According to LinkedIn, personal profiles get significantly more reach than company pages. Businesses should shift focus from solely posting on their brand page to empowering and encouraging employees to build their personal brands and share content, amplifying overall visibility.

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Company pages can achieve more significant growth in impressions, likes, and follows by leaving well-crafted, entertaining comments on posts from industry thought leaders, rather than solely focusing on creating original in-feed posts.

LinkedIn's algorithm now favors comments. By commenting with value-add content (like memes or insights) on popular posts, a company page can gain more impressions and followers than from its own feed posts. This "post within a post" strategy is highly effective for growth.

The term "personal brand" is modern slang for the timeless concept of reputation. Social media's power is that it acts as a lever, scaling that reputation to a much wider audience than ever before. A larger, more positive reputation directly translates to a higher volume of inbound personal and professional opportunities.

Boosting posts directly from a person's profile (like a CEO or founder) performs significantly better than standard company ads. Users on LinkedIn engage more authentically with individuals than brands, leading to higher dwell times and lower costs.

The Marketing Millennials (1.2M followers) grew by 300k in one year—a 50% increase over the prior year—by shifting focus from posting to commenting. For company pages with declining reach, comments on popular posts, especially with images, can generate more impressions and faster growth than original content.

LinkedIn now shows impression metrics for comments, signaling their importance. Strategically leaving thoughtful, entertaining comments on others' posts can drive more page growth and followers than original feed posts. Treat comments like mini-posts to test content ideas.

Your LinkedIn profile should not be a resume listing your accomplishments. Instead, frame it as a mini-landing page that speaks directly to your ideal customer's pain points and showcases how you provide value and tangible results for them.

LinkedIn shows impressions on comments, allowing marketers to prove ROI. A strategic commenting plan can now be a core part of a content strategy, sometimes yielding more reach than original posts. This shifts focus from just publishing to engaging with others.

LinkedIn now lets users see how many people save a post or send it in a private DM. These are strong signals to the platform's algorithm, indicating high-quality content. Focusing on creating content that encourages these actions can significantly boost organic circulation beyond simple likes and comments.

The context in which content is consumed matters. Users browse LinkedIn with a professional and business-oriented mindset, making them far more receptive to listings, deals, and industry insights than when they are on entertainment- or family-focused platforms.