Here's What I Tell People When They Ask How to Crush it as a LinkedIn Writer
Photo: The Hamster Factory, Flickr

Here's What I Tell People When They Ask How to Crush it as a LinkedIn Writer

In the spring of 2014, we rolled out the ability for any to publish long-form content on LinkedIn. Our goal was simple: to allow anyone, anywhere to share their unique expertise with the professional world. Nearly 2 million professionals have now published a piece, generating over 150,000 posts a week. 

Those big numbers make it sound like writing is easy for everyone. It's not. Below, I've pulled together seven tips generated from watching reader patterns over the years that I hope will help newcomers and regular posters. (I also recorded a companion course on Lynda.com; check it out!). If you're looking for examples of writers who are regularly connecting with their audiences, read — and follow — the Top Voices of 2015, a ranked look at the top 10 writers on LinkedIn in industries like education, marketing, venture capital, etc.

Just want to get started? Click here. Want the 7 tips? Read on:

1. Write What You Know

Plumb your professional world to come up with topics. What tricks do you employ every day that make your work life easier? What failures have had along the way that helped turn you into a success? What inspired you to do what you do? Use the details from your life to help others be better in theirs.

You can also use LinkedIn as a sounding board: Share your big ideas about how to reshape the economy or about what disruption is coming next (and why everyone is missing it). Explain why you think one firm is doing well and another dying. Then use the wisdom of the professional crowd to refine, reshape or just debate.

Here are three examples from professionals who relied on "write what you know" to create content that performed phenomenally well on LinkedIn:

2. Write often

Shorter and frequent beats the reverse. Get your thoughts out there and let your commenters help you craft your next big idea. Find something that works and keep iterating on it. Don't wait for perfect. 

Our data finds that 800-2,000 words is the sweet spot for encouraging engagement, but it's more important to write to what the content demands vs what the data suggests.

3. Remember your audience

LinkedIn is comprised of more than 400 million executives, entrepreneurs, entry-level and exiting workers — basically the working world in one place. Be conversational, but keep the conversation focused on the professional sphere. And remember that your readers are busy; an email, IM, phone call or conversation is always about to lure them away. Employ photos, bold headings, lists and infographics whenever you can. And, above all, always be interesting.

4. Pay attention to the headline

A great headline carries a lot of weight: It can draw in readers who might otherwise skim and move on; it can help keep you focused while you're writing (some writers will come up with the headline first before writing a word of the post -- I did here); it can give search engines valuable information. One rule to remember: Clear beats clever; use puns or jokes sparingly. And don't try to trick people by offering a headline that doesn't pay off in the text; there's no better way to anger your readers and stop them from coming back.

The tip I recommend to everyone is to write 5-10 headlines and then send those to a group of friends or colleagues. Ask them, "Which headline would you click on, assuming you didn't know the author of the post?" [Note: If one headline isn't working, test others. This post, for example, used to be called the 7 Secrets to Writing Great Content on LinkedIn, but we find that listicles are bad for engagement — though fine for raw clicks — so I changed it.]

5. When Facing the Blank Page, Consider Law & Order

Dick Wolf had the right idea. When Law & Order needed material, it turned to the news. Do the same: Find an acquisition that is generating headlines and explain why it's good or bad. Or talk about your own experience buying or selling companies. Some big name recently get promoted/hired/arrested? Offer tips on what he or she has to do next. Use the news as a conversation starter.

Three examples:

6. Always attribute

Give credit wherever and whenever you can: whether quoting, citing or using images. When in doubt, attribute. Use links and source lines liberally (and, of course, make sure you have the rights to the images you're using).

7. Share!

When you've published, tell your network, send to friends, post on Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, let your colleagues and employees know. (Also, if you write something that deserve a wide readership beyond your network, let @LinkedInEditors know by following this tip from the Writing on LinkedIn Group.) Get the word out to build a strong following. The more you share, the bigger your audience and the more impact you'll have.

Finally, if you want to get deeper into the weeds about how your post attracts an audience, check out my article: "What Happens After You Hit Publish."

What do you think? If you've been writing, what are your killer tips? And if you haven't been, what's holding you back?


(Post updated 1/5/17: Changed "@LinkedInPulse" to "@LinkedInEditors." Post updated 2/11/15: New headline, new member stats. Post updated 12/3/15: Embedded Lynda.com course.)

Marco Fernández

Business Development Manager en OnLean.

3y

Very good article, Indeed. Thanks for sharing. On my way to publishing my first one now... 🤞

Esther Silván

Your bilingual LinkedIn Mentor | Transforming entrepreneurs like YOU into industry leaders 🚀 with personal brand and social selling strategies | Digital Strategy → Personal Branding → Prospecting and Sales

3y

Very useful article, thanks! 🙂

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Q Jé

🎼 Composing dark, edgy, compulsive, intense music. It's sometimes playful, often serious, occasionally unsettling, scary, unremitting and doom-laden 😱

3y

Even revisiting this after 7 years is worth reading. #audioengineer

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Alexandre Teixeira Tavares, CPM

Consultor de Marketing e Gestão de Conteúdo | Especialista em Apresentações Corporativas | Professor e Palestrante de Marketing

4y

Great article! Tks for sharing your thoughts! Congrats from Brazil!

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Mat Hargett

Project & Program Manager | Sales | Dad

4y

Daniel Roth I am relatively new to LinkedIn (in the "active" sense).  One thing that struck me as odd/confusing was when I went to read this article, it stated "Published on Oct 1, 2012."  Based on that, I almost closed the window on my browser, but then I saw the first phrase "In the spring of 2014" which I found confusing enough to keep me reading.  Then, after I read the entire article (which was very good), I realized that it was updated 12/3/2015).  Why doesn't LinkedIn at least show the most recent update at the top of the article/page?  That would eliminate reader confusion/alienation before even getting to the first word.  I have other suggestions for LinkedIn, also, though I do not know where to input feedback.  Thanks for the article.  I am working on my first one right now...

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