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You are here: Home / Blog / LinkedIn Insight Tag the Ultimate Guide for Marketers

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LinkedIn Insight Tag the Ultimate Guide for Marketers

October 5, 2020 2 Comments Brad Smith

While LinkedIn is often an overlooked platform for advertising, it offers some of the best targeting options in the industry.

You can create an audience based on someone’s employer, job title, company size, and more. It’s perfect for account-based marketing or reaching luxury audiences with a high annual income.

But before you jump in and start taking advantage of the platform, there’s something you need to do first.

You need to install the LinkedIn Insight Tag. Just like the Facebook Pixel, or Google Ads Conversion Tag, it tracks your ad performance.

It helps you eliminate wasted budget and focus only on the campaigns and ads that work.

In this article, we’ll cover everything you need to know about the LinkedIn Insight Tag, from what it is to how to install it on your site and use it to create remarketing campaigns.

What Is the LinkedIn Insight Tag (Pixel)?

The LinkedIn Insight Tag or pixel is a marketing tag that helps you measure the success of your LinkedIn Ads campaigns.

Essentially, it’s a piece of code that you insert on your website that helps LinkedIn confirm what happens after they send a visitor your way.

For example, it’ll register if someone visits your website through a LinkedIn campaign and ends up making a purchase.

It’s like your very own digital tracking dart.

Why You Need the LinkedIn Pixel

Ever since the dawn of advertising, the foundation of creating a successful campaign has been measurement.

And with good reason. Without measuring your campaigns, you have no way of knowing what you’re doing right or wrong.

You wouldn’t wander into the wilderness without a map or compass.

gif with John Travolta being lost  (Gif Source)

It’s the same with marketing. You shouldn’t start a campaign without a pixel in place because you’ll waste money, throwing bad money after bad money into the abyss of digital advertising.

When you can reach 690 million different people, you want to make sure you’re marketing to the right ones, in the right way.

With the LinkedIn pixel installed, you can:

  • Measure the performance of your campaigns to see which ones are driving the best results.
  • Track the CPA (the cost per lead or conversion) to see you’re getting a positive ROI (return on investment).
  • Create retargeting audiences.

And much more.

Let’s start with how to install it.

How to Create and Install a LinkedIn Insight Tag on Your Website

Before you can install your pixel, you first need to create it. Log in to the LinkedIn campaign manager with your LinkedIn account.

After that, select your account and click the “website demographics” link in the top menu. Then, click the “set up your Insight Tag” button.

Screenshot of LinkedIn campaign manager - set up Insight Tag button

From this point forward, there are many different ways you can install the pixel on your website. In this section, we’ll cover the following three methods:

  • How to install the pixel with Google Tag Manager
  • How to install it in WordPress
  • How to install it manually

Add it Via Google Tag Manager

If you’re already using it, the best option is to set up the pixel via Google Tag Manager.

It makes it easy to manage all your pixels and tags.

The first thing you need to do is expand the “I will use a tag manager” section. Then, copy your “partner ID” and move on to the next step.

Screenshot of LinkedIn campaign manager - Install Insight Tag with tag manager

Next, log into your Google Tag Manager account, and choose the right container (website). Then, move to the tag section, and click the “new” button to create a new tag.

Screenshot of Google Tag Manager

After that, make sure you select the “LinkedIn Insights” as the tag type.

Screenshot of Google Tag Manager - creating LinkedIn Insights tag

Paste your LinkedIn partner ID.

Screenshot of Google Tag Manager - LinkedIn tag settings

Next, set the trigger to the general “all pages” page view trigger. It’ll make sure your pixel is installed sitewide for every visitor.

Finally, you should be able to see that you’ve successfully added your new tag to all pages.

Screenshot of Google Tag Manager - LinkedIn tag trigge

That’s it, you’re all set up.

Note: Only use one method. If you used GTM, you can skip to the confirmation part of this section.

Add it to Your WordPress Site

Adding a LinkedIn tracking tag to your WordPress site starts with the same step. Expand the tag manager section, and copy your partner ID.

Screenshot of LinkedIn campaign manager - Install Insight Tag with tag manager

Next, log in to your WordPress dashboard, and search for “LinkedIn Insight Tag” related plugins.

Screenshot of WordPress - search for LinkedIn tag plugin

Install the plugin from Pagup and activate it.

Screenshot of WordPress - install Pagup LinkedIn tag plugin

After activating it, flip the “Enable LinkedIn Insight Tag” button, copy and paste your ID, and save your settings.

Screenshot of WordPress - LinkedIn tag plugin settings

You have now successfully added the tracking pixel to your WordPress site.

Add it Manually

If your website is pure HTML and CSS, you have to add the full pixel code manually. Expand the “install the tag myself” section, and copy the code by clicking it.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - manual installation

Next, open up your universal page footer file in your code editor of choice. Copy and paste the code above the closing body tag.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag in code editor

Save the file and upload it to your server. Or, if you use it, push it live via Git.

Confirm That You Installed the Pixel Successfully

Once you’re done with the installation, you need to confirm that you did it correctly. If you did something wrong, it won’t work.

The easiest way to do this is to inspect the page source of any page on your live site.

To view the page source, right-click and select the “View Page Source” option, or press Ctrl (⌘) + U on your keyboard.

Screenshot of view page source link

After that, press Ctrl (⌘) + F and search for “LinkedIn Insight” to quickly find the tag code.

Screenshot of page source with the LinkedIn tag

Confirm that all the necessary code is in place (including your correct partner ID).

When you’ve confirmed that everything’s good to go, click the Next button in LinkedIn, and you should see your domain sending signals.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag domains

That’s confirmation that you’ve done everything correctly.

After 24 hours (and at least 300 visitors), your “website demographics” page will start looking like this:

Screenshot of LinkedIn website demographics

You can break down your visitors by job title, employers, and more. It’s the perfect audience tool for account-based marketing.

How to Add Conversion Tracking to Your LinkedIn Insight Tag

It’s not enough to set up the LinkedIn pixel to track general visits to your website. You also need to set up a conversion action.

Conversion tracking is how you know who makes a purchase or becomes a lead after visiting your site.

Move from the “tagged domains” tab to the “conversions” tab by clicking on the link in the top menu. Then, click the “create a conversion” button.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - create a conversion button

Give your conversion a name and expand the first section. From there, select the category, estimate a value, and confirm the conversion attribution settings.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - new conversion settings

Next, expand the second section, and define how to track the conversion. If you have a dedicated thank-you page, that’s the easiest way to do it.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - new conversion settings

If not, you need to track conversions based on events.

How to Track Event-Based Conversions

If you need to track actions like form submissions or button clicks, that’s easier to do with Google Tag Manager.

Choose the event-specific pixel, and copy it by clicking the code block.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - event-specific conversion

Go to Google Tag Manager and create a new custom image tag.

Screenshot of Google Tag Manager - create custom image tag

Then, set the name to “LinkedIn purchase” or something similar, and paste in the URL. Delete all the surrounding tags and code, leave only the URL.

Screenshot of GTM - new LinkedIn purchase conversion

Finally, select the purchase or sale trigger you use for other conversion events. (For example, a form submission on your checkout pages.)

Save the tag, and push your GTM changes live.

Setting up conversion tracking correctly is key to your success. It’ll help you find out which campaigns are reaching your target audience.

And when 4 out of 5 LinkedIn users “drive business decisions,” imagine the impact of reaching the right group of those users.

How to Use the LinkedIn Pixel to Create Your First Remarketing Campaign

The next step is to use the LinkedIn Insight Tag you installed to create your first remarketing campaign.

Before you can create your first LinkedIn ad for remarketing purposes, you need to set up retargeting audiences.

Open the “account assets” drop-down menu, and click the “matched audiences” link.

creenshot of LinkedIn - account assets

Next, hover over the “create audience” button and click the “website” link under retargeting sources.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - matched audiences

The first audience you should create is a basic audience of all your website visitors. Name it “all visitors” and set the targeting option to “contains” and your site’s domain.

Screenshot of LinkedIn - new website audience for all visitors

Of course, the more specific a retargeting audience is, the more effective they are. You can show relevant ads and offers based on which pages they visited.

For example, if you have a specific offer or service you want to promote, you can create an audience just for that.

Create a new audience, set the name to visited “product page” and include the product name in the “contains” field. Make sure to enter it how it appears in the product page URL and not the title.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - new audience for product page

Keep in mind that you need at least 300 members of a retargeting audience before LinkedIn lets you target it.

Create Your Remarketing Campaign

Go back to the main campaign manager page, and create a new campaign group. Set the name and start date and save it.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - new campaign group

Click your new campaign group, and create a new campaign.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - new campaign

From here, set your campaign objective to the “website conversions” option. Of course, you could choose another option, like engagement, if that is your main objective.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - new campaign objective

Next, you’ll want to narrow down your audience. If not, you’ll be showing your ads to the whole country at random.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - new campaign audience

Choose the “retargeting” audience.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - retargeting audience

Next, click the “website” link.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - website audience

And finally, select one of the retargeting lists you created.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - all visitors audience selected

After you’ve done this, follow the regular steps of creating a LinkedIn campaign.

  • Choose the ad format.
  • Edit the placement settings.
  • Set the budget.
  • Make sure the landing page is ideal for the audience.

When those steps are complete, you can save your very first remarketing campaign on LinkedIn.

It wasn’t too complicated, right?

How to Grant Other Users LinkedIn Insight Tag Permission

Do you work with an agency or collaborate with another department? You probably need to share your LinkedIn pixel access with them.

For example, your sales team can benefit greatly from seeing the website demographics. Knowing that employees from specific companies are visiting your sites can be a useful sales tip.

Thankfully, sharing permission isn’t difficult at all.

Hover over “account assets” in the top menu and click the “Insight Tag” link.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - all visitors audience selected

Next, hover over the “Manage Insight Tag” button and choose the “manage sharing” link.

Screenshot of LinkedIn Ads - manage insight tag sharing

You have two options here. You can either give accounts full access or use-only access. If you only want them to be able to see the data, give them use-only access.

If you want them to be able to create their own conversion goals, and more, give them full access.

Screenshot of LinkedIn tag - sharing settings

Click the empty field and search for the person you want to share with. Click an account to give it access, and save your settings.

Conclusion

LinkedIn offers next-level targeting options, but the CPM can be a little higher than Facebook Ads or other social media.

That’s all the more reason to get your tracking and measurement right from day one.

Set up your tracking pixel before you start your first campaign, to ensure you get the maximum return on investment from your very first ad dollar.

Have you had any success with LinkedIn Ads? Do you use LinkedIn Insights for your sales team? Let us know in the comments.

You may also like reading:

  • Social Commerce 101: How to Make Money Selling on Social
  • 63 Instagram Caption Examples for 2023 (And How to Write Your Own)
  • 15 Fresh Facebook Ad Examples to Inspire Your Next Campaign [2022]
  • How to Create a Facebook Business Page (The Easy Way)

Comments

  1. mindmadetechnologies says

    October 10, 2020 at 12:22 am

    Thanks Brad. I want to try this

    Reply
  2. Santhosh Muralidhar says

    October 27, 2020 at 11:08 pm

    I always felt that LinkedIn is a very interesting platform. It was amazing to learn that this insight tag can be easily integrated into our wordpress websites as well. I’m going to try it and see how it helps my business.

    Reply

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