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by NeutralCrane
304 days ago
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> This is a pre-requisite for winning on LinkedIn. The kind of content that performs best are strong opinions informed by actual expertise. Definitely don’t agree with this. I have worked with a single person who is a LinkedIn “influencer”. They have a ton of followers, get a lot of engagement on every post, have been invited to speak on podcasts, have published a book, and have leveraged their internet reputation into jobs at large, well-known tech companies. But their reputation is entirely undeserved. They are a mediocre dev at best, and made absolutely no impact at the company I was with. In fact, once they left, a big chunk of work I was tasked with was basically stripping out/reworking much of what they had done (which frankly, wasn’t much). They single-handedly killed the illusion that having an audience on LinkedIn is in any way connected with competence or expertise. Doing good work is absolutely NOT a prerequisite for winning on LinkedIn. |
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Marketing and connection is always about this. That is not unique to LinkedIn. People who feel the need to spend time and treasure to tell you how smart they are generally fall short.
Conversely, there are plenty of brilliant people who toil anonymously and nobody, even at their company, knows they exist.