Major social media platforms to consider
According to Econsultancy, LinkedIn, Facebook, and Twitter account for 90% of all social referral traffic to business-to-business (B2B) websites, with LinkedIn accounting for more than half (64%).
For this reason, it’s almost expected for any modern B2B firm to be active on each of these core platforms.
LinkedIn
LinkedIn is the social media platform where business takes place. As of 2024, LinkedIn has more than one billion members in more than 200 countries and territories worldwide, representing more than 67 million registered companies and 134,000 schools.
Reports from companies such as Hubspot have found that LinkedIn is 277% more effective at generating leads than Facebook or Twitter. With more than 238 million members in North America alone, it’s easy to see why LinkedIn acts as the primary driver of high-value social media leads for B2B organizations.
Strategically, LinkedIn should act as the primary social channel for your organization’s thought leadership. Due to its inherent formal nature, educational content and thought leadership tend to excel on this platform. LinkedIn also acts as an effective platform for promoting open positions, upcoming events, and other official communications from your organization.
Facebook
Despite waning interest in the United States over recent years, Facebook remains the largest social media platform by a significant margin. In fact, despite several tough years, Facebook has recently shown strong growth in users, with recent investor reports showing that the platform currently has 3.049 billion monthly active users, accounting for around 38% of the world’s population.
Recent industry trends among B2B marketers have shifted Facebook away from its former central position in the social media marketing space as businesses increasingly focus on LinkedIn, Twitter, and Instagram as primary lead drivers .
However, Facebook still holds a strong position in the B2B marketing space due to its ubiquitous nature and wide reach.
For this reason, many organizations choose to use Facebook for its more social and team-focused nature — taking a more “social” approach to social media by posting content about the employee or customer experience and avoiding hard sales tactics entirely.
Instagram
Instagram takes a more visual approach to social media and largely combines many features from Facebook with the shorter and more fast-paced tempo of a platform such as Twitter. With around 2 billion active monthly users, Instagram’s reach lands it as one of the most visited websites in the world.
B2B marketers have largely taken notice of Instagram due to its diverse content formats that support discovery and delight across the buyer’s journey, which can increase your brand’s favorability and stickiness.
Remember, B2B buyers are on Instagram as well — they’re just not visiting the platform with the intention of fully engaging with the business world. By aligning your content with the user intent of discovery (“look at this cool thing we did or made”) and delight (posting entertaining content that nurtures the human connection), you can create a cross-platform experience that nurtures leads in a more holistic way.
YouTube
While not overtly a social media platform, YouTube shares many of the common attributes associated with these other sites (posting original content, comments, likes, follows, etc.). Further, with more than 2.5 billion monthly active users as of 2023, YouTube ranks as both the second-largest social media platform (after Facebook) and second-largest search engine (after Google) in the world.
Because of its large audience and the relative ease at which you can post long-form video content, YouTube has taken on a supporting role in many B2B organization’s social media strategies.
Specifically, many organizations will post long-form video content, guides, client and employee interviews, and more on YouTube, and then link to this content on other social media platforms, in their articles, and even in their training, marketing, and customer support materials.