This week, Iâm breaking down the top thought leadership myths, two minutes at a time, so you can get over the âickâ and start sharing your expertise. Check out yesterdayâs email for the intro.
Myth #1: Thought Leadership = Linked InFluencer
If youâre on this list:
- You likely have a LinkedIn profile
- You likely have a cringe-meter that goes off the charts when you read LinkedIn
- You still read LinkedIn anyway
No way around it - LinkedIn is the digital town square for knowledge professionals. Its reach and network effects are unmatched, and if youâre looking for broad awareness, youâll be hard-pressed to find another free(ish) channel that compares.
That said, LinkedIn is far from a one-stop shop for thought leadership. In fact, if youâre relying solely on LinkedIn as your thought leadership strategy, youâre missing out on other channels that can provide a similar or better ROTI (return on time invested).
Think of LinkedIn as the following, and nothing more:
- A way to ping the world that you still exist and share what youâre up to in a helpful way
- A resource to better understand leads in your audience (yes, profile âresearchâ)
- A direct messaging tool to facilitate off-platform conversations
If youâre using LinkedIn as a daily uninvited megaphone of self-promotion and unhelpful content, you are at risk of:
- Being penalized by LIâs algorithm
- Being actively unfollowed by put-off users
- Coming off as âthat guyâ, which is probably the most harmful of all to your personal brand
Here are some simple starter tips rooted in consistency and helpfulness:
-
Post on LinkedIn 2x/week on weekdays to build and maintain awareness
- You can write posts in one sitting, and schedule them for later delivery
- Make it short and helpful â no peacocking, only something useful to others
- Donât get caught up on likes or impressions, but do respond to any comments
- Request connections with anyone who comments on your post that isnât a 1st-degree connection
-
Let the algorithm carry you
- Iâm not a specialist here, but the LI algo is intricate and will funnel your posts through your network and beyond, but over time and not every time (i.e. not every post will be seen by every person in your network, and certainly not immediately)
- If youâre consistently writing good, helpful posts, youâll see it in your reach and engagement over time
Then move on! Focus your attention on all of these other thought leadership channels, most of which should seem less cringe. Iâll give you a framework to prioritize these in a future email, but to get your gears going, these are ranked from low-to-high effort:
- Guest on a podcast
- Essays / editorials
- Talks / lectures / webinars
- Keynotes
- Courses
- Host a podcast
- Start a newsletter
- Write a book
Fun fact: When you invest time in these channels, it will often provide content you can repurpose for your LI posts which meansâŚeven less of your time focused on LinkedIn.
Tomorrow: Myth #2 - âThought leadership is too time-consumingâ
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-Wes
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