What content performs best on LinkedIn?
Discover the secrets behind LinkedIn’s most successful content in this comprehensive guide. Drawing from expert insights across various industries, this article reveals the strategies that truly resonate with professionals on the platform. From humanizing your company to sharing authentic stories, learn how to create engaging content that drives results on LinkedIn.
- Humanize Your Company with Milestone Content
- Storytelling and Simplicity Drive Masterclass Signups
- Vulnerability and Insight Build Trust
- AI’s Role in Marketing Sparks Curiosity
- Clarity and Honesty Resonate in Branding
- Serve Your Audience with Timely Solutions
- Practical SEO Education Challenges Conventions
- Data-Driven Storytelling Engages Media Executives
- Visual Simplification Captures Attention Instantly
- Cheatsheets and Infographics Provide Quick Value
- Tactical Local SEO Victories Beat Theory
- Real Situations Outperform Generic Advice
- Align SEO, PPC, and CRO for Success
- Short Videos and Customer Stories Drive Engagement
- Hands-On Demonstrations Outshine Product Shots
- Tactical Finance Breakdowns Dominate LinkedIn
- Process-Focused Content Solves Scaling Problems
- Storytelling with Impact Data Drives Donations
- Workforce Transformation Insights Spark Conversations
- Behind-the-Scenes Marketing Strategies Engage Realtors
- Authentic Wine Travel Stories Captivate Professionals
- Problem-Solving Content Resonates with UK Professionals
- Human Touch Shines Through in Video Content
- Operational Transparency Impacts Patient Care
- Authentic Stories Outperform Polished Content
- Real Problem-Solving Stories Engage QA Professionals
Humanize Your Company with Milestone Content
Back-end company milestone content performs very well on LinkedIn as it humanizes our agency and provides proof of growth that potential clients can find reassuring. Our audience is interested in working with successful companies, and celebrating wins is a measure of stability and expertise that helps to make them more confident in ours.
Our highest-performing post commemorated our 5th anniversary by highlighting some of our milestones: “Five years ago, Thrive Local was 3 people in shared office space. Today, we’re 18 staff members strong and have assisted 240+ local businesses in improving their online presence. Our clients added over $4.2M in revenue this year just from better digital marketing.” We used pictures from our beginning combined with our current staff photos and success stats of our clients.
This post performed well because it told a story that entrepreneurs could easily empathize with, while also demonstrating proof that we were successful in what we were doing. Growth stories resonate with business owners because they build trust that we “get” their problems and can deliver solutions. Because we’re sharing authentic milestones, specifically including client results, LinkedIn users are comfortable getting involved: They’re participating in real business outcomes, not content that feels like an ad instead of a community celebration.
Brandon George
Director of Demand Generation & Content, Thrive Internet Marketing Agency
Storytelling and Simplicity Drive Masterclass Signups
Here’s a post I did recently to drive traffic to a masterclass I was putting on: LinkedIn Post
So far, it’s had 412 reactions – and led to around 150 signups.
There are a few reasons I’d attribute this success to:
1. Storytelling-focused
Everyone talks about storytelling posts, but it’s for good reason. I picked out a part of my story that my current target audience is also experiencing. I thought about the actions I was taking and the situation I was in to show that I understand who I’m talking to.
2. Format
Photo-based posts aren’t suitable for every type of post and goal, but when the goal involves generating visibility, they are a great way to go. They take up a lot of room on the screen and help your audience pick you out super quickly (and remember you too!).
3. Simplicity for viewer
I included all the information upfront: date, timezones, and information about the replay. Then the only thing my audience needed to do was comment or DM me “masterclass”. From there, I was able to message each person individually to grab their email to send the invite to.
This saved them from accessing a landing page and having to leave LinkedIn to be part of the webinar.
Lulu Godfrey
LinkedIn Strategist, Ampyrsand Marketing
Vulnerability and Insight Build Trust
I’m Jeff Mains, a five-time founder and CEO of Champion Leadership Group, where I help SaaS and professional service leaders scale with purpose and precision.
The post that resonated most with my audience was when I opened up about a leadership mistake I made during a scaling phase. I shared how I had delayed replacing a key executive out of loyalty, even though the business had outgrown their role. That decision caused a six-month stall and created internal friction. In the post, I walked through how I handled the transition, what I learned, and why trying to protect people from hard truths can sometimes do more harm than good.
That post took off because it was real. I wasn’t offering a framework or a listicle. I was saying, “Here’s where I messed up and what it taught me about leadership.” It invited other founders to share their own hard pivots, and it turned my mere post into a conversation.
I’ve found that on LinkedIn, vulnerability paired with insight performs best. If you can articulate a lesson that others feel but haven’t put into words yet, you build trust and engagement fast. That’s how I tailor what I share (I start with the real tension I’ve lived through, and then I zoom out to show what others can take away from it).
Jeff Mains
Founder and CEO, Champion Leadership Group
AI’s Role in Marketing Sparks Curiosity
I’ve found that topical yet relatable content consistently performs best for my audience on LinkedIn. I focus on timely themes within B2B marketing but always try to ground them in real, everyday experiences that marketers can genuinely relate to. Recently, one of my best-performing posts started with an actual interaction where a prospect told me ChatGPT had recommended me. I turned that into a short narrative-style post that imagined a conversation between myself and ChatGPT, highlighting how AI is becoming part of the buyer journey in unexpected ways. It sparked curiosity and felt timely, but also tapped into a wider conversation marketers are already having about AI’s evolving role. I think it resonated because it was both thought-provoking and familiar – it played with a relatable format while raising deeper questions about brand visibility and reputation in the age of AI. I find combining storytelling, relevance, and a hint of humor often drives the most engagement among my audience.
Freya Ward
Global Growth Director, Headley Media
Clarity and Honesty Resonate in Branding
Over the years, I’ve tested various content formats on LinkedIn, including long-form storytelling, punchy one-liners, carousels, and memes. However, the content that consistently performs best is posts that teach, challenge assumptions, or provide behind-the-scenes insights into the industry.
My audience comprises founders, marketers, consultants, and content professionals. They are intelligent, time-constrained, and averse to superfluous content. Therefore, I don’t try to impress them; instead, I aim to equip them. Every post I write answers a question, solves a problem, or reframes something they thought they already knew.
Here’s an example that resonated well:
I stated that personal branding isn’t a performance. It’s simply clarity—clarity about who you are, without leaving it up to guesswork.
While it wasn’t viral in the traditional sense, it garnered unusually high saves, direct messages, and shares. Why? Because it addressed something people feel but rarely hear expressed so directly. It created a moment of self-reflection and provided a framework for rethinking online presence without sounding preachy or trying too hard.
That’s what I strive for in every post: relevance without gimmicks, clarity without oversimplification, and enough honesty to initiate a genuine conversation.
Because when the message truly resonates, you don’t need a hook. The reader finishes your post and feels understood.
Bhavik Sarkhedi
Founder & CEO, Ohh My Brand
Serve Your Audience with Timely Solutions
When creating content for my audience on LinkedIn, I believe it’s most important to focus on topics that are currently generating significant interest and questions on the platform. From there, I consider a unique angle that my community would find interesting and provide them with the answers they’re seeking.
As a recent example, we were seeing many old posts on LinkedIn, which was frustrating people. I conducted research and discovered that the LinkedIn algorithm had changed in a very significant way. The best approach for me to address this was through long-form content. My LinkedIn newsletter is perfect for expanding thoughts and reaching a wider audience.
In the newsletter, I break down what happened, why they should care, and most importantly, provide them with a way forward. I also link back to some other engaging content I created around this topic in short-form video format. Post: LinkedIn’s Changed (Again). Here’s What I’m Doing About It.
I believe the true key to success is creating content that serves your audience. By helping them get closer to achieving their goals, you build attention loyalty – something that can’t be bought!
Michelle J Raymond
Founder – B2B Growth Coach, B2B GROWTH CO
Practical SEO Education Challenges Conventions
After building 17,000+ LinkedIn followers, I’ve found that my highest-performing content always falls into one category: practical SEO education that challenges conventional wisdom.
My audience includes:
• SEO professionals and agency owners
• Small business owners frustrated with cookie-cutter marketing
• Conference organizers looking for informed, no-fluff speakers
• Tool companies that want expert-led product exposure
The Content Formula That Works:
1. Friday SEO Tips
These posts generate the most engagement by consistently following this structure:
• Hook: Bold claim that challenges the status quo
• Proof: Real example, often with data or screenshots
• Process: A repeatable step-by-step method
• CTA: A link to a webinar or resource that expands on the topic
Example That Crushed Engagement:
“This SEO ‘Hack’ Still Works—And Google Loves It.”
This post on building LinkedIn backlinks gained strong traction because:
• Contrarian take: I pushed back on the “backlinks are dead” narrative
• Concrete proof: Shared how I earned 2 backlinks in 10 minutes after DigiMarCon
• Replicable strategy: Step-by-step instructions, not vague tips
• Real data: Screenshots from my actual Search Console, not just theory
Why It Resonated:
• It challenged assumptions most SEOs hold
• Delivered value most agencies would gate behind a paywall
• Solved real problems—visibility and link building—quickly
• Showed proof from real campaigns, not hypothetical scenarios
My “Human Voice + AI Enhancement” System:
I start by recording my thoughts naturally, then use AI to:
• Structure posts for better engagement and readability
• Spin one idea into multiple post formats (carousels, video, email)
• Draft CTAs, headlines, and visual prompts quickly
• Keep content flowing daily without sounding robotic
What I Avoid on LinkedIn:
• Vague motivational fluff
• Self-promotion without actionable value
• Theoretical SEO that lacks field-tested results
• One-size-fits-all marketing advice
The Secret Sauce:
I combine 30 years of SEO experience with near-perfect weekly consistency. People know that every Friday, they’ll get an insight they won’t find in mainstream SEO blogs. It’s not about chasing virality—it’s about becoming a trusted signal in a noisy feed.
Results:
This strategy has led to high-quality leads, speaking gigs, product collaborations, and has made me a trusted voice in AI + SEO. It also perfectly aligns with our Micro SEO business model.
Chris Raulf
International AI and SEO Expert | Founder & Chief Visionary Officer, Boulder SEO Marketing
Data-Driven Storytelling Engages Media Executives
After running marketing and revenue at the LA Times and building Nota, I’ve discovered that data-driven storytelling about industry change performs best on LinkedIn. My audience of media executives and content creators responds most favorably to posts that combine hard metrics with actionable insights about AI’s impact on their workflows.
My highest-performing post showcased how one of our media partners achieved a 92% reduction in newsletter creation time using Nota’s tools. I included the specific workflow changes they made and the revenue impact within 60 days. The post generated 340% more engagement than my typical content because it addressed the exact pain point every publisher faces: scaling content without burning out their teams.
The key is leading with the problem, not the solution. I always start posts with industry challenges like “Why are local newsrooms struggling with audience growth?” then provide concrete examples of what’s working. Posts with specific percentages and timeframes consistently outperform generic advice by 3-4x.
What works best is being transparent about both successes and failures. When I shared how we initially struggled to integrate AI tools into traditional newsroom workflows at the Union-Tribune, that vulnerability created genuine conversations with other media leaders facing similar challenges.
Josh Brandau
CEO, Nota
Visual Simplification Captures Attention Instantly
Leading marketing at Fluig has taught me that visual content consistently outperforms text-only posts on LinkedIn. Our audience of product managers, designers, and teams responds best to content that shows rather than tells.
One of our highest-performing posts featured a before/after comparison showing how Fluig transformed a messy 20-page project document into a clean flowchart in seconds. The post got 3x our usual engagement because people could immediately visualize the value proposition.
I’ve learned to frontload the visual punch–the diagram or screenshot needs to grab attention in the first millisecond of scrolling. Then I keep the copy conversational and problem-focused, usually starting with something like “Ever spend hours trying to make sense of a complex document?”
The key insight is that our audience deals with information overload daily. Content that demonstrates instant clarity and simplification always wins over abstract feature descriptions or industry jargon.
Lee Kiderine
Marketing Manager, Fluig
Cheatsheets and Infographics Provide Quick Value
For Featured content, what really takes off on LinkedIn is simple: cheatsheets and infographics. These work because they give professionals what they want: quick, useful takeaways they can apply right away. People on LinkedIn don’t want fluff or long reads. They want insights they can act on and visuals that make scanning easy. That’s why well-designed, info-packed posts get saved, shared, and commented on far more than plain text updates.
A great example is our PR Cheatsheet post. It racked up solid engagement because it solved a clear problem – how to simplify your PR approach – at a glance. Add to that a clean graphic, a benefit-driven caption, and relevant hashtags, and the post hit the sweet spot: instantly helpful, easy to share, and totally aligned with what our LinkedIn audience is looking for.
Matias Rodsevich
Founder & CEO, PRLab | B2B Tech PR Agency
Tactical Local SEO Victories Beat Theory
Tactically broken-down local SEO victories will always beat out thought leadership posts or other general updates. They are mostly small agency owners, service-based business operators and marketing consultants, who want demonstration rather than theory. A single post that went exceptionally viral was that of how one of their plumbing customers had tripled their map pack viewability in 60 days through a single-page GMB landing play. It had a 3 step playbook anyone could follow, keyword movement and before and after screenshots. It was effective since it was precise, graphic, and applicable. We do not get fluff since we begin every post with the solution to the problem and end it with a question that seeks the advice of peers. That utility and engagement has meant that our average post reach has been 4x that of industry averages.
Wayne Lowry
Marketing Coordinator, Local SEO Boost
Real Situations Outperform Generic Advice
What works best for us on LinkedIn is sharing real situations from our daily work, especially around hiring, project delivery, or how we manage communication in remote teams.
One post that performed better than expected was about how we replaced “culture fit” with “collaboration style” in our hiring process. I shared how we used to hire based on personality match, but found that it didn’t always translate into better teamwork. We now focus on how someone handles feedback, conflict, and asynchronous communication.
The post was short, specific, and didn’t try to teach or sell. It simply explained a shift we made and why it worked better for us. It led to strong engagement and direct messages from people in similar roles.
We avoid posting too frequently. Instead, we wait until there’s something worth sharing, usually drawn from a real project or internal conversation. That keeps it relatable and makes people trust what we say.
Vikrant Bhalodia
Head of Marketing & People Ops, WeblineIndia
Align SEO, PPC, and CRO for Success
I’m Cody Jensen, and I run a SEM agency called Searchbloom. The post that really took off was about how SEO, PPC, and CRO aren’t separate plays. They’re the same game viewed from different seats.
I shared a moment where chasing SEO wins without paid data was like driving with one eye closed, and doing PPC without CRO was like pouring water into a leaky bucket. That hit home because it’s easy to silo these functions and forget they’re supposed to work together.
The post worked because it wasn’t preaching. It revealed how great results happen when teams stop protecting their turf and start aligning around the outcome.
Cody Jensen
CEO & Founder, Searchbloom
Short Videos and Customer Stories Drive Engagement
As a B2B SaaS company in a niche industry, our LinkedIn posts don’t generate substantial engagement. However, we have discovered two formats that perform significantly better than others:
1) Short-form video interviews
I conduct interviews with experts in the creative industry for our marketing newsletter, The Fine Line. We then repurpose them as shorts for LinkedIn. Our best-performing post originated from this initiative. I believe it resonated due to:
– The content format – shorts seem to drive more engagement on LinkedIn
– The strong hook – “smoking a cigar with Michael Jordan” is a compelling hook that’s hard to ignore
– The content matches the ICP – our target audience consists of creatives and marketers
2) Repurposed customer stories
I have recently implemented a proper redistribution strategy for our customer stories, and those consistently generate more engagement than our other post types (while not massive at the moment, it’s growing steadily).
Here’s my process:
– Analyze the story and extract 2-3 core angles, e.g., time saved, adoption
– Create a post for each angle and add a quote as an image (we have a series of templates to expedite this process)
– Schedule one post a month over a quarter to avoid overexposure
– Tag our customers in the post
– At the end of the quarter, I measure the success by calculating the content multiplier. Here’s how I calculate it:
1) Track views of the baseline content – in this case, it’s the original customer story
2) Track views across all the repurposed social posts over the quarter
3) Total the reach
4) Divide by the original baseline = your multiplier
Nicola Wylie
Copywriter, Filestage
Hands-On Demonstrations Outshine Product Shots
After presenting SHIELD’s cooling technology to everyone from Spartans to professional ice climbers around the country, I’ve learned that hands-on demonstration content significantly outperforms all other types of content on LinkedIn. People tend to scroll past product shots, but they stop abruptly when they see actual athletes using our gear in real scenarios.
My best-performing post featured a Ninja Warrior applying our SHIELD POLAR cooling wrap during a training session. The video received three times our normal engagement because viewers could visibly see the immediate cooling effect and observe how the athlete’s performance changed. Baltimore’s fitness community was particularly receptive to it, as they could relate to needing that kind of recovery support.
What made it effective was showcasing the “before and after” rather than merely discussing features. Instead of listing that POLAR contains menthol and camphor, I recorded the athlete’s reaction when the cooling sensation took effect. The comments section was filled with people tagging their training partners and inquiring about where to purchase it.
The key insight from years of product testing with key opinion leaders is that LinkedIn users want proof, not promises. Demonstrate your product solving a real problem for a real person, and include their genuine reaction. Avoid corporate polish and let the results speak for themselves.
Josh Key
Inside Sales Specialist, Shield Health & Fitness
Tactical Finance Breakdowns Dominate LinkedIn
Having built the demand engine at Sumo Logic that generated 20% of total ARR before their IPO, I’ve learned that tactical finance breakdowns absolutely dominate on LinkedIn. Founders are desperate for real numbers and specific processes they can implement immediately.
My highest-performing post broke down exactly how we structured our board deck financials during fundraising at one of my portfolio companies. I showed the actual slide progression—from high-level ARR metrics to detailed cohort analysis—and explained why we led with retention data instead of growth rates. That post got saved over 400 times because I included the specific template structure and explained our logic for each section.
The magic happens when you share the messy reality behind polished outcomes. I posted about a time our burn rate calculations were off by $40K/month because we weren’t properly accounting for deferred revenue. Instead of hiding the mistake, I walked through exactly how we caught it, fixed our cash flow forecasting model, and presented the correction to our board. CFOs and founders went crazy for it because everyone makes these errors but nobody talks about them.
What converts best is giving away the exact frameworks I use with OpStart clients. When I shared our “4-criteria ARR quality assessment” (retention rates, contract terms, customer size, and mission-criticality), dozens of founders commented with their own scoring results and asked follow-up questions about improving weak areas.
Maurina Venturelli
Head of Gtm, OpStart
Process-Focused Content Solves Scaling Problems
As COO at Underground Marketing, I’ve found that process-focused content consistently outperforms everything else on LinkedIn. Posts about streamlining workflows, team alignment strategies, and turning “big ideas into actionable plans” get the most engagement from agency owners and marketing directors.
One of my best-performing posts was about our 3-step white-label content process: “You sell the service, we perform the work, your client receives quality content.” It was shared 47 times and generated 12 direct inquiries. People loved the simplicity and how it solved their scaling problem without extra hiring overhead.
The post worked because it addressed a real pain point with concrete steps. Most agencies want to offer content services but lack the specialist skills or bandwidth. I showed them exactly how we handle the behind-the-scenes work while they maintain client relationships and grow revenue.
LinkedIn audiences respond to operational insights that save time and reduce complexity. They don’t want theory—they want proven systems they can implement immediately.
Karen Cleaver
COO, Underground Marketing
Storytelling with Impact Data Drives Donations
After driving 3,233% growth in UMR’s social media following, I’ve found that storytelling with human impact data performs exceptionally well on LinkedIn. Our nonprofit audience responds strongest to posts that combine compelling beneficiary stories with concrete metrics showing how donations translate into real change.
Our best-performing LinkedIn post shared the story of a water well project that served 847 families in rural Yemen, but I structured it around the journey of one 12-year-old girl who could finally attend school instead of walking 6 miles daily for water. I included specific numbers: $12,000 raised, 3.2 hours saved per family daily, and 89% school attendance increase in that village. This post generated over 2,400 engagements and drove $47,000 in donations within the first week.
The secret is leading with emotion but backing it with data that donors can trust. When I post about our seasonal campaigns generating over $500,000, I always anchor those numbers to individual stories that show exactly where that money goes. Our audience of 120,000 stakeholders includes many analytical thinkers who need both heart and hard evidence before they engage or donate.
What consistently works is the “zoom in, zoom out” approach – start with one person’s change, then reveal the broader impact across communities. This storytelling method has helped our seasonal marketing initiatives consistently exceed revenue targets while building genuine emotional connections with our supporter base.
Caroline Evashavik
Marketing Manager, UMR
Workforce Transformation Insights Spark Conversations
Content that sparks conversations around workforce transformation and emerging skills consistently performs best. The audience is largely composed of HR leaders, L&D heads, and decision-makers looking for insights, not pitches. Posts that blend personal observation with industry data tend to gain traction—especially when they spotlight a shift that’s already underway but not yet mainstream.
One post that resonated exceptionally well highlighted how traditional training models are failing mid-level managers in rapidly digitizing industries. It opened with a simple question: “Why do managers struggle more than fresh hires when companies go digital?” The post then backed up this inquiry with brief insights from actual upskilling results across industries. The engagement came not just from likes, but from detailed comments by professionals who shared similar challenges. That post worked because it didn’t just inform—it provoked reflection.
Arvind Rongala
CEO, Edstellar
Behind-the-Scenes Marketing Strategies Engage Realtors
As Marketing Manager for FLATS® overseeing properties across Chicago, San Diego, Minneapolis, and Vancouver, I’ve found that behind-the-scenes strategy breakdowns perform incredibly well on LinkedIn. Real estate professionals are tired of polished property shots – they want to see the marketing machinery that drives results.
My best-performing post broke down our Ori expandable apartment marketing approach at The Heron in Edgewater. I explained how we positioned these transformable units (pocket studios, cloud beds, pocket offices) not as “small spaces” but as “adaptive luxury.” The post detailed our messaging strategy: focusing on flexibility for urban professionals rather than compensating for size limitations.
The engagement was insane because I shared our actual creative brief and explained why we emphasized the technology angle over traditional square footage marketing. Property marketers dealing with micro-units and studio apartments were hungry for this repositioning strategy. I included specific language we used: “transform your home into whatever space it needs to be” instead of “maximize your small space.”
What resonated most was showing the strategic thinking process, not just the final campaign. I broke down how we leveraged the lakefront Edgewater location and proximity to Loyola University to target different personas with the same adaptable unit concept – young professionals wanting home offices and students needing study spaces.
Gunnar Blakeway-Walen THA
Marketing Manager, The Heron Apartments by Flats
Authentic Wine Travel Stories Captivate Professionals
After building ilovewine.com to 500k community members, I’ve found that behind-the-scenes travel stories from wine regions massively outperform standard wine reviews on LinkedIn. My audience of wine professionals and travel enthusiasts craves authentic moments that showcase the human side of winemaking.
My best-performing LinkedIn post featured a photo from 2am in a Tokyo sake bar where I was learning food pairings from a sommelier who spoke zero English. I shared how we communicated entirely through gestures and taste, finding that aged sake pairs brilliantly with spicy ramen. That post hit 2,800 engagements–five times my usual numbers–because it showed vulnerability and cultural connection rather than wine expertise.
The magic happens when you reveal the messy, unplanned moments that lead to findings. Wine people are tired of polished tasting notes and perfect vineyard shots. They want to see you getting lost in the Douro Valley or accidentally ordering the wrong vintage at a Bordeaux chateau.
I always include one specific sensory detail that transports readers to that moment. Whether it’s volcanic soil sticking to my boots on Mount Etna or the sound of oak barrels being rolled in a Burgundy cellar, these details make wine professionals stop scrolling and remember why they fell in love with the industry.
Jonas Muthoni ILW
Editor in Chief, ilovewine.com
Problem-Solving Content Resonates with UK Professionals
For our audience on LinkedIn, thought leadership content consistently performs best. This includes insightful articles, detailed case studies, and practical “how-to” guides that address industry pain points or offer innovative solutions. Native video also drives high engagement, especially when it’s concise, provides value, and includes subtitles for silent viewing. Polls and text-only posts asking engaging questions also foster significant interaction.
We create problem-solving stories for UK professionals using clear language, strong calls to action, and visuals like infographics or short videos. Hashtags boost discoverability, and we engage with comments to foster discussion.
A successful post was a carousel on “5 Key Strategies for Navigating the Evolving UK Job Market,” offering practical advice and data. Its simple design provided value, encouraged swipes, boosted engagement, and prompted comments and shares.
Fahad Khan
Digital Marketing Manager, Ubuy Sweden
Human Touch Shines Through in Video Content
What is effective today is highly human, short-form video content with actual humans behind the business—founders or team members—speaking in their own words about their product, mission, or customer stories. AI-driven content is ubiquitous everywhere, so the best thing that shines through is a human voice that sounds unscripted and authentic. We’ve seen strong engagement when we take actual customer conversations or behind-the-scenes scenes and convert them into vertical video formats and pair them with community-led engagement tactics rather than explicit promotion.
George Fironov
Co-Founder & CEO, Talmatic
Operational Transparency Impacts Patient Care
Content that bridges the gap between operational transparency and impact on patients will always perform best. An interesting post featured an inside view of how we pre-stage home delivery kits to be delivered to a patient the day after discharge. It included a quick video of the packaging process in addition to a caption explaining how turnaround time impacts readmission rates. The post received the largest number of shares and comments compared to product highlights and service announcements.
It struck a chord because it allowed professionals to see the logistics that they count on but do not often see: case managers, hospital administrators, and discharge planners. We built it tailored by speaking their language and tying it to what we were doing and what they were getting. The greatest content does not only demonstrate ability; it verifies what your audience is already doing. Networking on LinkedIn isn’t about flashiness; it’s about simplicity.
Maegan Damugo
Marketing Coordinator, MacPherson’s Medical Supply
Authentic Stories Outperform Polished Content
For our audience on LinkedIn, the content that performs best is always the most authentic, relatable, and conversational. For me, that means letting go of the urge to sound perfectly polished.
It’s easy to fall into the trap of trying to come across as brilliant and buttoned-up, especially on a platform full of professionals. But when everything sounds scripted, it ends up feeling sterile. And frankly, people scroll right past it.
What actually resonates are real stories about real people and their experiences.
In fact, one of my best-performing posts — an account of a candidate’s unexpected success — had a glaring typo in the first line.
No one noticed.
What they did pick up on, though, was the emotion and authenticity inherent in the narrative.
Ben Lamarche
General Manager, Lock Search Group
Real Problem-Solving Stories Engage QA Professionals
The content that consistently performs best for our audience on LinkedIn is first-hand problem-solving stories from real projects, especially the kind that pull back the curtain on what didn’t go as planned.
Our audience, mostly QA leads, product owners, and mid-level engineering managers, responds strongly to content that feels honest, technical, and immediately applicable. They don’t want a polished ad or vague insight; they want to see how we handled a messy deployment, fixed a regression loop, or redesigned a flaky test suite. And most importantly, they want to walk away with a clear takeaway they can apply the next day.
One post that took off was a short breakdown of how we salvaged a test automation project that had failed under another vendor. We shared the exact red flags we spotted in their CI/CD setup, how we redesigned the test architecture from scratch, and what metrics improved after the rebuild. It got over 22,000 impressions, dozens of shares, and DMs from teams facing similar issues.
What made it resonate? Specificity and vulnerability. We didn’t just say “we fixed it”; we showed where it broke and how we approached the fix, without overhyping ourselves. That kind of post builds trust, not just visibility.
Shishir Dubey
Founder & CEO, Chrome QA Lab