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How do I use the People Keywords filter in ListKit’s B2B Search?

Said Jrad avatar
Written by Said Jrad
Updated this week

THIS ARTICLE IS FOR: ✅ Self-Serve
Stage: Trial / Onboarding / Live
Owner: CS
Last updated: 2026-01-20



TL;DR

  • The People Keywords filter searches individual profiles, not companies.

  • It scans a person’s Social Headline and Social Summary only.

  • Use it for skills, tools, certifications, and self-described roles.

  • This is an advanced, niche filter, don’t use it for industries or company traits.

  • For company-level targeting, use Company Keywords instead.



When you’d use this / Why it matters

Job titles are often messy, inconsistent, or incomplete.
The People Keywords filter lets you target people based on how they describe themselves, unlocking niche audiences that job titles alone can’t reliably capture.

Used correctly, it creates highly specialized, high-intent segments.



What the People Keywords filter actually searches

ListKit scans keywords inside a person’s:

  • Social Headline

  • Social Summary

These are personal profile descriptions, not company bios.

Examples of text in these fields

  • “Helping SaaS founders scale to 8 figures”

  • “Ecommerce growth specialist”

  • “Marketing director passionate about AI & automation”

  • “Fractional CFO | Finance strategy | VC-backed startups”

  • “Real estate investor | Multifamily | Passive income”

If your keyword appears in either field, that person qualifies.



Step-by-step: How to use the People Keywords filter

  1. Go to Search → Filters in ListKit.

  2. Open the People Keywords filter.

  3. Add Include keywords (comma-separated or grouped).

  4. Add Exclude keywords if needed.

  5. Combine keyword groups using AND / OR logic.

  6. Pair with Job Titles and other filters.

  7. Run your search.

The logic mirrors Company Keywords, but applies only to individual profiles.



When you SHOULD use People Keywords

Use this filter when you want to target people based on people-level attributes, such as:

  • Skills they mention

  • Tools they claim expertise in

  • Certifications or specialties

  • Niche role variations

  • Personal branding descriptors

  • Industry expertise

  • Freelance or fractional positioning

This filter is about who the person is, not where they work.



When you should NOT use People Keywords

Do not use this filter to target:

  • Company types

  • Industries

  • Niches or verticals

  • Business categories

  • Company descriptions

  • Technologies used by the company

👉 For those use cases, use Company Keywords instead.



People Keywords ≠ Company Keywords

Filter

What it searches

Best used for

Company Keywords

Company descriptions

Industries, niches, company types

People Keywords

Social Headline + Summary

Skills, tools, personal descriptors


Practical use cases

1. Target people who use a specific tool

People Keywords:

  • HubSpot

  • Salesforce

  • Figma

  • Shopify expert

Finds individuals who mention the tool themselves, not just companies using it.



2. Target specific skillsets

Examples:

  • Cold email specialist

  • Google Ads expert

  • Ecom strategist

  • Java developer

  • Copywriter

Ideal for agencies, recruiters, SaaS tools, and consultants.



3. Target personal branding descriptors

Examples:

  • Fractional CMO

  • Consultant

  • Investor

  • Coach

  • Freelancer

Surfaces people based on self-positioning, not employer.



4. Capture niche role variations

Examples:

  • Demand Gen

  • Growth marketing

  • RevOps

  • Cybersecurity lead

Useful when job titles don’t fully capture the role.



Example searches

Recruiter targeting Figma designers

People Keywords:

  • Figma

  • UI/UX

  • Product designer

Result:
People whose profiles explicitly mention these skills.



Agency targeting ecommerce coaches

People Keywords:

  • Ecommerce coach

  • Online business mentor

  • Brand strategist

Result:
Individuals who self-identify as coaches or mentors.



Finding fractional CMOs

People Keywords:

  • Fractional CMO

Result:
A narrow, high-value segment with clear buying power.



Expected outcome

You should now see highly specific individuals who explicitly describe themselves with the skills, tools, or roles you’re targeting, even when job titles are vague or inconsistent.




Troubleshooting / FAQs

Q: Should I use People Keywords instead of Job Titles?
No. Use People Keywords in addition to Job Titles for best precision.

Q: Why is my list very small?
This filter is intentionally narrow. Not everyone mentions keywords in their profile.

Q: Can I use exclusion keywords?
Yes. Common exclusions include “student,” “intern,” or “junior.”

Q: Are longer phrases better?
No. Short keywords (1–2 words) usually perform best.



Callouts

If ListKit runs campaigns for you (Managed Program)
What ListKit handles:

  • Using People Keywords only when role-level precision is required

  • Pairing them with Job Titles to avoid over-filtering

What you should do:

  • Tell your account manager which skills or self-descriptors matter most

How to request changes:

  • Share feedback on lead relevance with your account manager



If you use ListKit self-serve (DIY)
Steps in the product:

  • Search → Filters → People Keywords

  • Add people-specific skills or descriptors

  • Pair with Job Titles for accuracy



Final takeaway

The People Keywords filter works like Company Keywords, but instead of scanning companies, it scans individual personal profiles.

Use it only when you need people who explicitly describe themselves with terms like:

  • “Google Ads”

  • “Shopify expert”

  • “Fractional CMO”

  • “Cybersecurity”

  • “Growth marketing”

It’s not for defining your market.

It’s for pinpointing the exact individuals inside that market.

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