Marketing & Advertising Magazine

How to Use LinkedIn for Your Business

Posted on the 22 October 2020 by Shurby

Despite its button-down image as the Chamber of Commerce of social media platforms, LinkedIn is often underutilized as an asset that can help establish your brand, build connections and drive business. If your business has a LinkedIn Page and you've only filled out the basic fields and post an occasional update, you're missing valuable opportunities.

Just as each social media platform has ways to optimize its use for inbound marketing purposes, LinkedIn offers distinct advantages. Here's how to unlock its powerful potential as a marketing tool.

Start at the Beginning - Complete Your Page

Approach LinkedIn as a permanent trade show booth for your business. When there were actual trade shows not so long ago, you'd make sure your booth was outfitted with all the information visitors needed about your business. You'd get their contact information so you could establish connections that might lead to a sale - or at least an ongoing professional relationship that might eventually lead to a sale. Plus, your existing network of contacts were likely to be at the same show - which often resulted in introductions to new contacts, expanding your circle.

Sehl offers the following tips for fleshing out your LinkedIn Page:

Provide an engaging company description - Go beyond the dry facts (industry, year founded, etc.). "Tell people about your vision, mission, values, and offer a description of your products and services in three to four short paragraphs. Copy should be natural and written in your brand voice. Google results preview up to 156 characters of your page's text - so make your description SEO friendly by including keywords."

List your location(s) - Even if you don't expect in-person traffic at your physical location, it serves to establish your business as reputable, and provides a mailing address.

Add a cover photo - This enhances your company's professional polish. Sehl recommends choosing an image that showcases your business (or is relevant to it). Avoid shots that are too busy, cluttered or blurry. Recommended size is 1584 (w) x 396 (h) pixels.

Add a custom button - A call-to-action (CTA) button can encourage visitors to take a desired action. Options include Visit Website, Contact Us, Learn More, Register, and Sign Up. Add the corresponding URL. Adding a UTM parameter allows you to track the source and medium of those who clicked.

Add hashtags - LinkedIn allows up to three hashtags to make your profile more visible in searches. Choose those typically used in your industry and that best apply to your business.

Tell your audience you speak their language - If your company does business on a global basis, or if your target audience is multilingual, LinkedIn allows you to add your name, tagline and description in over 20 languages.

Customize the URL of your public profile - As Amanda Zantal-Wiener recommends, customizing your LinkedIn public profile URL will personalize it with your name, rather than ending with random numbers.

Post Quality Content That's Relevant to Your Audience

Returning to our trade show analogy, you made sure your company's booth was supplied with high-quality collateral - brochures, sell sheets, looping videos, etc. - that would attract traffic and give visitors valuable information about your business. Product demos and other special presentations also went a long way to ensure a successful show. You're a professional selling a quality product line or service, so your LinkedIn Page deserves no less!

Even if you're posting to other social media platforms, tweaking your posts to address the reasons why LinkedIn's participants are there will fine-tune your messaging to better reach your audience.

Herewith is her list of best practices for LinkedIn posts:
  • Share timely and relevant content.
  • Grab attention with an image or video.
  • Keep copy short. If you write a longer post, use paragraph breaks or bullet points to make it more readable.
  • Call out key stats, points and quotes.
  • Include a clear and simple call-to-action.
  • Name the audience you're trying to reach (i.e., "calling all creatives" or "are you a working parent?").
  • Tag people and pages mentioned.
  • Lead with a question to prompt responses.
  • Create LinkedIn polls for feedback and engagement.
  • Include two to three relevant hashtags in a natural way.
  • Respond to comments within a short timeframe to encourage more engagement.

Knowing when to post is as important as knowing what to post. Posting on a regular basis is essential, as LinkedIn estimates that brands that even post a minimum of once a month gain followers faster than those that don't. Those posting weekly experience the engagement. Brands that post once a day gain even more traction - but depending upon your business, this may be overkill.

Growing Your Professional Network on LinkedIn

The purpose of being on LinkedIn isn't to accumulate "likes" for your posts - it's to make connections with other professionals and grow your network. With that in mind, Zantal-Wiener offers some ways to achieve these objectives:

  • Add, view, and remove connections depending on their level of value to your business.
  • Control who can see your connections - maybe you do or don't want your competitors to see that list of people.
  • Leverage your second and third-degree connections to grow your network and build new relationships.
  • Import and sync your contacts from your email and other sources to stay in touch with colleagues, partners, leads, and customers across the board. These connections will see your content in multiple places so they learn more about who you are as a business, deepening their relationship with your brand.

Another advantage to joining Groups is that you can view complete profiles of other members of the same group, even if you aren't connected. In addition, if you're a member of the same group as another user, you're allowed to send up to 15 free one-on-one messages to other group members per month. Choose the purpose of your messages carefully, so they don't come across as being overtly self-promotional or salesy. Instead, look for an opportunity where you can offer a solution to a problem the Group member posted about, or direct the member to a useful resource.

Some marketing experts recommend starting your own Group. However, unless your business is in a highly specialized industry or influential already, it may not attract much of a following. Growing the Group would require more time and attention than you probably have as a small-to-medium-size business owner. We recommend focusing on existing Groups to establish your reputation as an expert and thought leader.

LinkedIn's Feature for the New Normal

The Take-Home Message and Our Blatant Self-Promotion

Your business deserves better than to have LinkedIn be a neglected afterthought. Spending the time to cultivate your content and connections can pay off with new opportunities, customers and clients. Even if trade shows were still on, they only last a few days, but your LinkedIn Page is forever (so to speak). Make it the place to be!

If time is an issue, Virtual Stacks Systems offers social media management services that include managing social media pages. Our experienced content writers can write and schedule posts, update and revise LinkedIn Pages and follow best practices to increase engagement. We also write great blog posts for businesses in all industries. to learn more!


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