LinkedIn Ads on $10 a Day: How to Apply Dennis Yu’s Dollar a Day Strategy to LinkedIn

By AJ Wilcox

Can you really run LinkedIn Ads on just $10 a day and get meaningful results? In this episode of The LinkedIn Ads Show, I break down how to apply Dennis Yu's famous Dollar a Day strategy to LinkedIn advertising — and why this approach can be a game-changer for B2B marketers who think LinkedIn is too expensive.

What Is the Dollar a Day Strategy?

The Dollar a Day framework, created by Dennis Yu of BlitzMetrics, is built on a simple but powerful premise: start with just a dollar a day to test your content, identify what resonates with your audience, and then scale the winners. Dennis originally developed this for Facebook Ads, where the minimum daily budget is truly just $1. On LinkedIn, the minimum daily budget is $10, but the same principles still apply beautifully.

The core idea is that you don't need to throw thousands of dollars at untested campaigns. Instead, you start small, let the data tell you what works, and methodically increase your spend only on content that has proven its value. It's an approach that eliminates wasteful spending and maximizes your return on every dollar invested.

Why This Works on LinkedIn

LinkedIn Ads have a reputation for being expensive — and at $8 to $14 per click on average, that reputation is well-earned. But expensive clicks don't have to mean a poor return on investment. In fact, I've found that LinkedIn's precision targeting means you're reaching exactly the right decision-makers, which often makes the cost-per-qualified-lead far more efficient than cheaper platforms.

When you combine LinkedIn's targeting power with the Dollar a Day discipline of testing small before scaling, you create a system that lets even modest budgets generate real pipeline. You start by running multiple creative variations at $10 a day each, identify which messages and formats resonate with your ideal customer profile, and then confidently increase spend on proven winners.

The $10 a Day LinkedIn Playbook

Here's how I recommend applying this strategy to LinkedIn. Start by creating three to five pieces of content — ideally mixing formats like single image ads, video ads, and Thought Leader Ads. Set each campaign to $10 a day and let them run for at least two weeks to gather statistically meaningful data. Look at engagement rates, click-through rates, and downstream metrics like form fills or demo requests.

After your testing window, pause the underperformers and reallocate that budget to the top-performing creative. This is exactly the Dollar a Day philosophy: test, learn, and scale. The difference on LinkedIn is that your $10 a day gets you in front of senior executives, VP-level decision-makers, and the exact job titles that matter for your B2B pipeline.

Content That Wins at Low Budgets

At small budgets, creative quality becomes even more important because every impression matters. I've seen the best results from authentic, value-driven content rather than polished corporate ads. Thought Leader Ads — where you boost a personal post from an executive — tend to perform exceptionally well because they feel native to the LinkedIn feed. Similarly, short video content that delivers a quick insight or tip can drive strong engagement even at low daily spends.

The key is to lead with value rather than a hard sell. Share a surprising data point, offer a contrarian perspective on an industry trend, or tell a brief customer story. These content approaches generate the engagement signals that LinkedIn's algorithm rewards, giving your small budget outsized reach.

Scaling From $10 to $100+ Per Day

Once you've identified your winning creative, the scale-up process is methodical. Increase budget by 20-30% every few days rather than making dramatic jumps. Monitor your cost-per-result closely — if it stays stable as you scale, keep going. If costs start climbing, you may be saturating your audience and need to either expand targeting or introduce fresh creative.

Dennis Yu talks about this as building a "content library" of proven assets. Over time, you accumulate a growing portfolio of tested, high-performing ads that you can deploy with confidence. This eliminates the common B2B mistake of launching one big campaign with all your budget and hoping it works.

Tools to Maximize Your $10 a Day

Creating enough content to test doesn't have to be expensive or time-consuming. Tools like Vidyo can turn one long-form video into dozens of short clips perfect for LinkedIn video ads. Descript makes it easy to add animated subtitles to your video content, which is essential since most LinkedIn users watch with the sound off. These tools let you produce the volume of creative variations you need for effective testing without a massive production budget.

Get Expert Help From B2Linked

Whether you're just getting started with LinkedIn Ads or ready to scale a proven strategy, B2Linked can help. As the LinkedIn Ads-specific agency, we specialize in building efficient campaigns that deliver real B2B results. Visit b2linked.com to learn how we help companies maximize their LinkedIn advertising investment, or join the LinkedIn Ads Fanatics community to access courses and expert support.

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Watch the Full Episode

Watch the full episode above for the complete breakdown of how to run LinkedIn Ads on $10 a day, including specific campaign structures and bidding strategies. For the full show notes and transcript, visit Episode 125 on the B2Linked blog.

LinkedIn Ads: The Ideal Budget for Your Campaign

By AJ Wilcox

Choose the Right LinkedIn Ads Budget

LinkedIn offers three budgeting options: daily, lifetime and a mix of both. A daily budget lets you control pace and spend without burning through cash too quickly, while a lifetime budget caps overall spend so you don’t overshoot. Combining them can balance control and scale. AJ explains when each makes sense and why there isn’t a single “right” number—your budget should reflect the value of a lead for your business.

Key Factors That Influence Spend

AJ highlights that how much you can spend depends on five things: the size of your audience, your bid strategy, the objective you select, your relevance score and the frequency at which the ad is shown. A small, niche audience can’t absorb spend as fast as a broad one, and a highly engaged audience can burn through a lifetime cap quickly. Experiment with objectives and adjust bids to see what delivers the best results.

Need Help With Your LinkedIn Ads?

If you’d like expert support developing your strategy, the B2Linked team of LinkedIn ads specialists can help you craft a plan and manage campaigns. AJ and his agency run campaigns for B2B brands and can advise you on budgets, creatives and optimization so you get more from every dollar spent.

Watch the Full Episode & Join the Conversation

Watch the full episode below and then join the conversation: what budget strategies have worked for you on LinkedIn? Share your thoughts in the comments or reach out to the B2Linked team to discuss your campaign goals.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0BKbppeC6Oc

He then walks through the five factors that determine how much your campaign can spend: audience size, bid strategy, objective, relevance score and frequency. A small niche audience can’t spend as quickly as a large broad one. AJ shares examples of how a daily budget of $30 paired with a $3,000 lifetime cap can allow a campaign to run for roughly 100 days, but warns that if your audience is very engaged it could spend much faster.

The episode also offers practical tips on pacing: monitor your results daily, adjust bids to avoid overspending, and experiment with different objectives to see how they affect delivery. AJ stresses that there is no “magic number” for budget; instead, marketers should determine how much a conversion is worth to their business and reverse‑engineer the budget from there.

If you’d like expert help with budgeting and campaign strategy, AJ’s agency B2Linked has managed over $150 million in LinkedIn ad spend. They offer custom strategies and reporting capabilities that even LinkedIn doesn’t provide, and they always aim to save clients more than they charge. You can learn more at B2Linked.com.

Watch the full episode below to hear AJ’s detailed explanations and real‑world examples.