The platform where B2B deals get made. LinkedIn has 950M professionals—and compared to every other platform, it has the least competition for attention from real decision-makers.
Quick Hits
Best Time To Post
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday consistently outperform Monday and Friday. Peak engagement window: 9–11 AM and 12–3 PM during business hours (audience's local time).
The 11 AM–12 PM window is the single highest-performing slot based on aggregate data across industries. Morning posts (before 8 AM) and evening posts (after 6 PM) perform significantly worse—this audience is professionals checking LinkedIn during the workday, not in their leisure time.
Posting Frequency
2–5 posts per week is the proven sweet spot. Data from Buffer shows that 2–5 weekly posts generate roughly 1,200 more impressions per post compared to posting once a week.
If you can commit to 5+ posts per week with consistent quality, you'll see compounding growth. Power users posting 11+ times per week see nearly 3x the engagement of once-weekly posters.
Important: consistency and quality always beat frequency. Three genuinely useful posts per week outperforms five filler posts every time. LinkedIn audiences are sophisticated—they notice when you're padding.
Who It's Really For
LinkedIn is for B2B creators, service providers, consultants, coaches, and anyone whose customers are professionals making workplace decisions.
The demographic is uniquely valuable: 34% of US LinkedIn users earn over $100K per year. 53% are in high-income households. These are people with purchasing authority—not teenagers watching videos.
LinkedIn works especially well if you're selling high-ticket services, building authority in a professional niche, recruiting, or driving newsletter subscriptions. It's less effective for consumer products, entertainment, or any audience that skews under 25.
What It Rewards
LinkedIn's algorithm changed fundamentally in early 2026. The mantra from researchers studying it is 'less broadcast, more precision.' Your content now gets distributed to 2–5% of your network first. If those initial viewers engage meaningfully, it distributes more broadly.
What meaningful engagement means here is different from other platforms. LinkedIn values 'Depth Score'—a new 2026 metric measuring how long people actually engage with your content. A post that 50 people read for 30 seconds outperforms one with 500 quick likes.
Comments are the most powerful visible signal—especially substantive ones. A post with 50 genuine comments will outreach a post with 500 likes every time. And external links in posts see roughly 60% less reach than identical posts without links. LinkedIn wants you to keep people on LinkedIn.
Practical Moves
- Put your hook in the first line—LinkedIn shows only 2–3 lines before "See more." If your first sentence doesn't earn the click, your reach suffers. Treat the first 200 characters like a subject line.
- Create PDF carousel posts on topics you know deeply. Format them as checklists, frameworks, or step-by-step guides. These are the highest-performing format on the platform by engagement rate.
- Put external links in the first comment instead of the post body. Write "Link in first comment ↓" in the post itself. This sidesteps LinkedIn's 60% link penalty and still drives traffic.
- Engage with others' content strategically—leave substantive comments (2–3 sentences) on posts by people in your target audience. Their connections see your comment, giving you free distribution into new networks.
- Start a LinkedIn Newsletter. Newsletters get distributed to your entire connection list via email notification—a reach boost no other LinkedIn format gets.
- Reply to every comment, especially in the first hour. Each reply triggers another notification to the commenter, which brings them back to the post and extends its engagement window.
Hook Ideas
- "[Specific number] things I learned from [experience or failure] that I wish I knew at the start"
- "The most common [industry] mistake costs teams [cost/time]—here's how to avoid it"
- "I spent [time] analyzing [data/companies/results]. Here's what I found."
- "Hot take: [contrarian professional opinion]. Here's the data behind it."
- "I made [professional mistake] that cost [amount/time]. Here's the exact lesson."
- "Most [job title/professionals] overlook this. I've seen it kill [outcomes] at 3 different companies."
What Feels Tired
Inspirational quote graphics with zero original thought. 'I'm excited to announce...' posts that celebrate something only the poster cares about. Motivational Monday content that could have been written by anyone. 'Just landed my dream job' posts that are actually subtle humble brags. Engagement bait ('Tag someone who needs this motivation!'). Generic 'lessons from my morning routine' posts.
Making Money Here
LinkedIn money paths for creators and professionals:
1. Lead generation for services. LinkedIn's conversion rate is 2.74%—the highest of any social platform. For consultants, coaches, and agencies, consistent LinkedIn content is a pipeline generator that works while you sleep.
2. Sponsored newsletters. LinkedIn began allowing newsletter sponsorships in July 2024. If you have a LinkedIn Newsletter with a meaningful subscriber count, brands will pay to sponsor individual issues.
3. LinkedIn Learning. If you're a deep expert in something teachable, LinkedIn Learning courses can generate passive income at scale. LinkedIn actively promotes Learning content to its 950M user base.
4. Affiliate marketing. LinkedIn is excellent for recommending software tools, books, and professional resources. The audience has budget authority and buying intent. Include affiliate links in your first comment (not the post body) to avoid the reach penalty.
5. Speaking and consulting. LinkedIn is the world's largest professional networking event. A strong LinkedIn presence consistently generates inbound speaking invitations, consulting inquiries, and partnership opportunities.
Platform Health 2026
LinkedIn is financially healthy and strategically important to Microsoft (which acquired it for $26B in 2016). It's not going anywhere.
The challenge in 2026 is the 'less broadcast, more precision' shift—organic reach has declined by roughly 50% for many creators over the past 18 months. The platform is increasingly rewarding niche expertise over broad motivational content.
This is actually good news for focused creators. If you know your subject deeply and post consistently for a specific professional audience, you'll outperform the generic 'thought leaders' who dominated the platform 3 years ago.
Recommended Tools for LinkedIn
These are the tools we actually recommend for this platform—scheduling, analytics, design, and growth. No need to go hunting.
Experts to Follow
Your LinkedIn Strategy in Plain English
Your LinkedIn strategy in plain English: Pick one professional topic you know better than most people. Post 3–5 times a week sharing what you know in a direct, specific way.
Put your hook in the first line. Never put external links in the post body—always in the first comment. Create PDF carousels when you have something worth explaining deeply. Reply to every comment fast.
LinkedIn compounds. A year of consistent, expert posting builds a lead-generation machine that most paid ad campaigns can't match—because the audience comes with purchase intent already built in.
Explore the Full Toolkit
See all the scheduling, analytics, and design tools we recommend across every platform—with notes on what each one is actually good for.