Post by account_disabled on Dec 20, 2023 4:02:54 GMT
231 words, 1,290 characters, 572,572 views, 8,094 likes, 680 comments and 256 shares, published on January 11, 2021. No alt text for this image Rant + controversial (even divisive) subject + story telling + a touch of emotion. Everything you need to make a reaction and therefore tickle the algorithm. Not complicated. Seen like this: there’s no photo. Long live the posts! Why bother publishing an article? But, even if it makes me happy (I'm obviously not spitting in the soup), I prefer an article with 500 views, on one of my subjects and which brings me a hot prospect who becomes a customer. Transforming 1 item directly into a customer, this happened to me. Even without a prior “physical” appointment (1 item > 1 call > 1 sale). And more than once. With posts, never so quickly.
Seen differently, the posts that I have published have, to date, brought me much less Email Data turnover and in particular have generated fewer incoming requests from large account clients (I am talking about multinationals of the CAC 40 type). ) than the articles. What day should you post and at what time? 2 answers: 1) I don’t know 2) When you will be read by the right person and your message will reach your audience. Just because on average certain niches would be better for posting doesn’t mean that’s the case for you. Some have better results on weekends. Not me. I tried and compared, it's not relevant for me. So I don't publish on weekends, not because of the algorithm but because my audience is less present on LinkedIn on weekends. Or maybe because I have something else to do.
My life does not revolve around LinkedIn and moreover LinkedIn does not represent more than 20% of my turnover. In incoming requests, yes. And a very large part of my turnover comes from my presence on LinkedIn, but not all the requests I receive concern (by far) a better presence on LinkedIn. When I published 1 article per week, I published it on Thursday morning. Because it’s better for the algorithm? No, because it was easier to manage in my weekly schedule. Moreover, my first content which exceeded 150,000 views was published on a Thursday at 5 p.m. One of the worst slots according to the stats and the first to exceed 250,000 views was published last week of July when, a priori, a good part of France is on vacation. Are quality and quantity linked? I read in an article that one person says they are more relevant than another because they have more likes and comments.
Seen differently, the posts that I have published have, to date, brought me much less Email Data turnover and in particular have generated fewer incoming requests from large account clients (I am talking about multinationals of the CAC 40 type). ) than the articles. What day should you post and at what time? 2 answers: 1) I don’t know 2) When you will be read by the right person and your message will reach your audience. Just because on average certain niches would be better for posting doesn’t mean that’s the case for you. Some have better results on weekends. Not me. I tried and compared, it's not relevant for me. So I don't publish on weekends, not because of the algorithm but because my audience is less present on LinkedIn on weekends. Or maybe because I have something else to do.
My life does not revolve around LinkedIn and moreover LinkedIn does not represent more than 20% of my turnover. In incoming requests, yes. And a very large part of my turnover comes from my presence on LinkedIn, but not all the requests I receive concern (by far) a better presence on LinkedIn. When I published 1 article per week, I published it on Thursday morning. Because it’s better for the algorithm? No, because it was easier to manage in my weekly schedule. Moreover, my first content which exceeded 150,000 views was published on a Thursday at 5 p.m. One of the worst slots according to the stats and the first to exceed 250,000 views was published last week of July when, a priori, a good part of France is on vacation. Are quality and quantity linked? I read in an article that one person says they are more relevant than another because they have more likes and comments.