When I started my business β Revel Impact, a workplace inclusivity consultancy β I realized that LinkedIn would be part of my marketing and business development strategy. LinkedIn is a natural place to connect with clients because itβs a platform for professionals. But the impact of LinkedIn on my business growth became even more profound when I started putting myself out there in an authentic way.
The morning it all changed was not a fun one: As I was headed into a coffee shop to start my work day, a woman decided to hurl some vaguely threatening and very graphic lesbian slurs at me. It wasnβt extraordinaryβthis wasnβt the first time this happened, and it wouldnβt be the lastβbut as I sat down to try and work, I couldnβt get her words out of my head.
One of my tasks for this morning was to finalize a LinkedIn post. I already had one drafted, but I wondered: Should I post about this experience instead? It was clearly affecting my ability to work, and therefore was relevant to LinkedInβbut was it too personal? While I was already posting about similar topics, I hadnβt gotten this specific or shared about my personal life before. I didnβt want sympathy, so how could I post in a way that was productive? How would my clients respond if they saw it?
I decided to post it. It performed like a typical post in the beginningβa handful of reactions and commentsβbut within the next few hours, the post garnered a few thousand reactions, over 500,000 impressions, and hundreds of comments.
Within the next four months or so, I would grow my LinkedIn presence from 1,000 followers to 10,000. (As of writing, Iβm currently at about 14,000 and am a LinkedIn Top Voice of 2022.) About 90 percent of my business leads come through LinkedIn posts. Iβve secured over 40,000 in speaking engagements just from LinkedIn. Iβve been invited to speak on about a dozen podcasts. I received an invitation to write for Harvard Business Review in a LinkedIn message and recently had my first article published. A publisher has even reached out via LinkedIn to inquire if Iβd like to write a book
So, how did all of this happen?
Iβm not a brand strategist or marketer. I donβt have any other social media platforms besides LinkedIn. I built my platform mostly by being myself. Here are the pillars that help guide my content strategy. I hope they can be just as game-changing for your business as they have been for mine.
I focus on stories that tie to the bigger picture
As a diversity, equity, and inclusion consultancy, much of our content on LinkedIn highlights the importance of being who we are at work and provides tangible resources or tips to create workplaces where business and people thrive. However, Iβve found that when that advice is rooted in storytelling, the posts have so much more impact.
For example, I recently wanted to write a post about the stigma around asking for disability accommodations. I could have simply written β give disabled people accommodationsβ but that wouldnβt have resonated. Instead, my LinkedIn post focused on a specific moment I had in the airport, using it to exemplify the point I was trying to make. By drawing people in with a story, theyβre able to better connect with the human experience behind the point Iβm trying to make, even if itβs not an experience theyβve had themselves. The post currently has 950,000 impressions, I received 8 inbound leads, 2,500 new followers, and 3 requests to speak on podcasts from this one post.
When Iβm brainstorming LinkedIn posts now, I choose one trend or point to highlight and then find a specific, meaningful moment to exemplify it. It doesnβt have to be something life-changing to be a meaningful story. For example, if you are announcing a new website, think about how you felt the moment before or after you pressed publish. Think about a conversation you had with the developer. Choose one specific moment to engage your audience.
LinkedIn is a professional platform, but professionals are people and people connect to stories. They will see themselves in the moments you are describing and connect with them. They will want to let you know they connect with you by commenting and reactingβand thatβs how your posts will gain traction.
Iβve made my own best practices
There are so many βexpertsβ on LinkedIn who share their top tips for getting engagement. But, after following them for some time, I started to notice that most of the people giving advice are cisgender, white, neurotypical men. How they post on LinkedIn wonβt work for my autistic, trans, Jewish, queer self.
I found that the best way for me to succeed on LinkedIn was to create my own best practices that would keep me showing up consistently, but in a way that was more feasible for me. These include:
- Posting twice a week at the same time: LinkedIn rewards users for consistency but I knew that I could never commit to posting every day. I also knew that it would stress me out to try and figure out an optimal posting time. Instead, I post every Tuesday and Thursday at 11:30 am because thatβs what works for me. Even if itβs not the most optimal time, Iβm able to do it consistentlyβwhich is better than not doing it at all.
- Engaging with posts in time blocks: The LinkedIn algorithm looks at how much engagement your post receives in the first two hours to determine how much traction it will get in the days and weeks to come. The more engagement it gets, the more people will see it. So, I pay close attention to the post within the first two hours, responding to every commentβbut then I take a break to give my autistic, introvert self some rest. After these first two hours, I have time blocks where I will check LinkedIn to respond to comments and messages.
- Skipping a content calendar for observational note taking: I have tried to keep a content calendar to develop posts but Iβm not able to maintain one. Instead, Iβve found it better to keep a running document of observations and notes for LinkedIn. When Iβm ready to write, I think about the specific point I want to make, check my general topic buckets, and then use my notes to craft the post.
- Creating a post template: To help facilitate content creation, I created my own structure for each of my posts. I start with a meaningful moment, then elaborate and provide context. Next, I provide resources, tips, or suggestions, directly calling out the audience Iβm speaking to (e.g., for those navigating disabilities at work or for DEI professionals). Finally, I end with a soft call to action (e.g., invite me to speak to your team or schedule a call to learn more). Having a streamlined structure makes it so I typically spend less than two hours a week on LinkedIn content creation.
These are the best practices that work for me, but they might not exactly work for you. I created based on trial and error to see what would allow me to be consistent and create content that felt right to me. I encourage you to use these best practices as a guide to create your own.
Iβve reconsidered what βshouldβ be on LinkedIn
Like I mentioned above, the idea of sharing some of my more vulnerable or personal moments on LinkedIn was initially nerve-wrackingβit didnβt feel like those stories belonged on this professional network. But Iβve come to realize that the idea that there is a strict boundary between our personal and professional lives was never true. We always brought our full selves to work, we just didnβt talk about it.
Iβve come to find that sharing how my personal experiences affect me at work is a strength, not a weakness. People hire me because they connect with my story, they appreciate knowing my values, and they trust me because Iβm willing to be open.
Iβve also found it is possible to share your personal experience while still having boundaries. For example, when I post about being trans, itβs often about the barriers I face, peopleβs reactions to me, or the resources I need to succeed. Itβs very rarely about how I feel about being trans or my personal experience transitioning. I donβt feel vulnerable because my focus is not on myself or my need to processβitβs using my personal experiences to highlight what people can do to support trans communities at work and everywhere else.
We all have unique stories. Maybe youβre a caregiver or a parent. Maybe you grew up in a small town. Maybe youβre the only woman on your team and have been for decades. Whatever your experiences are, they belong on LinkedIn. They shape how you work. Being yourself will help you grow your platform and it will help you build your business. We canβt really be anyone else but ourselvesβso why not embrace it?
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