Post by account_disabled on Dec 19, 2023 23:02:49 GMT -5
The comment adds: “personally I use LinkedIn to look for clients”. So he looks for clients and… publishes… so as not to be seen… strange. So if you want to optimize your number of views, the post remains more effective than the article. On the other hand, the posts, basically, are a real pain. I'll come back to it later. Moreover, among those who are the most critical of my content on the algorithm, we find profiles who double their articles with a post!! To ensure optimal visibility because they have noted this evolution of the algorithm. So they take into account the functioning of the algorithm while criticizing those who do it and while taking the classic posture of “that, me? Never". You speak. MDR as the other would say.
I read: “taking care of the algorithm is taking an interest in yourself” On the one Email Data hand, I could answer “yes and what’s the problem”. If we don't start by giving ourselves some attention, who will? But on the other hand, I don't agree. Taking care of the algorithm means taking an interest in others. If we are convinced that our content will be useful to others and that it will help them, they must read us. And knowledge of the algorithm can help us do this. I think we even have a duty to do it. The posts are absolute horror I hate posts. Besides, I favored articles for a very long time and only recently started posting. But I hate posts. Being forced by LinkedIn to limit what we have to say to 1,300 characters to serve their turnover requirements does not please me at all. 1,300 characters is “snacking content”.
It’s the annihilation of taking a step back and thinking. It’s teasing, quotes, rants, advice but no analysis, no reflection. The problem is not the post as such, but the post in relation to other means of communication which, as I have just explained above, are much less taken into account by LinkedIn. So, I started making posts. Why, when I hate it? Because LinkedIn doesn't really give me a choice if I want to be read and seen. And, unlike others, I assume that I publish to be seen, read and even to develop my business with new clients. For my part, moreover, articles have always been more effective than posts on this point. My best numbers are as follows (as of January 25, 2021): Article : 25 Things to Know About the Post Algorithm : 3,467 words, 20 211 characters, 40,718 views, 2,560 Likes, 1,338 comments and 374 shares, published on September 19, 2019. Post : Rant.
I read: “taking care of the algorithm is taking an interest in yourself” On the one Email Data hand, I could answer “yes and what’s the problem”. If we don't start by giving ourselves some attention, who will? But on the other hand, I don't agree. Taking care of the algorithm means taking an interest in others. If we are convinced that our content will be useful to others and that it will help them, they must read us. And knowledge of the algorithm can help us do this. I think we even have a duty to do it. The posts are absolute horror I hate posts. Besides, I favored articles for a very long time and only recently started posting. But I hate posts. Being forced by LinkedIn to limit what we have to say to 1,300 characters to serve their turnover requirements does not please me at all. 1,300 characters is “snacking content”.
It’s the annihilation of taking a step back and thinking. It’s teasing, quotes, rants, advice but no analysis, no reflection. The problem is not the post as such, but the post in relation to other means of communication which, as I have just explained above, are much less taken into account by LinkedIn. So, I started making posts. Why, when I hate it? Because LinkedIn doesn't really give me a choice if I want to be read and seen. And, unlike others, I assume that I publish to be seen, read and even to develop my business with new clients. For my part, moreover, articles have always been more effective than posts on this point. My best numbers are as follows (as of January 25, 2021): Article : 25 Things to Know About the Post Algorithm : 3,467 words, 20 211 characters, 40,718 views, 2,560 Likes, 1,338 comments and 374 shares, published on September 19, 2019. Post : Rant.