Over the past few weeks, we’ve run a series of LinkedIn ad tests for our clients to evaluate the impact of ad personalization across different geographies and campaign types. The early data has been promising, and it’s helping shape a smarter, more scalable paid social strategy moving forward.
Here’s what we’ve learned so far and what we’re testing next.
We rolled out personalized ad copy across two LinkedIn Lead Gen campaigns (global and US), inserting dynamic variables like FirstName, JobTitle, and CompanyName into our top-performing evergreen copy. The goal: drive more attention and conversions by speaking directly to each user.
Safe to say that personalization works when tested and used strategically.
After running the same personalized copy for about a month, we started to see some signs of fatigue (rising CPL, decreasing efficiency). While the performance still beats non-personalized ads, this prompted us to consolidate evergreen and personalized ads into a single campaign to consolidate budgets and lower the frequency of the personalized ad copy by mixing evergreen and personalized ads. This allows the campaign to run the ads side by side in the same environment to see how the algo responds.
This way, we can pit the best of both styles against each other in one campaign structure and optimize more strategically across performance, fatigue, and geography.
Our LinkedIn rep also offered some helpful regional insights that we’re starting to bake into testing:
These nuances matter, and we’re planning to test each personalization type separately to better isolate what resonates most by region.
If you’re starting from scratch, here’s the basic framework we recommend:
While the copy personalization gets a lot of the spotlight, we’re also thinking more broadly about creative alignment:
As we expand testing and collect more data, we’re focused on three things:
Even with some initial fatigue kicking in, the overall improvement in CPL and CTR tells us we’re moving in the right direction. Personalized LinkedIn ads aren’t magic, but with the right structure, message, and audience insights, they’re a powerful lever worth pulling.