      Stella
      TransFS.com
    • i heard that someone get impression 20k within 5 minutes. and make 100k sale by using flyer
    • We've tested Facebook social ads against Google's content network using several multiple-layer testing buckets (e.g. geo, demo, site-targeted, contextual, and combos of each). Initially, the site-targeted Google Content Network campaign performed better based on cost per conversion, but without scale. After refining our Facebook ads to leverage initial learnings and incorporate Adwords copy performance insights, Facebook emerged the clear winner, and with far more scale.

      We're now looking to set up tests on LinkedIn, Slideshare, and Digg - all have unique targeting options and offer CPC pricing. The initial challenge we're adapting to is that each site has unique user expectations that require unique creative and landing content approaches. Look forward to sharing high-level insights on those fronts in the near future.
    • How many different ad variations did you try within the two networks?

      Perhaps test some ads written for an audience that may never have heard of LeadsCon, or emphasizing the free admission opportunity in the ad title to garner more clicks.
    • Derrick,

      I tried four different landing pages for each. Two single page and two multi-step. The copy tried to speak to an audience unfamiliar with the show (copy on landing page), but I suspect you are correct that most weren't familiar enough and that it would take different language.
    • Nik
      Hi Jay,

      This is great and very useful information. We also tried Facebook and didnt see much results from a conversion perspective. We are going to try this again in a month or so with a slightly different product/marketing positioning.

      Did you try the same thing for Google (Esp Adsense with a filter on specific blogs)? Curious about the ROI/conversion difference between FB Vs LI Vs the Big G

      Nik
    • Nik,

      Unfortunately, I didn't get to try Google as I am still banned from Adwords - www.jayweintraub.com/2008/03/guilty-until-pr.html. My guess is that Google would prove better though. It's a test I would very much like to run.
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