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LinkedIn CPCs run high but the leads are senior and decision-ready. Plug in your pipeline goal, ACV, and win rate to see whether the spend pencils at your deal size, with worst, moderate, and best cases side by side.
The default for LinkedIn. Sponsored Content, Lead Gen Forms, Message Ads, anything where the lead converts to a deal offline.
Lead generation budget
| Metric | Worst case | Moderate | Best case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Form conversion rate | % | % | % |
| Clicks per lead | — | — | — |
| CPL | — | — | — |
| Leads required | — | — | — |
| Orders required | — | — | — |
| CPA (cost per sale) | — | — | — |
| Quarterly budget | — | — | — |
| Monthly budget | — | — | — |
| Daily budget | — | — | — |
| ROAS | — | — | — |
How it works
Plug in real numbers, compare three scenarios, take the moderate budget into your quarterly plan. LinkedIn is expensive, so input quality matters more than on most channels.
pipeline_goal = $500K cpc = $8.00 win_rate = 10% acv = $25,000
Pipeline goal, ACV, win rate, and a CPC pulled from Campaign Manager (not Forecasted Results, which run optimistic).
Worst, moderate, best for click-to-lead conversion. LinkedIn often surprises in either direction, so the range matters more than the midpoint.
LinkedIn Ads, Q2 plan
Use the moderate scenario as your monthly cap. Track CPL and pipeline created weekly. Kill audiences that miss the mark fast, LinkedIn is too expensive to coast.
Inputs explained
Six inputs that drive everything. Three apply to both modes; the rest depend on whether you run B2B pipeline or considered-purchase ecommerce.
Pipeline goal
Quarterly pipeline you need from LinkedIn. Plan against pipeline created (deals in stage 2 or 3), not closed-won, since LinkedIn cycles run long.
Average CPC
30-day account average from Campaign Manager. LinkedIn runs hot at $5 to $12 per click depending on industry, seniority, and how tightly you target.
Conversion rate
Click to lead. The format you pick swings this 2 to 3x, so be honest about whether you are running Lead Gen Forms or sending traffic to a landing page.
Win rate
Lead generation only. Share of LinkedIn-sourced leads that close. LinkedIn leads tend to be senior and warm but cycles drag, so pull this from CRM data, not from a feeling.
Average contract value
Lead generation only. First-year ACV or initial deal size. LinkedIn math only pencils when LTV is meaningful, which usually means $5,000+ ACV.
Average order value
Ecommerce only. LinkedIn rarely makes sense for transactional ecommerce, but works for considered B2B-adjacent buys (executive education, premium gear, software).
Best practices
Use real account CPC, not forecasts
Campaign Manager Forecasted Results run optimistic. Pull a 30-day average once you have spend, otherwise discount the forecast 25 to 40 percent.
Lead Gen Forms convert 2 to 3x landing pages
Plan separate budgets for in-platform forms vs landing page traffic. The same audience converts very differently depending on the format you pick.
Tighten audience to senior decision-makers
Targeting Director+ at companies of 200+ doubles CPC but doubles win rate too. Cheap LinkedIn traffic is usually the wrong traffic.
Plan for a 60 to 90 day proof window
B2B sales cycles drag. A LinkedIn budget judged on 30 days of data will under-credit pipeline. Reserve full-cycle budget before the verdict.
Track LinkedIn pipeline to closed-won
LinkedIn shines on lead quality but loses on volume. If your CRM does not stitch source to revenue, you will under-budget LinkedIn every quarter.
Built by the team behind SourceLoop
Guide
LinkedIn does not have to be cheap. The audience is professional buyers, the auction is thin (far fewer advertisers than Meta or Google), and the data signal is the strongest in B2B: job title, company, seniority, function, even years of experience. All three push prices up. A $7 click that reaches a Director of Engineering at a 1,000-person SaaS is worth more than a $2 Google click that lands a curious intern, so the price is rational once you account for who you are reaching.
A LinkedIn budget is a chain of multiplication. You start from the pipeline you need and work backward to clicks:
sales_required = pipeline_goal / acv
leads_required = sales_required / win_rate
clicks_required = leads_required / conversion_rate
budget = clicks_required * cpc The conversion rate is where most teams get this wrong. It forks sharply by ad format, which we will get to.
LinkedIn click-to-lead conversion rates fork by ad format more than any other platform. Lead Gen Forms (the prefilled form that pops up inside the LinkedIn feed) convert 12 to 18 percent of clicks. Sending traffic to your own landing page typically converts 5 to 10 percent. Same audience, same ad creative, same CPC, but the format you pick can swing your required budget by 2 to 3x. Pick the right one before you run the math.
If your AOV is under $200 or your sales cycle is shorter than a week, LinkedIn is the wrong place. The $5 to $12 CPC only pencils when LTV is meaningful (typically $5,000 ACV+) and when you can wait 30 to 90 days for pipeline to close into revenue. Below that threshold, Meta and Google produce the same outcome at a fifth of the spend.
B2B with high LTV runs profitably at lower ROAS than ecommerce because contracts compound. Quick benchmarks for first-year ROAS:
Say you sell B2B software at $25,000 first-year ACV and your sales team closes 12 percent of LinkedIn-sourced leads. You want $500,000 in pipeline next quarter. At a $9 CPC and a 14 percent Lead Gen Form conversion rate, the math says you need 20 sales, 167 leads, 1,190 clicks, and roughly $10,700 in LinkedIn spend, for a 47x pipeline-to-spend ratio. Drop the conversion rate to 6 percent (you sent traffic to a landing page instead of using Lead Gen Forms) and the budget jumps to $25,000 with a 20x ratio. Both are workable. Now drop ACV to $3,000 (SMB segment instead of mid-market) and the same setup ratios drop to 5x and 2.4x respectively, the second of which is at the edge of profitable depending on win rate.
That kind of sensitivity is why the worst-moderate-best framing matters more than any single number.
FAQ
You plug in pipeline goal, CPC, win rate, and ACV. The calculator works backward from revenue: how many sales you need, how many leads at your win rate, how many clicks at your conversion rate, and the LinkedIn spend that gets you there. Three scenarios so you have a range, not a guess.
Two reasons. The audience is professional buyers commanding higher CPMs, and the auction has fewer advertisers chasing far smaller volume. You pay $5 to $12 per click instead of $1 to $3, but the leads are senior and decision-empowered. The CPC math only pencils when LTV is high enough to absorb it.
Lead Gen Forms (the in-platform prefilled form) convert 12 to 18 percent of clicks into leads. Sending traffic to your own landing page is closer to 5 to 10 percent. Single Image converts higher than Carousel. Sponsored Content beats Message Ads on lead volume, though Message Ads can do better when targeting is laser-tight.
Rarely. LinkedIn only makes sense for high-consideration purchases, premium products, executive education, or B2B-adjacent gear. For consumer ecommerce, the CPC is wrong by an order of magnitude. Run on Meta, TikTok, or Pinterest instead.
B2B with high LTV often runs profitably at 1.5x to 3x first-quarter ROAS, because contracts renew and LTV compounds. Hitting 5x or higher is unusual and typically means the audience is too narrow or the offer is undersized for the channel. Use multi-year LTV in the math, not just first-year ACV.
Lead Gen Forms convert 2 to 3x better in-platform, but the leads tend to be lower intent (frictionless fill). Landing pages convert worse but qualify harder. If you have a strong sales team, Lead Gen Forms wins on volume. If your sales team is small, landing pages keep the queue clean.
Yes. No signup, no email gate. We host it because the same teams planning a LinkedIn Ads budget usually need real attribution to know which campaigns turn into closed-won pipeline, which is what SourceLoop does.
Capture and send full attribution data from every signup, lead, booking, and sale to your CRM and ad platforms, so you know exactly what's driving revenue.
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