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The key to a true 360-degree customer view is linking a person’s professional and personal data profiles. This allows B2B marketers to overcome low match rates on consumer platforms like Instagram or CTV by targeting prospects' personal accounts, reaching them where they actually spend their time.

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The person scrolling social media at work is the same human they are at home. Effective marketing creates an emotional connection by focusing on the person ("P2P"), not just their professional role ("B2B"), leading to stronger, longer-lasting brand affinity.

Businesses like jewelers mistakenly dismiss LinkedIn as purely for B2B. This is a flawed view because every professional on the platform is also a consumer ('a C'). This creates a significant, overlooked opportunity for direct-to-consumer sales in a less saturated environment.

Effective identity resolution goes beyond separating consumer and professional personas. True personalization involves linking these identities to market to the 'whole person,' allowing for more contextually relevant messaging, such as targeting a professional with IT products during their personal hobby time (e.g., watching golf).

A powerful LinkedIn advertising strategy is to create content aimed at a target company's employees, designed to be forwarded internally to the actual decision-maker. Ads can directly ask, "Does your CFO know…?" This leverages internal networks to bypass gatekeepers and reach the ultimate buyer.

In B2B marketing, reaching a small, highly relevant group of decision-makers is far more valuable than generating thousands of impressions or clicks from an unqualified audience. Focusing on the 'who' (the specific buyer profile) ensures marketing spend is efficient and drives real business results.

B2B marketing often assumes a sterile, professional-only mindset. This is flawed. The same person scrolling LinkedIn during the day also binges consumer entertainment at night. B2B content should embrace humor and personality, recognizing that you're always marketing to the same multifaceted human being.

Understanding a buyer persona means more than knowing their job title and performance metrics. Research their public activity—panels, blogs, LinkedIn—to understand what personally excites and motivates them. This deeper, human-level understanding is a key differentiator in a crowded sales landscape.

Don't just target the same job titles as your best customers. Dig deeper into the buyer's professional history (e.g., a COO with a 20-year sales background). This backstory is often the true indicator of an ideal fit, allowing for more precise and effective targeting.

Instead of inefficient, broad-reach brand campaigns like TV ads, D2C brands can achieve better results by mirroring B2B's focused approach. Using measurable channels like creator whitelisting and publisher advertorials allows for targeted storytelling to ideal customer profiles.

The shift from a 'social graph' to an 'interest graph' means platforms show content based on user behavior, not just connections. For a B2B product, this allows you to create niche content that the algorithm serves directly to your ideal target customers without them following you.