LinkedIn reported double-digit growth in video uploads but notably omitted data on video engagement or watch time. This suggests that while marketers are following the platform's advice to post video, it may not be yielding results. Marketers must analyze what platforms *don't* report.
A month with 25% fewer views can generate a record number of leads if the content is highly targeted to the right audience. This proves that viewer quality and intent are far more valuable for lead generation than raw view count, a common vanity metric.
Platforms optimize for their own goals, not yours. Don't mistake their vanity metrics (views, likes) for key business drivers. A clip with 100 million views can have an imperceptible impact on core goals like long-form downloads or newsletter sign-ups. Constantly ask "why" a metric matters to avoid platform capture.
Conventional engagement metrics like likes and shares are often misleading. A more valuable indicator of content quality is dwell time. In an environment where users can easily skip content, their choice to spend more time with an ad is a powerful behavioral signal that the message is resonating.
When a social platform like LinkedIn introduces a new feature, such as "comment impressions," it's a direct signal of what behavior the algorithm will now favor. Prioritizing and testing these new features immediately can lead to outsized reach as you align with the platform's strategic goals.
YouTube's algorithm now reads the full video transcript, making traditional keyword SEO obsolete. Success depends on optimizing for the recommendation feed, which drives 70% of traffic, by maximizing click-through rate and average view duration.
Simply posting content and leaving—or 'posting and ghosting'—is ineffective. LinkedIn's algorithm prioritizes posts that generate conversation. Engaging with comments, especially within the first couple of hours, is critical for signaling value and maximizing your content's reach.
While AI tools dramatically increase content production speed, true ROI is not measured in output. Leaders should track incremental engagement, conversion lift, and revenue per message. An often overlooked KPI is brand consistency—how often content passes governance checks on the first try.
Overly polished video content in B2B can signal "advertisement" to users, causing them to disengage. Lower-fidelity, more authentic content often performs better because it feels more organic and native to social media feeds, focusing on the message rather than slick production.
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's report on 2026 small business trends uses "predictive" and "hopeful" language. This isn't just an analysis of the past; it's a signal to creators about the type of content (like video) and behavior the platform wants to promote, effectively revealing their future algorithm priorities.