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Research shows a post's vitality is determined quickly, as half of its total impressions are served in the first two days. This means marketers must prioritize responding to comments immediately after posting to signal engagement and fuel the algorithm for maximum reach.
The LinkedIn feed's algorithm has shifted. Instead of a post's success being determined by engagement in the first hour, content can now gain significant traction 24 to 48 hours later as the platform serves it to new, relevant interest groups. This favors consistency over perfect timing.
According to a LinkedIn product head, the algorithm's main virality mechanism is "comment density." It favors posts that spark substantive, multi-reply conversations over those with many superficial comments like "nice post." Marketers should aim to create deep dialogues.
A Buffer analysis of two million posts shows a non-linear return on posting frequency. While posting 2-5 times weekly adds 1,000 views to future posts, increasing frequency to 6-10 times quintuples that boost to over 5,000 additional impressions per post, demonstrating a significant algorithmic reward for high activity.
"Set it and forget it" is a death sentence for automated social media posts. To maximize reach and performance, treat the moment a scheduled post goes live as an event. Be present to interact with comments within the first hour to signal activity to the platform's algorithm, preventing the post from being "dead on arrival."
LinkedIn's algorithm has shifted. Initial engagement is no longer the sole predictor of a post's success. Content can now gain significant traction 24-48 hours later as it's served to new, interest-based audiences, making consistent posting on off-days or holidays more viable than before.
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.
LinkedIn's algorithm prioritizes posts that are quickly saved and shared. By saving your own post and sending it to about 10 contacts within minutes of it going live, you provide positive initial signals that can significantly boost its reach and engagement.
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.
Simply posting content isn't enough to maximize reach. The key is to actively reply to comments on your own posts and to leave thoughtful, value-adding comments on others' content. This "networking effect" is the true driver of engagement.
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.