B2B Marketers Are Moving Budgets to LinkedIn (and You Should Too)
B2B marketers increased LinkedIn ad budgets by 31.7% while Google grew just 6%. Discover why traditional channels are failing and how you should respond.
There's a mass exodus happening in B2B marketing, and it's not just people fleeing yet another meeting that could have been an email.
Between Q3 2024 and Q3 2025, B2B companies increased their LinkedIn ad budgets by 31.7% while Google ad spending limped along with a measly 6% growth. That's five times the difference in growth rates. This isn't a test. This isn't a trend. This is a serious pivot at the executive level.
If you're still allocating your marketing budget like it's 2024, it’s time to have a serious chat. It’s not me, it’s you. Something needs to change.
The traditional channels are crashing out
What worked ten years ago doesn’t work today. What worked five years ago doesn’t work today. Increasingly, what worked one year ago doesn’t work today. The world is changing, and you’re sitting there, watching it spin on by, sipping your matcha latte and falling further behind.
We surveyed 125+ US-focused marketing leaders, and analysed data from 100+ B2B companies. Our LinkedIn Benchmarks Report gives intriguing insights into modern marketing, what works, and what is swiftly failing.
Organic traffic is tanking
While the aggregate numbers show a modest 1.7% growth in organic traffic, dig deeper, and you'll find the median organization actually experienced a -1.25% decline. Companies with 50K+ monthly traffic saw 67% of them losing ground.
Google's 2024-2025 algorithm updates basically carpet-bombed enterprise sites relying on historical domain authority. If you'd been coasting along as an established website, you're probably feeling the pain right now.
Paid search is having a full-blown meltdown
The paid search numbers are rough:
- Median paid search traffic change: -39%
- Aggregate conversion rate change: -8%
- Median CPC increase: 24%
- Companies with declining conversion rates: 65%
You're paying more, for less traffic, that converts at lower rates. That's a channel in crisis. According to our analysis of over 100 B2B companies, paid search is suffering on all fronts. Higher competition and more automated bidding and LLM’s impact on buyer behaviour are eating away at effectiveness and increasing costs.
Gated content is closing its gates (on you)
Gated content was the best strategy for the longest time; high-quality leads liked the valuable resources and the ROI was outstanding. But like newspapers in the time of social media, the relevance and impact is waning.
- Webinar registrations are down 12.7%
- eBook downloads among established programs have dropped by 5%
- Report downloads have fallen 26.3%
Now that B2B buyers can just ask ChatGPT for cliffnotes, your long and detailed gated whitepaper suddenly looks a lot less appealing. It sucks, we know.
The only demand gen action showing resilience? Demo requests, up 9.5%. But according to Forrester, 81% of buyers have a preferred vendor at first contact, and 85% have already established purchase requirements before reaching out. That demo request is a tick-boxing exercise because all the research is already done.
The great budget migration: Where the budget's actually going
LinkedIn's share of the digital marketing budget jumped from 31.3% to 37.6% in just one year. Google's share? Dropped from 68.7% to 62.4%. That's a 6.3 percentage point swing. In marketing budget terms, that's a massive shift.
68.3% of companies increased their overall digital marketing budgets, but they're specifically pouring that new money into LinkedIn at a rate 5X higher than Google. This isn't incremental optimization. This is systematic reallocation based on proven ROI.
But wait, there's more: The brand awareness revolution
Here's where things get really interesting. CMOs aren't just shifting budgets to LinkedIn. They're fundamentally changing how they advertise on the platform.
Campaign objectives focused on brand awareness or engagement jumped from 17.5% to 31.3% of LinkedIn spend. Meanwhile, lead generation objectives plummeted from 53.9% to 39.4%.
But wait, aren't we all supposed to be focused on leads and pipeline?
Here's why this change makes perfect sense: when 92% of buyers start their journey with a vendor already in mind, the battle is won or lost during the brand awareness phase. HubSpot's 2025 State of Marketing Report found that 92% of all marketers plan to maintain or increase their investments in brand awareness in 2025. The smart money knows that direct response lead gen on LinkedIn increasingly captures only in-market buyers who've already formed their preferences.
The real strategic leverage? Top-of-funnel brand investment. Because if you aren’t on that preferred vendor list, your goose is cooked, and you’ve missed out.
The ROI case that makes CFOs actually happy
Traditional channels are failing and everyone's moving to LinkedIn (like rats deserting a sinking ship). But does LinkedIn actually work?
Here are some numbers that’ll make your CFO's eyes light up.
LinkedIn vs. Google: The head-to-head showdown
Based on analysis of our Factors.ai customer data:
- Median ROAS: LinkedIn 1.8x vs. Google 1.25x (44% advantage for LinkedIn)
- Cost per ICP account engaged: LinkedIn $257 vs. Google $560 (LinkedIn wins at half the cost)
- Cost per qualified meeting: LinkedIn has a 23% cost advantage
- Average Contract Value: LinkedIn-sourced deals close at 28.6% higher ACV
Read that last one again. Not only are you paying less to acquire customers on LinkedIn, but those customers are worth 28.6% more. It’s like ordering a single-scoop ice cream and getting a double-scoop for free, because you know the guy behind the counter.
The multiplicative effect: LinkedIn makes everything else better
Every cook knows how to make meals taste better. The multiplicative effect in the kitchen is butter. The addition of butter makes everything better. Burnt? Scrape it off and add butter. Flavourless? Stir through some butter. Tastes too healthy? Butter.
LinkedIn is like butter. It takes everything to the next level.
- ICP accounts that saw LinkedIn ads convert from paid search at 46% higher rates (up to 69% higher in top-performing campaigns)
- 43% improvement in meeting-to-deal conversion for SDR outbound when accounts saw LinkedIn ads first
- 112% lift in conversion rates from website content pages for accounts exposed to LinkedIn ads
Think about what this means: LinkedIn isn't just driving direct conversions. It's making your entire marketing stack more effective. Your paid search? Better. Your content marketing? Better. Your SDR team's cold outreach? Suddenly, not so cold anymore. Toasty warm, really.
LinkedIn is not just a brand awareness platform. It’s your full-stack marketing butter.
The quality advantage: Not all leads are created equal
Let's talk about something that traditional metrics miss: lead quality.
71.9% of B2B marketers agree that leads from LinkedIn ads align more closely with their ICP and are more likely to be senior-level decision-makers compared to other channels. When you can target the actual CFO, VP of IT, and Director of Marketing (not just cross your fingers and hope that your ad reaches them) you fundamentally change the game.
LinkedIn's professional graph gives you access to real buying committees. And with 13 stakeholders involved in the average B2B deal, you need to influence the entire committee, not just your champion. LinkedIn makes that possible at scale.
How to make the shift (without screwing it up)
If you’re ready to take the plunge on LinkedIn, how do you do it? Here's how you can actually execute this budget reallocation without looking like you're panic-pivoting:
1. Start with the brand, not the leads
I know this feels counterintuitive, but trust the data. The top performers are allocating 31.3% of their LinkedIn spend to brand awareness and engagement. This is because 81% of buyers have a preferred vendor before formal evaluation even begins.
You can't capture demand you didn't create awareness for. Build mental availability with the 95% of your market that's out of market right now, and you'll be on the shortlist when they're ready to buy.
2. Diversify your creative formats
Here's what the smart marketers are doing:
- Video ads: Up from 11.9% to 16.6% of spend (+4.7pp). LinkedIn's platform data shows video gets five times the engagement compared to static posts.
- Document ads: Up from 6.4% to 10.7% of spend (+4.3pp). These enable native content consumption without requiring landing page visits.
- Connected TV: Exploded from 0.5% to 6.3% of spend, a massive 12.6X increase.
Stop putting all your eggs in the single-image ad basket. Diversification is the key.
3. Embrace automated bidding (yes, really)
Automated bidding adoption jumped from 27.6% to 37.5% among bottom-of-funnel campaigns. This signals something important: LinkedIn's algorithms have gotten smart enough that you can trust them.
But here's the critical part: automated bidding only works if you're feeding it quality conversion signals. LinkedIn's Conversions API (CAPI) customers see a 20% reduction in cost per acquisition and a 31% increase in attributed conversions. Set this up before you scale your spend.
4. Think beyond the LinkedIn feed
The best marketers are expanding their LinkedIn presence across multiple touchpoints:
- Offsite delivery: Up from 12.9% to 16.7% of spend
- Connected TV partnerships with Paramount, Roku, and NBCUniversal
- Thought Leader Ads to amplify executive content.
Your buyers aren't just on LinkedIn during work hours. They're at home streaming TV, reading articles, and consuming content across the web. Meet them there with consistent messaging.
5. Measure what actually matters
Stop obsessing over click-through rates and start tracking:
- Cost per ICP account engaged
- Multi-touch attribution across your entire funnel
- Pipeline contribution by channel
- Revenue attribution (not just lead attribution)
In-platform metrics like CTR and CPC don't tell the full story. Funnel benchmarks provide a clearer picture of how LinkedIn ads drive pipeline creation and revenue generation.
The bottom line: Adapt or get left behind
Here's what it comes down to: 56.4% of B2B marketers plan to increase their LinkedIn budgets by more than 10% in 2026. It’s the great migration.
The buyers have changed how they research and purchase. Traditional channels are under pressure. And LinkedIn has evolved from "that place where recruiters and Bitcoin bros spam you" to a sophisticated B2B marketing machine that delivers measurable ROI.
The companies winning in B2B today aren't the ones with the best funnel optimization or the trickiest growth hacks. They're the ones who recognized that the buyer's journey is no longer linear, that brand awareness drives vendor shortlisting, and that being present where decision-makers actually spend their time is worth more than clever conversion rate optimization.
So the question isn't whether you should shift your budget to LinkedIn. The question is: are you going to lead this shift, or are you going to lag while your competitors capture the market?
If you're still allocating less than 30% of your digital budget to LinkedIn while your competitors are at 40%+, you've got work to do. Factors.ai can help.
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