Making it onto LinkedIn Lunatics: a blessing or a curse?
Faris Aranki - Strategy and Emotional Intelligence
SUCCESS = IQ x EQ x FQ I help organisations & individuals be more effective today than they were yesterday by providing innovative, emotionally-intelligent facilitation, training and speaking to improve IQ, EQ and FQ
“We’re running a sweepstake in the office about how long it’ll be before you make it onto LinkedIn Lunatics”
So, said a friend of mine a year ago.
At the time I didn’t know what LinkedIn Lunatics was but now I very much do ??
What is LinkedIn Lunatics?
For those who don’t know it’s a thread on Reddit (a social media platform where users submit content and it gets voted and commented on — not usually in a positive way).
This particular thread was set up with the following mission: “ Sharing and discussing the LinkedIn characters who post a mix of rampant virtue signalling, cringeworthy titles, and other such stories”.
It appears one of my recent posts was sufficiently signalling, cringeworthy and more to have made it to the thread ??.
What was the post?and?what?happened?
The post itself was one of my weekly updates on my H1 2025 goals. It had been a frustrating week and I hadn’t actually made much progress against my goals so I was owning up to that.
The mistake I made was including a rather shocking photo of my toenail which had fallen off?—?this was to highlight the impact of overindexing on one of my goals (running ??♂?) to compensate that the other 8 had not really progressed at all.
I’ll hold my hands up and admit that I should never have posted that picture because within 10 minutes a friend of mine messaged me to say that it wasn’t appropriate and I took it down once I saw his message [which was about one hour after the original post].
I then had to go out for a meeting.
The meeting lasted a couple of hours, during which I didn’t check my phone ??
However when I stepped out I noticed several missed calls and hundreds of messages ??.
It seemed not only had my post blown up on LinkedIn [for some reason LinkedIn still had it up] but that my post had been screen captured and shared on LinkedIn Lunatics ??.
I immediately took down the post for a second time and then headed over to LinkedIn Lunatics to see what was being discussed.
I almost wish I hadn’t…
What did I find on LinkedIn Lunatics?
By the time I got there my post was trending and had over 200 comments and 1000 votes.
To be fair many of the comments were humorous and more about how ridiculous LinkedIn is.
Some comments actually offered running and podiatry advice to avoid toe nail injuries.
However those were the minority.
Most comments made personal slurs, in particular:
There was a particular sub-thread that discussed my ethnicity and contained racist remarks [to be honest this is something I have become used to since I proudly started referencing my Palestinian roots and adopted the #PositivePalestinian hashtag on LinkedIn].
What’s more, people seem genuinely disappointed that I’d taken down the post thus depriving them of their fun.
What happened next?
I have to admit, it hit me hard and I was shocked, saddened, angered, distraught and much more.
I couldn’t really think of anything else that evening so I abandoned the remainder of my plans for the day and actually ended up going to bed early????.
Before that though a raft of thoughts flooded my mind:
For a brief moment, it gave me an insight as to what it must be like to actually be in the public eye with so much written about you that isn’t positive.
It reminded about a statement a successful friend once said to me:
“Trust me, you don’t ever want to be famous or to go viral”
To be honest in the last 3 years since I started posting every day on LinkedIn, writing a weekly blog, recording 2–3 podcasts a week and gaining a following I’ve seen more and more the negative aspects of social media as I have encountered trolls, stalkers and more.
Still, there are always?takeaways
It would have been easy to just forget about this incident and move on but that’s not me and I’ve always committed to using LinkedIn like a journal, sharing the highs and lows of being a Start-up Founder.
Having slept on it, my takeaways are:
Looking for a positive spin: It’s actually useful to see an unfiltered review of how you come across to a stranger…and LinkedIn Lunatics certainly facilitates that.
Funnily enough, one day?on, the incident doesn’t seem to have effected my LinkedIn metrics. If anything I’ve had hundreds of people check out my profile in the last 24 hours and a few new followers so I hope they, and you, enjoyed the read.
I suspect a few of you may now go check out the LinkedIn Lunatics page and I’m OK with that; you do what you gotta do.
Whatever you do, whoever you are, as ever, it’s a pleasure to have you along for the journey ??
Faris
Faris is the CEO and Founder of Shiageto Consulting, an innovative consultancy that helps firms and individuals sharpen their effectiveness. Connect with him here
Success = IQ x EQ x FQ
Senior Manager | Transformation Specialist
1 周Thanks Faris. Elegantly put and useful lessons here on dealing with unexpected set backs and adversity. Glad you shared this and a useful reminder on the human impact of anonymous posters. Keep up the sharing and look forward to seeing how the goals progress. Another run maybe? ??
I help people achieve their next breakthrough | Amazon, ex-P&G
1 周"The Internet" is fast, never forget that!
SUCCESS = IQ x EQ x FQ I help organisations & individuals be more effective today than they were yesterday by providing innovative, emotionally-intelligent facilitation, training and speaking to improve IQ, EQ and FQ
1 周Just a flavour of the great comments I received
Giving wings to your words with translations from German and Italian to English and English-language proofreading and editing services
1 周I think I saw the original post and didn't think anything of it Faris, darling! So many people with so much time on their hands, wish I had that much leisure... ??