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Your LinkedIn strategy should adapt based on the prospect's activity. If a prospect accepts your connection request but doesn't post content, pitch them immediately in the DMs. Reserve the multi-week "warm-up" strategy of commenting and engaging only for the 10% of prospects who are actively posting on the platform.

Related Insights

The LinkedIn algorithm interprets direct messaging as a strong signal of connection. By engaging with a prospect in their DMs, you increase the probability that your organic posts will be prioritized and shown in their feed, creating a powerful content and outreach loop.

To maximize visibility and build relationships, you must give more than you take on LinkedIn. For every piece of content you post, you should engage (like or comment) on ten other people's posts. This not only satisfies the algorithm but also makes you matter to prospects before you ever ask for anything.

Don't just track whether a prospect accepts your LinkedIn request; track the speed of acceptance. A quick response (within a day or week) indicates the person is active on the platform and more likely to engage with a follow-up message. A month-long delay suggests they are a less immediate or engaged prospect.

For prospects actively posting on LinkedIn, delay your pitch. Instead, turn on their post notifications and meaningfully engage with their content for one to two weeks. This "warm-up" period makes them familiar with you, significantly increasing the likelihood they'll accept a meeting when you finally reach out.

The list of people who recently viewed your profile is a source of pre-qualified leads. Initiate contact with a personalized connection request based on a non-sales commonality (e.g., location). If they accept, follow up by offering value, not a sales pitch.

To connect with high-level professionals, consistently like and add intelligent comments to their posts for a month or two. This builds name recognition, making them far more likely to accept a subsequent personalized connection request because they'll recognize you.

After a new LinkedIn connection is accepted, send a short video or voice message. The goal is not to pitch, but simply to introduce yourself and establish that you are a real person. This humanizing step breaks through the noise and builds rapport for a future sales conversation.

To turn likes and comments into leads, time block one hour daily for the 5-3-1 rule: engage with 5 prospects, send 3 thoughtful event/webinar invites, and make 1 new connection request. This systemizes activity for pipeline growth.

Instead of a direct "just following up" message, tag your prospect in a relevant industry post on LinkedIn. This provides value, gives them visibility, and serves as a subtle reminder, positioning you as a helpful resource rather than a persistent seller.

Instead of sending a cold connection request, first find a prospect's recent post and leave a thoughtful comment. This "pre-engagement" warms up the interaction, making your subsequent personalized connection request far more likely to be accepted because you are no longer a stranger.