Post by account_disabled on Dec 20, 2023 3:02:31 GMT -7
It provides a service to the author and can provide interesting information to their network. – for those who are liked, since their content will be visible to profiles outside their direct network. – for those who see the like because they can discover relevant content that would have otherwise escaped them. However, for the “liker”, it will be even more effective if he adds a comment (saying a little more than “great article”). The ideal being the publication of an article, because the article exposes and develops an expertise, a point of view… How to make your article more visible? To put it simply, there are 3 keys. On the one hand, the timing. On LinkedIn, like on Facebook or Twitter, it's flow. What we publish is essentially visible and seen on the day of publication.
On the other hand, the illustrative image. Today, LinkedIn's 600 million members can publish Email Data an article. Tens of thousands of articles are published every week (more than 100,000) To find your way in the incessant flow of the home page, you need an image that attracts attention and a title that catches the eye. For your article to be seen, you have to think like the celebrity press. Next, the quality of your content must be exemplary and provide real value. But the competition is strong. No one has time to read all the articles that might interest them. If we read your colleague's article, we will not necessarily read yours. You must therefore attract attention and reach out to readers, making them want to read the article. This requires an image and a title. But initially, it is really the image that will be seen.
Quality remains essential. Often an article is read more thanks to likes, comments or shares than through its natural reach among the author's contacts. So after having used possible artifices with a catchy image and title, do not disappoint (no putaclic). Keep the promise and make your readers want to share. “Be Seen is not: – Like, comment or share anything and everything 10 times a day in the hope that someone will see you. – Make “bogus” updates to your profile by changing 1 or 2 characters to send notifications to your entire network. That's spam and it conveys a bad image. Remember that we can remain your contact and block all your content (i.e. we won't see it). Be In Touch On LinkedIn, we can make sure people find us: “BE Found”. We can make ourselves visible through contributions or interactions: “BE Seen”. But that may not be enough.
On the other hand, the illustrative image. Today, LinkedIn's 600 million members can publish Email Data an article. Tens of thousands of articles are published every week (more than 100,000) To find your way in the incessant flow of the home page, you need an image that attracts attention and a title that catches the eye. For your article to be seen, you have to think like the celebrity press. Next, the quality of your content must be exemplary and provide real value. But the competition is strong. No one has time to read all the articles that might interest them. If we read your colleague's article, we will not necessarily read yours. You must therefore attract attention and reach out to readers, making them want to read the article. This requires an image and a title. But initially, it is really the image that will be seen.
Quality remains essential. Often an article is read more thanks to likes, comments or shares than through its natural reach among the author's contacts. So after having used possible artifices with a catchy image and title, do not disappoint (no putaclic). Keep the promise and make your readers want to share. “Be Seen is not: – Like, comment or share anything and everything 10 times a day in the hope that someone will see you. – Make “bogus” updates to your profile by changing 1 or 2 characters to send notifications to your entire network. That's spam and it conveys a bad image. Remember that we can remain your contact and block all your content (i.e. we won't see it). Be In Touch On LinkedIn, we can make sure people find us: “BE Found”. We can make ourselves visible through contributions or interactions: “BE Seen”. But that may not be enough.