You’ve probably heard of Account-based Marketing (ABM), the strategy where instead of casting a wide net, you get laser-focused on a specific set of companies and go after them with everything you’ve got. The reason LinkedIn is the perfect place to run it is simple. Every other ad platform makes you guess who’s seeing your ads.
LinkedIn Account-based Marketing lets you walk straight up to the door of the exact company you want and knock on it, by name, by industry, by job title, by revenue. That targeting precision is something no other platform gives you at this level.
I’ve been running ABM campaigns on LinkedIn for over a decade and in this blog, I’m going to show you exactly how to run ABM on LinkedIn the right way, from picking the right type of ABM for your business all the way to handing warm accounts over to your sales team.
LinkedIn account-based marketing is a B2B paid strategy where you target specific companies or decision-makers with ads, instead of broadcasting to a broad audience.
Unlike Google Ads, where you’re chasing intent through search queries, LinkedIn Ads lets you walk straight up to the door of the exact company you want, by name, by industry, by revenue, by job title.
That level of precision is why ABM works so well here specifically. The platform’s targeting infrastructure is literally built for this, so you’re not hacking anything. You’re using it exactly the way it was designed.
The three types of of LinkedIn Account-based Marketing campaigns are:
Let me walk you through each one:
This is the most surgical approach you can take. Everything about the campaign is built for one company specifically:
For example: If you want to target Amazon directly. The entire campaign should look like it was made specifically for Amazon:
Here you’re working with a tighter list, typically 10 to 20 companies. The reason this number works so well comes down to two things:
Important Note: ABM 1:Few only works if your sales team is actually following up after the campaign runs. ABM without a coordinated sales motion is just burning money. We’ll come back to that.
Here you’re going after hundreds, sometimes thousands, of companies at the same time. You narrow the list based on your Ideal Customer Profile (ICP), whether that’s industry, company size, or region, and run ads across all of them simultaneously. The goal isn’t immediate conversion. It’s penetration across a large, well-defined universe of accounts.
For example, you can filter out 1:Many lists by:
Those two signals alone cut out a huge amount of wasted spend before the campaign even launches.
Here is the step-by-step process on how to run LinkedIn Account-based Marketing campaigns:
Before you even open LinkedIn Campaign Manager, get specific on your ICP:
Based on our previous example, if a company hasn’t raised any funding and isn’t hitting a certain revenue threshold, they likely can’t pay for what you sell. So they don’t make the list, regardless of how well they fit everything else.
Once your ICP is locked in, use it to decide which ABM type fits your business:
Why is this better? With 1:Few specifically, if your first batch of 10 accounts in one industry doesn’t convert, you move to the next, whether that’s IT, manufacturing, healthcare, or wherever the next best fit is. That iteration loop is only possible when you’re working with a tight, defined list.
With your ICP defined, pull your account list based on the filters that matter most:
Before you move anywhere near campaign setup though, confirm your sales team is ready to act on this list.
Here’s why that matters so much: From the ad side, you can see which accounts are engaged, but you have zero visibility into whether those accounts have actual buying intent. Only your sales team can confirm that by reaching out.
If they don’t follow up, you end up re-showing ads to accounts that may have no intention of ever buying from you, while the accounts that are actually ready to move forward never get a call. ABM is a sales and marketing system. Both sides have to be running for it to work.
Before you build anything in Campaign Manager, understand that LinkedIn gives you two distinct ways to run ABM:
Here are some common LinkedIn Ads mistakes people make with native targeting in an ABM context.
With a matched audience, you own the list entirely:
That control is the whole point of running ABM, and a native audience simply can’t give it to you.
Here’s the exact path to follow inside Campaign Manager:
Important Note: ABM on LinkedIn doesn’t have to stay at the company level. You can target specific individuals from those companies by uploading a contact list, which makes the whole thing significantly more precise.
Once you upload, LinkedIn takes around 48 to 72 hours to process the audience. Don’t launch before it’s fully ready. That’s a mistake that quietly wastes your first week of spend on an incomplete audience.
LinkedIn requires a minimum of 300 people in your audience before a campaign can go live. In ABM 1:1, this becomes a real problem fast. Say you’re targeting just the marketing department of one company and they might only have 150 or 200 people who fit your criteria.
The fix is simple:
Those extra people seeing the ad is a completely negligible trade-off for getting the campaign live and covering your core audience.
How you structure the actual campaign depends on which ABM type you’re running:
ABM is a slow burn, so go in with that expectation firmly set. Give the campaign at least 3 to 4 weeks before you evaluate anything. After that window:
That refresh cycle is what makes ABM so different from everything else. You’re always working a controlled, intentional universe of accounts, not waiting for an algorithm to decide who sees your ad next.
We’ve been in the trenches on this. At PipeRocket Digital, we build ABM systems that connect your ICP definition, account list curation, campaign architecture, and sales handoff into one coordinated motion
We’ve done this for PLG companies, SLG companies, across industries and all kinds of budget sizes.
If your LinkedIn campaigns feel completely disconnected from your actual pipeline, let’s talk about fixing that.
At the end of the day, ABM on LinkedIn isn’t complicated. You pick the right type for your growth model, you build your account list from a real ICP, and you make sure your sales team is ready to act before the campaign goes live.
The one thing I really want you to take away from this is the difference between native and matched audiences. Native targeting means LinkedIn controls the list. Matched audiences means you do. That distinction alone changes how effective your entire campaign is.
Yes, it’s a slower process than running broad ads. But the whole point of ABM is that you’re not trying to reach everyone. You’re trying to reach the right people, over and over, until they know exactly who you are. By the time your sales team calls, it doesn’t feel cold anymore. That’s the entire game.
Give it at least 3 to 4 weeks before you evaluate anything meaningful. You’re building familiarity inside specific accounts, not chasing immediate clicks. After that window, pull the company engagement report from LinkedIn and hand it straight to your sales team. The campaign warms the account and sales closes it. Both sides have to do their part.
With native targeting, LinkedIn controls the audience pool and automatically refills it when accounts cycle out. You have no say in who replaces them. With a matched audience, you upload your own list and own it completely.
You decide who’s in, who gets removed after they engage, and who gets added in the next cycle. That control is exactly what makes account-based marketing work the way it’s supposed to.
For ABM 1:1, absolutely yes. Your creatives need the target company’s logo and their name in the copy. For 1:Few and 1:Many you have more flexibility, but the messaging still needs to speak directly to the specific pain points of the segment you’re targeting.
Generic creative defeats the entire purpose of running an account-based marketing campaign in the first place.
No sales follow-up process. From the ad side, you can see who engaged, but you have no idea whether those accounts have actual buying intent. Only your sales team can figure that out by reaching out. If they don’t, you keep spending on accounts that may never convert, while the ones with real intent never hear from you.
It comes down to your growth model. PLG products should go with 1:Many because you need the volume to drive sign-ups. SLG companies should go with 1:1 or 1:Few because your sales team needs a workable list. With 1:Few specifically, you test one industry of 10 to 20 accounts, see what happens, and if it doesn’t convert, you move to the next industry.
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