Windows 11: arrivano le app Android in Italia
Il rilascio di Windows 11 2022 porta l’Appstore Preview sui mercati internazionali, ora le app Android si possono usare su PC in Italia.
MacBook Pro M2, il notebook Apple più potente in sconto: è da comprare subito
ALLARME Windows 11 2022 Update: occhio al FINTO aggiornamento Windows
Livestream Marketing: 5 B2B Brands Elevating With LinkedIn Live


B2B brands have increasingly turned to LinkedIn*’s live-streaming offering LinkedIn Live to elevate their messaging in creative new ways. Brands using LinkedIn Live are increasing engagement from virtually all public-facing sides of their organization, and pulling their professional communities closer than ever in real time using live-streaming.
The past year has been the first that LinkedIn has offered LinkedIn Live Events, a combination of LinkedIn Live and the professional platform’s other event features, and B2B brands have increasingly found value in the combined one-two punch, as we’ll explore.
The updated LinkedIn Live Events experience has allowed brands to create more robust virtual events, which have become de rigueur, must-have offerings for many brands since the pandemic began.
According to LinkedIn statistics, when brands use LinkedIn Live they have seen seven times the number of reactions and 24 times more community comments than when they publish standard non-live video content.
The sky’s the limit when it comes to how B2B brands can use LinkedIn Live. Here are 12 to get you started:
- Interviewing a Member of Your C-Suite
- Brand & Community-Building Events
- Answering Frequently-Asked Questions
- Talent & Career Branding Events
- Streaming a Keynote, Session, or Presentation
- Product Demonstrations
- Highlighting Special Events
- Streaming “Ask Me Anything” Episodes
- Introducing Various Team Members
- Deep-Dive Interviews
- Showcasing Behind The Scenes Workplace Culture
- Unveiling New Innovations & Product Launches
- Launching Episodic Content
- Announcing Major Brand News Live
- Sharing Tips and Tactics
Let’s take the lens-cap off and look at five brands that are elevating customer experiences by live-streaming with LinkedIn Live.
1 — Salesforce

Salesforce has turned to LinkedIn Live to elevate multiple areas of its live-streaming efforts, such as its Futureforce: Salesforce University Recruiting, with streams including “Exploring Salesforce | US & Canada (Non-Tech),” which has explored internship roles and more.
Salesforce has also creatively used LinkedIn Live to celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month, with “In honor of #HispanicHeritageMonth starting this week, join a conversation with J.R. Martinez,” and in a series of its BossTalks events such as “Episode #22 Owning Your Ambition – Shellye Archambeau.”
Additional Salesforce content live-streamed via LinkedIn Live has included interviews with a variety of guests including Catherine Price, science journalist, author, and the founder of Screen/Life Balance, who took a look at finding a better balance and reconnecting with the things that bring joy. Other live-streams looked at embracing change, such as in “How can we embrace change, and grow through its challenges? Find out on #BWellTogether with Cassandra Worth.”
LinkedIn Live events are also well-suited to playing an important role in successful B2B influencer marketing efforts, and as Salesforce global innovation evangelist Brian Solis recently noted in our 2022 B2B Influencer Marketing Research Report, businesses are seeing new levels of freedom when it comes to opportunities to innovate.
“When it comes to where B2B influencer marketing can take business in the next few years, our only limitations are our imaginations,” Brian observed.

During the early days of LinkedIn Live, Salesforce broadcast an 11-part series via LinkedIn Live, garnering some 600,000 organic viewers accompanied by a robust three percent engagement rate during the live-stream events, and the firm has continued to embrace LinkedIn’s streaming feature as it has matured over the past several years.
2 — Mitel

B2B telecommunications firm Mitel* has elevated its social live-streaming using LinkedIn Live for a wealth of varied online events, including a recent comprehensive discussion with company chief marketing officer Venkat Nagaswamy in, “Chatting w/ @Mitel CMO @VenkatNagaswamy,” along with a look at “Finding Your Soulmate in Business Communications,” with Daren Finney, senior vice president of global channels at Mitel.
Another of Mitel’s recent LinkedIn Live broadcasts used the medium to take an eye-opening look at “Marketing that Makes a Difference,” while additional live-streams have explored “What do you do when the world turns upside-down?” and a discussion on “What it takes to create successful digital marketing,“ featuring Hal Werner, global director of digital marketing and strategy at Mitel, who also sat down with us for an episode of Break Free B2B Marketing in “Break Free B2B Series: Hal Werner on the Intersection of Marketing Creativity and Analytics.”
3 — A.P. Moller – Maersk

Embracing its 1.3-million-plus LinkedIn page followers, global transport and logistics firm A.P. Moller – Maersk has taken to LinkedIn Live events with recent offerings such as an opportunity to meet various team-members, as in “Meet the Business Platforms Team.”
Maersk has also used LinkedIn Live to take a look at its hiring processes in, “Maersk Logistics & Services – Hiring Process,” along with examining how the firm addresses its array of sustainability efforts, in “Maersk Sustainability & Safety.”
4 — Demandbase

Demandbase has taken to LinkedIn Live for numerous live-streaming events, including a recent broadcast that examined some of the economic challenges that B2B organizations have been facing, with its “Current Economic Challenges & How B2B Leaders are Combating Them” event.
The company utilizes the Demandbase TV branding and an accompanying #DBTV hashtag for its LinkedIn Live events, and other recent live-stream events have included a look at the role of marketing data science, featuring Christopher Penn, co-founder and chief data scientist at TrustInsights.ai, and Sana Ghazi, principal data scientist at Demandbase, in “DB Live: What Is Marketing Data Science?”
Demandbase has also successfully incorporated live-streaming via LinkedIn Live into a robust online video strategy that includes regular features such as “5 Questions 4,” which asks notable B2B industry leaders five topical questions. Our CEO Lee Odden, for example, explored “5 Questions 4: Understanding Influencer Marketing and Why It’s Important for B2B companies with Lee Odden,” which shows the one-two punch of turning live content in derivative digital assets that can be repurposed over time.
Demandbase’s video efforts through live-streaming its DBTV content has propelled the company to several industry awards, including as a 2022 Digiday Awards finalist in the “Modernizing Video and TV” category, and as a winner in the Demand Gen Report’s 2022 Killer Content Awards Winner, being the Finnys winner for packaged or bundled content.
5 — Mercer

Global professional asset management firm Mercer has taken to LinkedIn Live with broadcasts on a variety of topics, including “Building more relatable, sustainable and people-shaped organizations” — part of its MercerChats series featuring notable industry speakers such as Tamara McCleary, CEO of Thulium and Kate Bravery, advisory solutions and insights global leader at Mercer.
Mercer has also used LinkedIn Live to explore “Evolving the employee experience for a new era of work,” with global experts discussing the key actions business leaders can implement to shift with changing employee experiences.
Build Peak Brand Awareness Using LinkedIn Live
Your own marketing initiatives can also benefit with the addition of a savvy LinkedIn Live strategy, and we hope that the examples we’ve seen here from Salesforce, Mitel, A.P. Moller – Maersk, Demandbase, and Mercer will prove useful in your own campaign efforts as we make the push towards 2023 and beyond.
Our latest social media poll has asked whether B2B marketers plan to use LinkedIn Live over the next 12 months, and you can vote over the next week either on our LinkedIn or Twitter pages.
You can learn more about how B2B brands including JPMorgan Chase, CompTIA, Microsoft, NASA, and SAP are using LinkedIn live in our additional article, “Livestream Marketing: 5 B2B Brands Rocking LinkedIn Live.”
Additionally, LinkedIn offers case studies highlighting how brands have found success using LinkedIn Live, including Adobe, Dentsu Aegis Network, and others.
More than ever before, creating award-winning B2B marketing that elevates, gives voice to talent, and humanizes with authenticity takes considerable time and effort, which is why more brands are choosing to work with a top digital marketing agency such as TopRank Marketing. Reach out to learn how we can help, as we’ve done for over 20 years for businesses ranging from LinkedIn, Dell and 3M to Adobe, Oracle, monday.com and many others.
* LinkedIn and Mitel are TopRank Marketing clients.
The post Livestream Marketing: 5 B2B Brands Elevating With LinkedIn Live appeared first on B2B Marketing Blog – TopRank®.
Motorola moto G52, il MIGLIOR medio gamma sotto ai 200€ che puoi acquistare
Samsung Galaxy Watch4, l’iconico smartwatch di nuovo in offerta: quanto costa ora
Chromeloader: nuova campagna più pericolosa
Gli esperti di VMware e Microsoft informano che è in corso una campagna malware che sfrutta Chromeloader in maniera più aggressiva.
OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite prezzo in picchiata: oggi costa davvero una MISERIA
Una VPN a casa è utile? 4 motivi per averla
Installare una VPN sul router di casa è vantaggioso? Ne vale la pena? Rispondiamo a queste domande con 4 motivi.
Samsung Galaxy Buds Live, il suono fatto apposta per le tue orecchie: sconto del 59%
Matt Brittin at DMEXCO on enhancing the ad-supported web
The following is adapted from a speech given by Matt Brittin, President, Google EMEA, at DMEXCOin Cologne.
Across the world, we’re seeing increased uncertainty. We’re living through a pandemic, seeing rising prices, a global energy crisis, increasing climate disasters and a horrific war in Ukraine. Access to quality information has never been more important — to help people search for answers, find ways to save money, make more sustainable choices and stay safe and informed.
But the web as we know it is at risk. People are more concerned than ever about their privacy online. Regulators across the world are demanding a more private internet — with some critics calling for a ban on personalised ads completely.
The future of the web depends on earning people’s trust — building responsible, private advertising to secure a sustainable internet that is safer for people, stronger for businesses and successful for publishers.
A grown-up attitude to responsibility
For generations, ads have funded our favourite content: from newspapers, magazines and entertainment to the web. Today 66% of the world is online. The ad-supported internet model has become a remarkable resource for humanity: putting an explosion of tools, information and content at our fingertips.
But nearly 40 years after its creation, the internet needs a grown-up attitude to responsibility.
As people manage more of their lives online, their concerns over how personal data is gathered, used and shared have increased. People want great online experiences — delivered with the privacy they deserve, by brands they can trust.
For advertisers, that presents a clear responsibility – but also an opportunity. And the good news is this: privacy safe ads are effective ads.
This year, we asked 20,000 Europeans about the consequences of good and bad privacy experiences. Our findings show that users view bad privacy experiences as almost as damaging as a theft of their data. It’s enough to make many of them switch to another brand entirely. And, because the impact of a negative privacy experience outweighs that of a positive one, it’s very difficult to recover from.
Instead, brands need to get it right the first time. People prefer to buy from brands that give them more control over their privacy — almost three quarters said they would prefer to buy from brands that are honest about what data they collect and why.
In times of uncertainty, companies may be tempted to put privacy on the backburner – but that would be a mistake. In tough times you need to invest for the future. Privacy is that investment.
A sustainable, private future for people, publishers and businesses
Making these changes won’t just lead to successful advertising — but a sustainable web.
Digital advertising needs to be safer for people. They need to feel protected online and able to trust what they view. It needs to be successful for publishers — funding quality journalism while giving us access to authoritative and diverse perspectives. And, it needs to be stronger for business — allowing businesses of all sizes the opportunity to grow and build a global customer base.
Across Europe, we’re investing in that vision. We’re one of the world’s biggest financial supporters of journalism, committing billions of dollars every year; we’re delivering authoritative information and creating privacy-first technology.
At our Google Safety Engineering Center in Munich, hundreds of engineers are creating tools and technology that combine two German traditions: exemplary engineering and rigorous privacy standards.
The privacy-first technology they’re creating is minimising the amount of data used, simplifying data downloads and deletion, and helping root out hijacked passwords — building on our shared values and breaking new ground in the global industry.
Today, as part of our commitment to that transition, we’re announcing two new tools.
The first is the Google Ads Privacy Hub, launching today with the rollout starting here in Germany. It will show you the latest on product innovations and how best-in-class marketers are doing it — helping you take the first steps on this journey, whatever your company size.
The second tool we’re launching focuses on users. Last year, 300 million people visited Ad Settings — choosing to make the ads they see more specific to them. So we’ll soon launch the new My Ad Center globally — expanding our existing Ad Settings to give people a single place where they can control the ads they see across Google Search, Discover and YouTube — seeing more of what they like, and less of what they don’t. Because the best ads are helpful, relevant and safe — benefiting the user, and responsible businesses too.

Matt Brittin speaking at DMEXCO conference
Building the web that people want and deserve
Moving to a world without third-party cookies means rethinking the tech on which much of the web advertising system is built and building new, privacy-first solutions.
We’re doing that through the Privacy Sandbox: sharing and testing new technologies with the industry, while staying on course to deprecate third party cookies by the end of 2024, in line with our commitments to the UK Competition Authority, which we are applying globally.
There are those that say that efforts like the Privacy Sandbox aren’t enough. Some say that we should ban personalised advertising altogether — that “contextual” advertising can fill the gap. But that won’t pay for the web everyone wants.
It has been estimated that if personalised advertising were to suddenly go away, as much as $32 to $39 billion would shift away from those who rely on open web technology — including publishers, at a time where authoritative information has never been more important.
There are others that say that all services should simply be paid for. But that turns the web into a luxury good — shutting billions out. It’s why Netflix, a pioneer of the modern subscription model, and others like Disney Plus and HBO, are introducing ads for users who want — or need — to pay less. Now, the advertising industry is a big tent. There is plenty of room for newcomers.
But recent events underscore how flawed these arguments really are – and unpopular to boot. Research by IAB Europe shows that 75% of Europeans would choose today’s experience of the internet over one without targeted ads, where they would need to pay for access to websites, content and apps.
So there should be no question as to whether the ads-supported internet model is important: only what kind of advertising industry we want to see. We want an advertising industry that makes room for businesses large and small; that supports value for publishers, media and journalism, and that protects people’s privacy from tracking.
A now or never moment
But it’s not just enough to want that future. We have to actually choose it. For online advertising, and the future of the internet, this is a now or never moment: without people’s trust, the future of the ad-supported web is at stake.
The next two years are critical. The industry must embrace the journey and invest in privacy. It has to build stronger relationships with customers, create better ad campaigns and navigate the uncertainty. If we do nothing, the web as we know it will be under threat.
Together, we can build an ad-supported web fit for the future — giving us better content, richer perspectives and further protection online.
Amazfit GTR 3 PRO: lo smartwatch elegante torna al MINIMO storico
Samsung Galaxy Tab A8 va comprato ADESSO su Amazon: il prezzo crolla a 172€
Torcia flessibile con magnete, perfetta per i tuoi lavoretti fai da te: da AVERE
Torcia flessibile con doppio magnete, uno per fissaggio, l’altro per recuperare oggetti nei luoghi più disparati: un gadget utilissimo che costa davvero poco.
Leggi Torcia flessibile con magnete, perfetta per i tuoi lavoretti fai da te: da AVERE
Blender 3.3 LTS: arrivato il supporto per Intel Arc
Blender 3.3 LTS: la nuova versione stabile appena rilasciata introduce il supporto alle GPU Intel Arc


