Building an audience on platforms like X (Twitter) is incredibly difficult because you're competing with world-class writers. In contrast, the standard for content on LinkedIn is much lower, making it significantly easier for founders and marketers to stand out, be authentic, and build a following.
The primary reason new LinkedIn content gets no traction isn't poor quality, but a lack of an initial audience. Before focusing on content creation, prioritize building a relevant network through connection requests and engagement to ensure people actually see your posts.
Five years ago, a B2B organic strategy meant SEO. Today, it's about social channels. A company's organic presence is defined by what its CEO, employees, and users are posting on platforms like X and LinkedIn, making "building in public" and community engagement the new pillars of organic growth.
Treat social platforms as distinct tools. Use TikTok's wide-reaching algorithm for top-of-funnel discovery and lead generation. In contrast, use LinkedIn for daily, consistent posting to build deep trust and nurture a loyal "crew" of followers.
Don't dismiss LinkedIn as just for B2B. Its organic reach is powerful and underleveraged. Users are in a business-focused mindset, making them receptive to a different style of content than on entertainment-driven platforms, creating a unique opportunity for brand distribution.
Don't chase virality on LinkedIn. Millie posted daily for 1,000+ days, focusing on building a reputation for consistency and trust. The payoff wasn't a single viral post, but a deep-seated industry reputation that led to speaking engagements and being recognized as a thought leader.
LinkedIn currently has more user attention than available content, creating an arbitrage opportunity for B2B marketers. This imbalance makes organic reach incredibly high, mirroring the early, highly-effective days of Facebook's business platform.
Most businesses view LinkedIn as a B2B platform or resume site. It has evolved into a social network with massive organic reach where users often scroll during work hours to avoid their tasks, making them a captive audience for all types of content, not just professional topics.
B2B SaaS companies selling to specific verticals (like car dealerships) should stop broadcasting on all channels. Instead, they must focus on LinkedIn, creating native content as if for TikTok and then using targeted ads to amplify winning posts to their ideal customer profile.
The TBPN hosts view LinkedIn not as a stuffy professional network, but as a frontier for engaging tech news content. They're actively hiring to understand and optimize for its unique algorithm and culture, seeing it as an "unwashed mass" ripe for education.
The most strategic use of LinkedIn is to treat it as your primary blog for business and marketing insights. This reframe from "social channel" to "media channel" builds an invaluable asset that generates credibility, relationships, and revenue.