Retargeting vs Remarketing: What B2B Companies Should Know
Retargeting and remarketing are often used as if they mean the same thing. There is a useful practical distinction. This guide explains how each works, when to use each, and how B2B companies can use both to support demand generation and long buying cycles.
Retargeting and remarketing are often used as if they mean the same thing. In everyday marketing conversations, they are very close. But there is a useful distinction.
Retargeting usually refers to showing ads to people who previously visited your website, viewed a page, watched a video, clicked an ad, or engaged with your content.
Remarketing usually refers to re-engaging known contacts through email, customer lists, CRM audiences, or platform-based audience lists.
For B2B companies, both can help keep your company visible during a long buying journey. A buyer may visit your website, leave without converting, compare vendors, talk with colleagues, and return weeks later. Retargeting and remarketing help continue the relationship after the first touch.
What Is Retargeting?
Retargeting is a paid advertising strategy that shows ads to people who have already interacted with your company online.
Retargeting is useful because these people already have some level of awareness. They are not completely cold. They may not be ready to convert yet, but they have shown interest.
Common retargeting audiences
What Is Remarketing?
Remarketing is the process of re-engaging people who are already known to your company. Remarketing often uses email, CRM workflows, customer match audiences, or nurture campaigns. The goal is to restart or continue a conversation with people who have already entered your database.
Common remarketing audiences
Retargeting vs Remarketing: The Core Difference
Retargeting
Ad-based follow-up
- Reaches anonymous or semi-anonymous visitors
- Based on website or content behavior
- Paid ads across display, search, social
- Keeps brand visible after first interaction
- Works at awareness and consideration stages
Remarketing
Contact-based follow-up
- Reaches known contacts by email or list
- Based on database, CRM, or uploaded data
- Email, automation, customer match
- Continues an existing relationship
- Works at nurture and reactivation stages
Retargeting vs Remarketing Comparison Table
| Category | Retargeting | Remarketing |
|---|---|---|
| Main method | Paid ads | Email, CRM, or audience lists |
| Audience type | Website visitors or content engagers | Known contacts or customer lists |
| Best for | Staying visible after a visit | Re-engaging leads or contacts |
| Common channels | Google Ads, Meta Ads, LinkedIn Ads, display networks | Email, CRM, customer match, nurture workflows |
| Buyer stage | Awareness, consideration, evaluation | Consideration, nurture, reactivation |
| Main goal | Bring visitors back | Continue or restart a conversation |
| Common risk | Overexposure or irrelevant ads | Too much email or weak segmentation |
Why Retargeting Matters for B2B
B2B buyers rarely convert on the first visit. A buyer may read one article, leave, return through search, see a LinkedIn post, compare alternatives, and come back later through direct traffic. Retargeting helps bridge those gaps.
For B2B companies, retargeting is usually not about pushing a cold visitor directly into a demo. It is about guiding them to the next useful step — a related guide, a case study, a webinar, or a soft consultation offer.
Why Remarketing Matters for B2B
Remarketing matters because many leads are not ready to buy immediately. A webinar attendee may not need your service today. A newsletter subscriber may be researching for later. A past prospect may become relevant again after a budget change or new project.
Remarketing helps companies stay present without starting from zero. Remarketing works best when the message is specific to the contact's prior behavior.
Retargeting Examples
Blog Reader Retargeting
A visitor reads an article about Google Ads vs Meta Ads. Later, they see an ad promoting a Paid Media Strategy Review. The ad connects to the reader's prior interest, making it relevant rather than intrusive.
Webinar Page Retargeting
A visitor views a webinar registration page but does not register. A retargeting ad later reminds them about the topic and sends them back to the registration page with a clearer offer.
Service Page Retargeting
A visitor views a demand generation service page. Later, they see a relevant case study or checklist. This is better than showing a generic company ad to someone who was already evaluating.
Remarketing Examples
Webinar Follow-Up
Someone attends a webinar about B2B demand generation. After the webinar, they receive an email with the recording, related resources, and a soft CTA for a strategy review.
Download Nurture
A buyer downloads a marketing budget checklist. They receive follow-up emails about budget allocation, paid media planning, and demand generation strategy — each building on the previous.
Old Lead Reactivation
A lead spoke with sales six months ago but did not move forward. A remarketing campaign sends new market insights, updated service information, or a relevant case study to restart the conversation.
Retargeting Channels
The right channel depends on where your audience spends time and what kind of message you need to show.
Remarketing Channels
Remarketing should connect marketing and sales. If sales does not know which contacts are being nurtured, the process becomes weaker.
Retargeting Strategy for B2B
A good B2B retargeting strategy starts with segmentation. Instead of retargeting all website visitors with the same ad, segment by intent.
Blog visitors
Educational next step or related guide
Service page visitors
Consultation offer or case study
Pricing page visitors
Comparison content or FAQ page
Webinar page visitors
Reminder or related event
Returning visitors
Strategy review or audit offer
Remarketing Strategy for B2B
A good B2B remarketing strategy starts with contact context. Segment contacts and build messages that match their stage.
Cold subscriber
Education and awareness content
Webinar attendee
Recording + next-step resource
Downloaded guide
Related content and consultation offer
Demo no-show
Simple reschedule message
Past opportunity
New business reason to reconnect
Retargeting and Remarketing in Demand Generation
Retargeting and remarketing are not isolated tactics. They should support the larger demand generation system. A buyer journey may look like this:
Buyer discovers an SEO article or resource
Buyer sees a retargeting ad for a related guide or offer
Buyer downloads the guide and enters your database
Buyer receives remarketing emails with further education
Buyer attends a webinar and sees a case study ad
Buyer requests a consultation or strategy review
Retargeting and remarketing help connect touchpoints across the journey. See also: B2B Demand Generation Strategy and Omnichannel Marketing.
Common Retargeting Mistakes
Same ad for every visitor
Retargeting all visitors with identical messaging ignores their stage and intent. A blog reader and a pricing page visitor should see different offers.
Retargeting too aggressively
High ad frequency causes fatigue and negative brand associations. Set frequency caps and rotate creative regularly.
Sending traffic to generic pages
Retargeting ads should connect to relevant landing pages. Sending users back to your homepage wastes the investment.
Not excluding converted users
Showing consultation ads to people who already booked a consultation creates a poor experience and wastes budget.
Ignoring frequency controls
Without frequency limits, retargeting becomes annoying. Most platforms allow you to cap how often an individual sees your ad.
Asking for demos too early
A visitor who read one blog post is not ready for a sales call. Offer a next useful step, not a commitment they cannot make yet.
Common Remarketing Mistakes
Same email to every contact
Contacts have different histories, stages, and needs. Segment by source, download, webinar attended, or sales stage.
Ignoring buyer stage
A cold subscriber needs education. A warm lead may be ready for a consultation offer. Treating all contacts equally wastes messaging.
Over-emailing inactive contacts
Sending too many emails to disengaged contacts harms deliverability and erodes trust. Set re-engagement thresholds and respect them.
Not using sales feedback
If sales teams do not tell marketing which leads are qualified, remarketing campaigns have no useful signal to improve against.
Sending only sales messages
Remarketing should feel like useful continuation, not a sales reminder. Mix education, case studies, and insights with conversion offers.
Not following up after webinars
A webinar registrant who attended is one of your highest-intent contacts. A structured follow-up sequence can dramatically improve conversion.
Retargeting vs Remarketing for Technology Companies
Technology companies often have long and complex buying cycles. The more complex the product, the more important follow-up becomes. Here is how each vertical can use both strategies.
SaaS and AI Companies
- Retarget product page visitors with use case content
- Remarket trial users with onboarding and upgrade sequences
- Use LinkedIn retargeting for founder-specific content
- Build case study retargeting for evaluation-stage visitors
Cybersecurity Companies
- Retarget compliance and threat content readers
- Remarket webinar attendees with assessment offers
- Use search remarketing for buyers comparing vendors
- Build security audit offers for high-intent page visitors
Cloud and DevOps Vendors
- Retarget migration guide readers with next-step content
- Remarket event attendees with technical education
- Use display retargeting for integration and ecosystem pages
- Build remarketing sequences for free tier or trial users
Consulting and Professional Services
- Retarget service page visitors with consultation offers
- Remarket past leads with new market insights or reports
- Use LinkedIn retargeting for thought leadership content
- Build case study remarketing for past prospects
Metrics to Track
For B2B companies, qualified pipeline matters more than raw clicks or impressions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Resources
Digital Demand Generation
Core channels, five-stage framework, metrics, and mistakes for B2B demand generation.
Google Ads vs Meta Ads
A practical comparison for B2B companies across search intent, targeting, and ROI.
Social Media Advertising Cost
How much LinkedIn, Meta, YouTube, and Reddit advertising costs for B2B companies.
Marketing Budget Allocation
A four-step framework for allocating B2B marketing spend across channels.
Omnichannel Marketing
How to connect SEO, paid media, LinkedIn, email, and PR into one buyer journey.
CPC vs CPM
When to use each pricing model for B2B paid media campaigns.
Paid media and demand generation
Need Help Building Retargeting and Remarketing Campaigns?
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