In consumer marketing, ad targeting often focuses on individual demographics and behaviors. Show a coffee ad to coffee drinkers. Show a fashion ad to people interested in fashion.
B2B advertising is fundamentally different. You’re not selling to individuals. You’re selling to companies. And you want to reach the right people at the right companies with the right message.
B2B ad targeting is the practice of using data, technology, and strategy to display your ads to people at companies that fit your ideal customer profile and are actively in market for your solution.
In this guide, we’ll explore what B2B ad targeting is, the different approaches and platforms, and how to build an effective B2B ad targeting strategy.
B2B ad targeting is fundamentally about precision. Instead of trying to reach everyone on a platform (which is expensive and inefficient), you narrow your audience to the companies and people most likely to be interested in and benefit from your solution.
The goal is to spend your ad budget on reaching the right target audience, not on impressions wasted on unqualified prospects.
B2B advertising faces a distinct challenge compared to consumer advertising. Your audience is smaller and more specific. A consumer brand might target millions of potential customers. A B2B SaaS company might have only a few thousand ideal customers in the entire market.
This means:
Several distinct approaches to B2B ad targeting exist.
Account-based advertising (ABA) is the most targeted B2B approach. You identify specific companies you want to reach (typically through a target account list), and you show ads specifically to people at those companies.
This approach requires:
Account-based advertising is highly efficient because you’re concentrating spend on accounts that match your ICP and where you’re actively selling.
Firmographic targeting reaches people at companies matching specific criteria like size, industry, geography, and company type.
This approach is broader than account-based advertising but more targeted than generic audience targeting. For example, you might target “All SaaS companies with $10M-$100M revenue in the US.”
Platforms like LinkedIn Ads, 6sense, and Terminus support firmographic targeting. You define your target criteria and the platform identifies and reaches people at matching companies.
Technographic targeting reaches people at companies that use specific technologies or tools. For example, you might target “Companies that use Salesforce and HubSpot” or “Companies running on AWS.”
This is valuable because it helps you identify companies in a buying cycle. A company that recently added a new CRM might be looking for complementary tools.
Intent-based targeting reaches people at companies showing buying signals. Companies might show intent through:
Platforms like 6sense, Demandbase, and G2 provide intent data. You can use this data to target companies showing intent around your solution category.
Topic targeting shows ads to people based on what they’re interested in or reading about. LinkedIn provides topic targeting options. You might target people interested in “demand generation,” “marketing automation,” or “account-based marketing.”
This is broader than intent targeting but can be effective for awareness campaigns.
Platforms like LinkedIn and Facebook allow you to upload your own customer and prospect lists and target similar audiences (look-alike targeting) or reach people on your list (list-based targeting).
This approach works well for:
Contextual targeting shows ads based on the context of where someone is browsing. If someone is reading an article about “sales pipeline management,” your sales tool ad appears.
This approach doesn’t require as much personal data and works well for reaching people interested in your topic.
Several platforms enable B2B ad targeting.
LinkedIn is the dominant platform for B2B advertising. It enables:
Google Ads supports B2B targeting through:
Several platforms specialize in B2B account-based advertising:
These platforms typically combine account and intent data to enable precise targeting and measurement.
Programmatic display platforms enable real-time bidding on ad inventory across publisher networks. Platforms like The Trade Desk, DV360 (DoubleClick), and AppNexus support B2B targeting through:
An effective B2B ad targeting strategy has several components.
Start by clearly defining who you want to reach:
Different platforms serve different purposes. Many B2B companies use a mix:
B2B ad creative should:
Different audiences might respond to different messaging. Your enterprise audience might respond to “Scale operations” while your SMB audience responds to “Save time for your team.”
B2B ad success requires measuring:
This requires proper tracking setup, CRM integration, and regular analysis.
Good B2B ad programs are continuously tested and optimized:
B2B advertising shouldn’t operate in isolation from your sales team. Alignment is essential:
Account-based advertising deserves additional detail because it’s increasingly important in B2B.
Account-based advertising starts with identifying which companies you want to reach. This typically involves:
Target account lists typically range from 50 accounts (for very focused enterprise sales) to 10,000+ accounts (for broader mid-market and SMB approaches).
To show ads to people at target accounts, platforms need to identify who those people are. This happens through:
Different platforms use different methodologies. IP-based targeting is less precise (you reach everyone at a company) but can be effective for awareness. Email and cookie-based targeting is more precise but depends on having good email data.
Account-based advertising is most effective when creative is customized:
Measuring account-based advertising effectiveness is critical:
This requires CRM integration to track which accounts people at target companies belong to.
Organizations often make mistakes with B2B ad targeting.
“Reach as many people as possible” is the wrong objective in B2B. Reaching many people at companies that aren’t a good fit wastes budget. More targeted, focused campaigns are typically more efficient.
At the other extreme, targeting so narrowly that you reach too few people can make it hard to gather meaningful data or generate sufficient volume.
If advertising targets accounts that sales isn’t actively pursuing, or pursues people not actually involved in buying decisions, the program will underperform.
Generic, broad creative doesn’t work in B2B. Creative should speak to the specific business challenges and needs of your target audience.
If you can’t measure what’s working and what’s not, you can’t optimize. Good tracking and measurement is essential.
Driving traffic to irrelevant or poorly-designed landing pages wastes the value of your ads. Landing pages should be relevant, compelling, and optimized for conversion.
As privacy regulations evolve, B2B ad targeting faces changes:
Effective B2B programs are building first-party data collection and consent-based targeting strategies to be resilient to privacy changes.
B2B ad targeting is evolving:
B2B ad targeting is distinct from consumer advertising. It requires precision in identifying the right companies and the right people within them. It demands alignment with sales and customer success, strong measurement, and continuous optimization.
The most effective B2B programs use multiple targeting approaches in concert. They combine firmographic targeting for broader awareness, account-based targeting for focused high-value accounts, intent data to identify companies in buying cycles, and continuous testing to optimize performance.
Abmatic enables B2B ad targeting by providing the account intelligence needed to identify and understand your target companies, track buying signals, and measure the impact of your advertising efforts on pipeline and revenue. Whether you’re using LinkedIn Ads, Google Ads, or specialized account-based advertising platforms, comprehensive account intelligence makes your targeting more precise and your campaigns more effective.