LinkedIn has rolled out new ads specifically aimed at marketing professionals as part of its expanding “Network That Works For You” brand campaign, and the messaging is unusually blunt for a platform known for corporate restraint.
The new creative, developed in partnership with McCann New York, directly calls out what LinkedIn describes as the marketing industry’s habit of prioritizing vanity metrics over proof of real business impact.
One ad uses the phrase “cut the bullspend,” a pointed jab at the widespread practice of optimizing campaigns for impressions and clicks rather than measurable outcomes. Another segment targets sales professionals, showcasing how LinkedIn’s Sales Navigator helps cut through complexity to identify and nurture valuable relationships more efficiently.
The campaign, first launched in February 2026, uses humor to highlight awkward workplace moments and modern professional dilemmas, a deliberate departure from LinkedIn’s traditionally buttoned-up advertising tone. The expanded version doubles down on that approach with creative elements designed to connect with specific professional audiences through relatable frustrations rather than aspirational corporate messaging.
The new ads will run across TV, digital video, connected TV, paid social, audio, display, paid search, and out-of-home placements in the US and UK.
LinkedIn reported reaching $5 billion in quarterly revenue for the first time in its Q4 2025 performance update, driven by rising user engagement and growing advertiser interest. The platform has benefited significantly from the decline of X as a professional networking tool, absorbing users who migrated toward more focused, career-oriented spaces. LinkedIn Premium alone now generates $2 billion per year in subscription revenue, with subscriber growth increasing nearly 50% over the past two years.
LinkedIn has also been aggressively expanding its advertising and creator tools.
The platform rebranded its Wire Program as BrandLink, allowing marketers to place in-stream video ads before trusted publisher and creator content, and for the first time began sharing ad revenue with creators. Video views on the platform have increased 36% year over year, and short-form video is growing faster than any other content format on LinkedIn. Campaign Manager received major upgrades in 2026 including reach and impression forecasting, ad duplication tools, dynamic UTMs, and AI-powered performance insights.
By targeting marketers specifically and calling out the metrics problem that many in the industry privately acknowledge but rarely address publicly, LinkedIn is positioning itself not just as a platform where ads run but as the platform where ad spend actually translates into business results.


