The Biggest Problem With LinkedIn, And How You Can Fix It.
Justin Welsh
Building my one-person business to $10M in revenue and sharing everything I learn along the way.
LinkedIn has a social interaction problem.
Our feeds are made up of thousands of pieces of content from people we are "connected" with, regardless of whether we truly choose to follow them or not.
After some time (especially once you have a large audience) the feed is muddied and it becomes hard to find and interact with your favorite content creators.
I've found a simple 5 step workaround that helps me interact with my favorite creators and continue building my audience at a rapid pace.
I call it "Creating A Social Ecosystem".
Cheers,
Justin
Luxury Hospitality & Influencer Travel Management | 360 Talent (HR) Executive
3 年Asking creators for time, this is brilliant, Justin!
Personal Brand Strategist & Networking Coach → Helping entrepreneurs & executives build brands that attract clients, talent & opportunity | Family Man | Superconnector | AI & ?lockchain ?ull | Hot Sauce Aficionado???
3 年Very smart. Ariel Lee you're onto something for sure...!!!!
Predictable data migration without data loss | Data Integration and Warehouse | Align data with business goals
3 年I think you shared this tip in a post a while back and it got me thinking about consistency and how that can impact growth. You can build a list of these people because they are consistent and perhaps post once a day. A bit more difficult for voracious posters who keep it going all day. Great point about the feed. Sometimes you find gems but other times it is a bizarre collection of posts about everything you don't particularly care about. As always, great post Justin Welsh.
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3 年LinkedIn is quirky. There are so many things I love about the platform - but almost every time I'm here I bump into something I'd like to change. But what I've found is that while some things aren't immediately intuitive, hacks like this are extremely useful for making a better UX. Thanks Justin!