LinkedIn

9 Steps To Building a LinkedIn Content Strategy That Brings $$$

Mihaela Cicvaric
LAST UPDATED
May 21, 2024
READING TIME
7 min.

Ready to start building or upgrading your brand? Then it’s time to put together a killer LinkedIn content strategy for your business.

We reached our first million in revenue thanks to LinkedIn, a major part of our top-of-the-funnel channel.

And now, we’re going to share the exact steps we followed, so that you can get the same results.

Here are the 9 steps that you should take to start building your LinkedIn content strategy.

1. Set clear goals for your LinkedIn content strategy

First, decide what your main goal is with your LinkedIn strategy, as well as how you will measure it.

In other words, what do you want to achieve, and how will you know that you've achieved it?

For example, you may want to:

✔️ hire exceptional talent for your team

✔️ connect with sales prospects

✔️ build your brand awareness

✔️ increase your website traffic

Depending on which of these goals you choose, you’ll make different posts, connect with different accounts, and track different KPIs.

Basically, if you don’t set goals before creating your LinkedIn content strategy, you’ll be posting in the dark. You’ll have no way to know if there’s a return on your investment, or how to tweak your strategy to better meet your needs.

So choose one or two of these goals that most align with your business objectives, then pinpoint metrics that will help you track them.

For example, if a clear objective of yours is to hire exceptional talent, you could track:

→ organic reach of LinkedIn job listings

→ number of applicants per opening

→ offer acceptance rate

→ source of hire

Linkedin company pages come with a range of analytics that you can track automatically.

Once you’re sure of what you want to accomplish and how to measure it, you’re ready to start on your greater LinkedIn content strategy.

2. Find & define your LinkedIn target audience

There are more than [950 million people on LinkedIn]. You’re not going to reach all of them.

That’s why it is so important to define your target audience, as well as the individual personas that will be interacting with your posts.

If you haven’t already defined your B2B target audience, follow this step-by-step guide to creating your ICPs and buyer personas. Or better yet, learn how to define your target audience even faster using AI.

If you’ve already researched your target audience, the next step is to find out who they are on LinkedIn.

One way to do this is to look at the profiles of your current customers, read their descriptions, and check their previous professional experience.

But also check their activity 👇

A screenshot of a LinkedIn page showing a user's recent activity

This will help you understand their tone, if they use a lot of emojis or figures of speech, if they post serious updates or memes and jokes, etc.

You'll also be able to get a better understanding of how they interact with people, what kind of content they engage with, and who they respond to in the comments.

All of this is information you can use to tailor your content to be the kind that they start following and reacting to.

For more information on using the LinkedIn platform to find your target audience, use our guide on LinkedIn search.

3. Find your content topic niche

Decide what areas of content you would like to post about. It needs to hit two main criteria:

→ content that you or your brand has unique expertise in

→ content that your target audience likes to read

An infographic with the title "the holy grail of LinkedIn content." It's a venn diagram with the left circle "what your audience likes to read" and the right circle "what you like writing about." Where these two circles overlap is the holy grail

For the first criterion, think of topics unique to your brand identity and the problems that your business solves. These are areas where you are the expert.

For example, if you work in the sales industry, you could post about:

→ best cold outreach practices

→ sales success stories

→ multichannel case studies

The second criterion is where the time you spend defining your target audience comes into play. Consider the types of content that your buyer personas interact with, comment on, and share.

For example, if you’re targeting freelancers and solopreneurs, they may like:

→  storytelling posts that end with a clear takeaway

→ carousels, infographics, and other resources they can use to grow their business

→ productivity tips

Pinpoint where these two types of content overlap (i.e. your expertise and your target audience’s interests), and make this your primary topic area.

4.  Build your LinkedIn profile or company page

If you haven’t yet, your next step will be to create your official LinkedIn profile.

Here are some of the most important components to focus on:

Profile photo/page logo

If you already have an official logo for your brand, you should add it at this point.

If you’re creating a personal brand account, choose a professional photo that showcases your personality.

Give it a bright or colorful background to ensure that it stands out on the page. And don’t change it often, so that people can immediately associate it with you.

Cover image

When picking your LinkedIn cover image, design it to catch the eye and blend well with your company logo.

That’s important because, on the public view of your page, your logo takes up a small portion of the cover image. For example, here’s what it looks like on our page:

From the cover image and profile photo alone, visitors should get a clear idea of who you are and what you can offer them.

Finally, make sure it matches LinkedIn’s official image specifications: 1584 x 396 pixels for a personal profile and 1128 x 191 pixels for a company profile.

For inspiration, try these LinkedIn cover image templates.

Company tagline / header

This part of the profile is a mini sales pitch to your visitors. It should communicate:

→ this is who I am/we are

→ this is what I/we do

→ this is what you’ll get from this LinkedIn page

For example, here’s our tagline:

The lemlist company page tagline. It says "It can't be that you're doing cold outreach and haven't heard of us"

You can see we went for a tagline that communicates:

→ what we do (cold outreach)

→ a brand identity (cheeky, playful, informative)

→ FOMO (you’re ‘missing out’ if you haven’t heard of us)

Pick a tagline that fits best with your brand identity and what you want to accomplish with your LinkedIn.

Company bio

Your “About” section should include more in-depth information about what you offer to your followers.

Include keywords and phrases that people might search to find brands like yours, as LinkedIn pages can be indexed by Google and appear in search results.

If you need a little inspiration, here’s ours:

5. Set up your LinkedIn publication calendar

The key to success on LinkedIn is consistency.

It’s a bit like working out. If you only put effort into it every other month, you won’t get much in return. But if you put in the work every day, or even just a few times a week, you’ll see results.

To help keep you or your social media team consistent, make a plan in advance of what you will post, and when.

The ideal frequency of LinkedIn posts

If you can, work up to one post per weekday to get the most reach and engagement.

But when you’re just getting started, keep it to 1 new post per week as you build your business’s network. Then increase the frequency as you get more engagement and a larger audience.

Remember, you are building a brand, and this requires persistence.

For example, Briana was building her personal brand as a Creative Marketing Manager. She started posting once every few months, with an organic reach of only 370 views:

A screenshot of a LinkedIn post with 12 reactions and an organic reach of 370 views

And in 2 months of posting multiple times a week, she built an organic reach of thousands per post:

A screenshot of a more recent LinkedIn post with 59 reactions and an organic reach of 6,249 views.

The ideal timing for LinkedIn posts

The perfect time to post on LinkedIn depends on a few factors, like your target audience’s preferences and behavior patterns.

But as a general rule of thumb, the best time slots are before work, after work, or somewhere around 2 p.m. Test each of these and see which works for your target audience.

If you're posting for an international audience, vary the times of your posts so that different time zones are included.

6. Start writing LinkedIn posts for your business

Everything’s now ready for you to start posting on LinkedIn.

When you create your first posts, keep these best practices in mind:

Hook the reader with your intro

LinkedIn displays the first couple of lines of your post and leaves the rest in "see more." So your goal with your hook is to make it catchy enough to attract your audience.

Just like you want a subject line that corresponds to the body of your emails, you want your intro to be in line with the rest of your post.

Think of the goal of your post: what value are you bringing to people, or what story do you want to tell?

Show that off in the intro. For example:

A screenshot of a LinkedIn post by Guillaume Moubeche, with the text "Here's why Google Sheets will replace Excel". The rest is behind the "see more" button.

Here, Guillaume shares right off the bat what his post is about: Google Sheets replacing Excel. But you have to click “see more” to understand exactly why.

Another tip is to make the intro like a preview. So keep the main idea of your post, but don't give away all the information.

A screenshot of a LinkedIn post by Tal Baker-Philips. The above-the-fold text says "Shift this one word to 3x your reply rates: Stop saying "more"". The rest is behind the "see more" button

With this intro, Tal previews what you should STOP doing, but to find out what you should do, you’ll have to keep reading.

Use short phrases

You might have already noticed this, but the LinkedIn platform favors posts with short phrases.

Posts like this are also appealing to readers. A post with one-line sentences or short phrases is easier to read, even if it's the same amount of content.

To formulate this, make every idea a new phrase. You should also simplify your phrases to increase readability.

Check out this LinkedIn post:

A linkedin post by Dickie Bush. Every sentence has a line break in between it, and very few sentences are longer than 1 line. It says "Being prolific is not about coming up with 1000 new ideas.  It's about finding your 1-3 *core* ideas—then finding 1000 different ways to say them.  And the easiest way to do this is with the 4A framework:  • Actionable • Analytical • Aspirational • Anthropological  Examples:  The only way you can write *every day* is if you are always in a state of "idea surplus."  You should always have *too many* things to write.  And that's why we spend so much time on idea generation in Ship 30.  5 days left to hop aboard for July!  https://lnkd.in/d-_TgC64  And here's a handful of our 10,000+ successful students calling the course  • "Lifechanging" • "An insane amount of value" • "The best investment I made in myself this year."

He uses simple words and phrases that seem powerful, so you’re able to skim through the post easily. And at the end, you arrive at a call-to-action that is building his brand and his business.

If you need help thinking of things to post about, you can use a tool like Taplio to get AI-generated LinkedIn post inspiration.

Increase your reach by tagging relevant people & pages

Once your post is ready, there are a few more things you can do that will encourage engagement.

The first of these is tagging all relevant parties. The more people you tag, the more visibility your posts will get, and of course, the more likely these people will be to comment on your post.

See how Guillaume managed this in an earlier post that drove hype to lemlist:

An older linkedin post by G, CEO of lemlist. It says "When your competitor SalesLoft who have raised $250,000,000) is buying your name on Google Ads - you know that you are doing the right thing. What would you do if you were me? P.S. If someone from Salesloft sees this, I just wanted to apologize for the customers who've churned from your platform to join lemlist." The companies SalesLoft and Google Ads are tagged.

lemlist was a younger company at this time, and getting attention from big names helped boost our awareness.

If someone said something that inspired you to write the post, tag them. If you are writing a post about your experience with a company, tag them.

Especially for small or emerging companies, this can be a great way to get a boost from established brands and their followers.

Add images and videos to your LinkedIn posts

The LinkedIn algorithm favors adding pictures and videos to your posts. So one of the best ways to get more engagement is to use them!

In general, posts with images, videos, and other media get better results, because they are eye-catching to your followers.

See how Lucas did this by sharing useful information in the LinkedIn carousel format:

A LinkedIn post by Lucas Perret, with text and a carousel. The text says "Data scraping can boost your lead-generation results  Because it allows you to get: - Fresh prospecting data - Data from sites without export options - Real-time intent on your target  Leverage it for laser-focused outreach campaigns.  Discover my favorite tools to scrape data in this carousel ↓"

On LinkedIn, you can share:

→ plain text posts

→ photos

→ videos (native performs better than links)

→ documents (PDFs, carousels, etc.)

→ articles

→ LinkedIn polls

Use a variety of these formats to test which types of visuals, text, videos, or other great content on LinkedIn resonate with your target audience.

Include hashtags

Thankfully we are well past the days of filling social media posts with endless hashtags that nobody understands.

Still, adding a few hashtags to posts is still a relevant practice, especially for businesses.

This is because hashtags allow you to essentially label a post under a certain category, which can help boost its ability to pop up on the top of searches.

Add 1-3 targeted hashtags to appear on the feeds of people who are following the topics that are relevant to your brand.

7. Interact with other LinkedIn accounts

Take a few minutes a day to comment on and engage with relevant posts on your business’s LinkedIn feed.

Here’s how:

Step 1 - Search for things that matter to your content niche

For example, your content niche is B2B sales. Follow all the people and brands who are leaders in this space, and connect with other accounts who share this topic - your competitors included.

See what they're up to.

Step 2 - Check out their posts & read their articles

Get a feel for what your network posts about, and what you or your brand can add to the conversation.

Step 3 - Leave thoughtful comments

Leave real comments on the content that people and businesses in your network are posting. Aim to add value and insights where you can.

For industry leaders and popular accounts, try to leave your comments as soon as you can on their posts. You can sort your feed by most recent posts to ensure you’re the first to the table.

This gives you the best chance of grabbing the attention of the post’s author and their audience.

The more you interact with other accounts in your topic areas, the more likely they are to interact with you and boost your engagement in return.

8. Promote your LinkedIn content

Simply posting new content and interacting with other accounts isn't enough.

To get your LinkedIn content seen by as many people as possible, you’ll need to promote it.

Here are a few LinkedIn promotion techniques to get you started:

Leverage your team

Engagement from your colleagues and team members is a key factor in increasing the reach of your brand’s LinkedIn posts.

That’s because, in LinkedIn’s algorithm, your post is shown to your team members’ network after they like and comment on it.

So for every person in your network who gives your many posts a like, you’re multiplying your reach by their follower count.

At lemlist we frequently share our social media posts with each other to encourage engagement. It’s an automatic distribution system built into our company culture, and it works!

Every LinkedIn profile within your team is an opportunity for brand awareness and business growth.

Leverage your network

You can reach out to people outside of your company to promote your content as well.

Never be afraid to use the power of your network. After all, they connect with you because they are interested in what you are doing.

You can simply connect with people who might be interested and ask them to check out your content or share it with others in their network.

And if you’ve ever responded to someone in your LinkedIn DMs asking you to promote their work, now is the time to ask them to return the favor!

Leverage LinkedIn groups

LinkedIn groups are a perfect opportunity to connect with people in your target audience or your ICP.

Why? Because you can easily find an entire group of people that you know will be interested in connecting with you based on specific attributes.

Once you do that, you can share relevant content that the group would appreciate.

For example, in a cold calling training group, we might share one of lemlist's cold calling webinars, or share a post we made with some cold calling tips.

This boosts your reach and also provides value to your target audience.

Leverage other social media channels

As long as your profile is public, you can share your LinkedIn posts on other social media sites.

Sharing your LinkedIn posts across other channels introduces a new audience to your content. They get a link to your LinkedIn profile, which can help build your network and follower count.

Simply copy the URL of the post and share it with individuals or groups in your target audience.

Send direct messages to people in your target audience

To make the most personal connections with your target audience, send them messages directly.

One option is to do this manually, by choosing profiles one by one and typing out personalized messages. It will get the job done, but you’ll spend hours targeting the right people and personalizing each message.

Instead, we recommend combining LinkedIn searches with lemlist's automated messages to personalize at scale with your target audience. You can even get an AI-generated sequence that’s ready to connect with hundreds of LinkedIn prospects in seconds.

You can try it for free.

This works best when you have content that is targeted towards a certain group.

For example, at lemlist we’ve worked on more content for multichannel sequence users. When it was ready, our sales team used lemlist campaigns to share the content with people in our target audience.

Send LinkedIn voice messages with lemlist

Written messages, like emails and chat messages, are fine, but what if you could also send your leads audio messages?

Well, you can send LinkedIn voice notes straight from within lemlist.

These voice messages integrate perfectly into any multichannel lemlist campaign.

When you use more channels and mediums in your outreach, your engagement will skyrocket!

Make sponsored posts

If you really want to invest in the reach of your post, you can do a LinkedIn-sponsored post. It’s essentially just an ad.

It costs money and doesn’t always guarantee a high ROI, so if you are a small company, we only recommend using it as a last resort.

Now, that isn't to say sponsoring a post is a bad thing. In fact, it can really boost your reach.

But if you can get similar benefits for free, you should try that first.

9. Edit your LinkedIn content strategy according to your results

The strategy you implement when you first start posting on LinkedIn will evolve with time as you find out what works and what doesn’t.

In fact, a strategy that changes periodically is proof that you’re evolving as a brand and learning from your actions.

Go back to the metrics you defined in step 1 of this process and keep track of how they grow, and what actions drove the change.

This way, you can pinpoint the content types, messages, and topic areas that most contribute to your goals.

Here’s an extra process we recommend to measure the impact of your LinkedIn activity on your website traffic and conversions:

→ Open this tool and UTM the website link you’re sharing in a DM, post, or comment.

→ If you’re not sure how UTMs work, refer to this post from Google.

→ Go to Google Analytics → Acquisition → Campaigns to analyze traffic from LinkedIn.

→ Set events and goals in Google Analytics to measure metrics beyond traffic (e.g. conversions, free trials, form submissions, etc.).

The key takeaways

Here are the key steps you should take for a killer LinkedIn content strategy:

→ Set clear goals and metrics to measure success.

→ Define your target audience and tailor your content to their interests.

→ Choose a niche that aligns with your expertise and your audience's interests.

→ Optimize your LinkedIn profile or company page with a professional photo/logo, compelling tagline, and informative bio.

→ Establish a consistent posting schedule and vary your content formats.

→ Engage with other LinkedIn accounts by commenting and interacting with their posts.

→ Promote your content through your team, network, LinkedIn groups, and other social media channels.

→ Evaluate your results and adjust your strategy based on metrics and feedback.

→ Track website traffic and conversions using UTM parameters in Google Analytics.

Remember, consistency, engagement, and value-driven content are key to a successful LinkedIn content strategy.

For a complete course on using LinkedIn to build your personal brand and boost your revenue, follow the lemlist Personal Branding School. It’s completely free and comes with a value-packed Notion template and resources to guide you through every step.

Mihaela Cicvaric
Content Marketing Manager @ lempire | Sharing everything you need to get replies to your cold emails
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Price
Best for
Standout feature
Con
4.9
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$30/mo
$75/mo
$2,999/mo
Large, distributed sales teams
AI evaluation precision, gamified KPIs
Lack of tracking system
4.6
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Not publicly available
Sales operations and finance teams
Powerful configurability
Limited training resources and complex to navigate
4.4
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star
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Not publicly available
Mid-market and enterprise businesses
Comprehensive incentive management
Potentially high cost and steep learning curve
4.7
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star
star
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$15/user/mo
$40/user/mo
Enterprise: custom price
Complex sales structures and businesses of all sizes
Complex sales structures and businesses of all sizes
Steep learning curve
4.6
star
star
star
star
star-half
Not publicly available
Collaborative teams
Connected planning
Complexity and steep learning curve
4.6
star
star
star
star
star-half
Not publicly available
Companies with complex sales structures
Complex incentive compensation management (ICM) with high efficiency and accuracy
Complexity for smaller teams and potentially high costs
4.7
star
star
star
star
star-half
Not publicly available
Companies who want to automate commission calculations and payouts
Simplicity and ease of use
Lack of features like redirection
4.7
star
star
star
star
star-half
$30/user/mo
$35/user/mo
Custom: upon request
Businesses that need a comprehensive and user-friendly sales compensation management software
Ease of use and adoption
Lack of ability to configure the product based on user needs
4.8
star
star
star
star
star-half
Not publicly available
Companies with modern sales culture and businesses who want real-time insights
A built-in dispute management and real-time visibility
Users say it works slowly, customer support is slow
4.9
star
star
star
star
star
$30/user/mo
$50/user/mo
Smaller sales teams
Powerful automation
Lesser user base and average user interface
4.7
star
star
star
star
star-half
Not publicly available
Companies with scalable needs
Automated Commission Calculations
Lack of filtering by date, no mobile app
ERP vs. CRM
ERP
CRM
Summary
Backbone of a business's internal operations.
Backbone of customer-centric interactions and operations.
Goal
To centralize and streamline core business processes in a company.
To increase customer experience, satisfaction and loyalty, and boost sales.
Focus
Internal operations and processes across departments (finance, accounting, inventory, supply chain, HR, and sales).
All interactions with leads and customers.
Manages
Internal business data like financial data, inventory levels, production details, supply chain, HR info.
All customer data like contact info, purchase history, communication history, customer preferences and more.
Users
Finance, accounting, operations, supply chain, and HR departments.
Customer-facing teams like sales, marketing, and customer service.
Benefits
Streamlines operations, improves data accuracy, enhances decision-making, boosts collaboration, increases productivity.
Improves customer relationships, increases sales, strengthens customer service, personalizes marketing campaigns, provides insights.
Price
$150 per user per year on average.
$10 to $30 per user per month on average.
PRM Tool
Rating
Feature
Pro
Con
Mobile App
Integrations
Free Plan
Pricing
4.65
star
star
star
star
star-half
Org-wide alignment
User-friendly layout and database
Suboptimal as a personal CRM
square-check
Lack of tracking system
square-check
Team: $20/month
Business: $45/month
4.7
star
star
star
star
star-half
Social Media Integration
Easy contact data collection
No marketing/sales features
square-check
Lack of tracking system
square-xmark
7-day trial
$12/month
4.75
star
star
star
star
star-half
Block Functions
High customization capability
Not a dedicated CRM
square-check
Limited
square-check
Plus: €7.50/month
Business: €14/month
N/A
Open-source
Open-source flexibility
Requires extensive manual input
square-xmark
Limited
square-check
Self-hosted
$9/month or
$90/year
3.1
star
star
star
Simple iOS app
Ideal for non-tech-savvy users
iPhone only
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iOS only
Limited
square-xmark
1-month trial
$1.49/month or
$14.99/month
3.6
star
star
star
star-half
Smart Contact Management
Feature-rich and flexible
Reported bugs
square-check
Rich
square-xmark
7-day trial
Premium: $13.99/month
Teams: $17.99/month
4.4
star
star
star
star
star-half
Customizable Interface
Customizable for teamwork
Pricey for personal use
square-check
Rich
square-xmark
Standard: $24/member
Premium: $39/member
4.7
star
star
star
star
star-half
Integrated Calling
Integrated Calling
Too sales-oriented & pricey
square-check
Rich
square-xmark
14-day trial
Startup: $59/user/month
Professional: $329/user/month
4.8
star
star
star
star
star
Business Card Scanning
Business Card Scanning
Mobile only
square-check
Limited
square-check
$9.99/month
4.45
star
star
star
star
star-half
160+ app integrations
Comprehensive integrations
No free app version
square-check
Rich
square-xmark
14-day trial
$29.90/month or
$24.90/month (billed annually)
Capterra Rating
Free Trial
Free Plan
Starting Price (excluding the free plan)
Maximum Price (for the most expensive plan)
Best for
4.5
star
star
star
star
star-half
square-check
14-day
square-check
€15/month/seat billed annually
€792/month/3 seats billed annually + €45/month for each extra seat
Versatility and free plan
4.2
star
star
star
star
square-check
30-day
square-xmark
But it offers reduced price to authorised nonprofit organisations
€25/user/month
€500/user/month billed annually (includes Einstein AI)
Best overall operational CRM
4.3
star
star
star
star
star-half
square-xmark
square-check
Limited to 3 users
Comprehensive incentive management
€52/user/month billed annually
Small-medium businesses and automation
4.5
star
star
star
star
star-half
square-check
14-day
square-xmark
€14/seat/month billed annually
€99/seat/month billed annually
Sales teams and ease of use
4.1
star
star
star
star
square-xmark
square-check
Limited 10 users
$9.99/user/month billed annually
$64.99/user/month billed annually
Free plan for very small teams up to 10
CRM goal
Increase the sales conversion rate for qualified leads from marketing automation campaigns by 10% in the next 6 months.
SMART Breakdown
1. Specific: It targets a specific area (conversion rate) for a defined segment (qualified leads from marketing automation).
2. Measurable: The desired increase (10%) is a clear metric, and the timeframe (6 months) allows for progress tracking.
3. Achievable: A 10% increase is possible based on historical data and potential improvements.
4. Relevant: Boosting sales from marketing efforts aligns with overall business objectives.
5. Time-bound: The 6-month timeframe creates urgency and a clear target date.
Actions
Step 1: Refine lead qualification criteria to ensure high-quality leads are nurtured through marketing automation.
Step 2: Personalize marketing automation campaigns based on lead demographics, interests, and behavior.
Step 3: Develop targeted landing pages with clear calls to action for qualified leads.
Step 4: Implement lead scoring to prioritize high-potential leads for sales follow-up.
Step 5: Track and analyze campaign performance to identify areas for optimization.
Outcomes
Increased sales and revenue
Improved marketing automation ROI
Marketing and sales alignment
Data-driven marketing optimization
Table
CDP Software
CRM Software
Approach
Data-centric
Customer-centric
Focus
Interactions across various channels and touchpoints, both online and offline.
Sales, marketing, and customer service interactions.
Functionality
Automatically collects, organizes, tags, and makes data available in real-time.
Helps businesses track customer interactions, sales pipelines, prospects, and service requests.
Goals
Personalized customer experiences across all channels.
Better customer relationships, streamlined processes, and improved profitability.
Benefits
Data integration, management, and accessibility, allowing for detailed analysis and segmentation.
Better communication within teams and with customers by organizing information about customer interactions and history.
Data Handling
Handles both identified and anonymous data, stitches together various data points.
Deals primarily with identified customer data.
Use Cases
Personalized marketing campaigns, targeted advertising, content customization across multiple channels.
Managing campaigns and leads, enhancing customer service, providing better customer support, increasing customer satisfaction and loyalty.
Examples
Insider, Bloomreach, Salesforce Marketing Cloud CDP
HubSpot, Salesforce Sales Cloud Lightning Professional, and Zoho CRM
CRM
Free plan
Best feature
Best for
Con
1. HubSpot CRM
square-check
Sales automation
Sales teams
Up to 1,000 contacts
2. Insightly
square-check
Custom fields
Basic needs
Not enough info about the free plan
3. Agile CRM
square-check
Deal and sales pipeline tracking
Small teams
Up to 10 users
4. Zoho CRM
square-check
Lead and contact management
Businesses of all sizes
Limited to 3 users
5. ClickUp
square-check
Unlimited tasks and unlimited members
Personal use
Up to 100MB storage
6. EngageBay
square-check
Live chat
Small and midsize enterprises
Up to 1,000 branded emails per month
7. Bitrix24
square-check
Unlimited users and 5 scrum teams
Big teams
Up to 5GB of cloud storage
8. FreshSales
square-check
Easy to use and simple setup
Beginners
Up to 3 users
9. Mailchimp
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Very beginner friendly
Marketing teams
Send up to 500 branded emails per month
Type of Affiliate Marketing
Unattached
Related
Involved
Format
Paid advertising
Social media or YouTube channels
Dedicated website or blog
Focus
Quick income
Your niche
Your audience
Engagement with your audience
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Very close connection with your audience
Pro
Little effort
Higher credibility thanks to your niche
Long-lasting and scalable
Con
Paid ads cost a lot
Potential for bias since you don’t use the thing you promote
Require time, effort, and dedication

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