| name | linkedin-playbook |
| description | LinkedIn growth system for founders, builders, and consultants. Use when planning LinkedIn content strategy, designing a content calendar, evaluating LinkedIn performance, or coaching on LinkedIn for pipeline and authority. Covers the full-funnel system, 2026 algorithm mechanics, format rankings, and case studies. Works for SaaS, consulting, agencies, research labs — anyone building in public and converting attention to business. For actually writing posts, use linkedin-writer. For scheduling/posting ops, use linkedin-posting. |
| triggers | ["LinkedIn strategy","LinkedIn content strategy","LinkedIn growth","founder-led content","LinkedIn playbook","LinkedIn algorithm","LinkedIn funnel","content mix"] |
LinkedIn Pipeline Playbook
Full-funnel system for generating pipeline and authority from LinkedIn. Works for SaaS products, consulting, agencies, and builder brands — anyone turning expertise and building-in-public into business.
Founder-led content → trust → pipeline → revenue.
For writing individual posts, see linkedin-writer. For scheduling and ops, see linkedin-posting.
The 7-Step System
1. Post Opinions, Not Features
- Lead with problems and outcomes, never features or services
- Reframe: not "we built X" or "we offer Y" but "we noticed [problem], here's how we think about it, here's [outcome]"
- Talk AROUND what you sell — the problem space, misconceptions, bad solutions your audience tried before
- Works for products, consulting, research — the principle is the same: demonstrate thinking, not pitch
- 2-3 posts/week with real takes on what's broken in the industry
- By the time someone reaches out, they're pre-sold on your thinking
- Every post passes the "Only I can write this" test — requires YOUR specific experience/data/perspective
2. Write Content That Makes ICP Feel Seen
- Pull language directly from sales call transcripts
- Use the exact words and phrases prospects use to describe their pain
- Specificity > breadth — generic content attracts generic audience
- Target: "how did they know that's exactly what I've been dealing with?"
- Content that books calls > content that gets likes
3. Turn Sales Objections Into Posts
- Every objection heard on demos = a post
- Pattern: "[Objection from prospect]... here's why they were right to worry, and what we learned"
- If one person says it on a call, 100 others think it
- Handles doubt before prospects get on a call
- Result: shorter calls, better conversations, higher close rates
4. Give Away the Manual Version
- Lead magnets that let prospects feel the pain of doing manually what you do for them
- For products: give away the manual workflow your product automates
- For consulting: give away the framework — people try it, realize they need help executing
- For research/labs: give away the analysis — people see the depth and want more
- People try it → realize the gap between DIY and expert → convert
- Capture email behind lead magnet (opt-in page, not just DM the doc)
- Post-opt-in: offer page with CTA → 3-day email sequence addressing top objections
- Intent peaks in first 3 days after opt-in
5. Warm Outbound to Repeat Engagers
- 2+ engagements = intent signal (not accident)
- DM template: "Hey, noticed you've been engaging with the content. Are you looking to do X, or just enjoying the posts?"
- Lighthearted, low pressure, easy to respond to
- Check profile/company/role before reaching out
- Don't skip non-obvious ICP — you don't know who they know
6. Activate Multiple Executives
- Founder brand hits a ceiling eventually
- CTO, VP Sales, Head of Product each have different networks overlapping with ICP
- Same ideas, different voice, different angle, different audience
- ~8 touchpoints before purchase decision
- 1 poster → 2-3 touchpoints. 3 posters → 8 touchpoints in fraction of time
- Omnipresence makes buying feel obvious, not risky
7. Commit to 90 Days
- LinkedIn ≠ paid ads. Don't evaluate in week 3.
- Early wins happen (deals in first weeks possible) but can't be guaranteed
- 90 days = algorithm learns you, audience reaches critical mass, content sharpens from reps
- After 90 days: posts go viral, engagement compounds, inbound appears, warm outbound list grows
- Everything that felt like pushing a boulder starts rolling on its own
2026 Algorithm Mechanics
Understanding these determines whether your post reaches 500 people or 50,000.
The Depth Score
LinkedIn's primary ranking signal in 2026. Dwell time replaced likes as #1. The algorithm measures how long people spend reading your post, not just whether they clicked a reaction.
3-Phase Evaluation
- Phase 1 (0-90 min): Post shown to 2-5% of your network. Their behavior determines everything.
- Phase 2 (1-4 hours): If Phase 1 engagement velocity is strong, LinkedIn expands distribution to broader network + interest-based audiences.
- Phase 3 (4-48 hours): Posts that break through get 40-60x more impressions. This is where viral distribution happens.
The golden hour: Your engagement velocity in the first 60-90 minutes is the single biggest factor. 10 comments in 30 minutes > 50 comments over 3 days.
Interest-Based Distribution
LinkedIn now surfaces content to non-followers who match topical interest. This means:
- Topical consistency is rewarded — be known for ONE thing
- Topic-hopping is punished — random pivoting kills your algorithmic profile
- Your content reaches people who've never heard of you, IF it matches their interest graph
What's Penalized
- External links: 60% reach penalty. Zero-click content only. Link in comments barely helps.
- Engagement bait: NLP detection shadowbans "Comment YES for the PDF", "Like if you agree", etc.
- Single images: 30% worse reach than plain text. The "always add an image" advice from 2024 is actively harmful.
- Generic "thoughts?" endings: Overused, algorithm may be downranking.
- Tagging people for reach without real reason.
- Corporate/polished tone: Reads as AI-generated, gets less distribution.
- "Broetry": One-sentence paragraphs with no substance.
What's Rewarded
- "...more" clicks: Curiosity hooks that make people expand the post are a positive signal.
- Comments and replies: Especially back-and-forth conversations.
- Saves and shares: Weighted higher than reactions.
- Dwell time: Long reads that hold attention.
- Topical consistency: Algorithm learns what you're about and matches you to the right audience.
Format Performance Rankings (2026 Data)
Ranked by current engagement performance:
| Rank | Format | Performance | Notes |
|---|
| 1 | Multi-image (3-4 photos) | 6.60% engagement | Best overall. Personal photos > stock. |
| 2 | Carousels / PDF docs | 596% more than text-only | 4x more reach than 2025. 6-10 slides, <12 words/slide. |
| 3 | Polls | 206% more reach | Not anonymous — see who voted (prospecting gold). |
| 4 | Text-only | Baseline | Strong writing beats bad visuals. |
| 5 | Video | Reach crashed 35% | But builds trust. 30-90 sec, captions always, native only. |
| 6 | Single images | -30% vs text | Dead format. Don't use. |
Content Mix: The 20/60/20 Rule
| Funnel Stage | % of Posts | Purpose | Content Types |
|---|
| TOF (Top) | 20% | Reach, new audience | Contrarian takes, bold predictions, perspective shifts, failure stories |
| MOF (Middle) | 60% | Trust, authority | Frameworks, how-tos, process breakdowns, "how we actually did it", lessons |
| BOF (Bottom) | 20% | Convert to pipeline | Case studies with metrics, objection handling, customer stories, comparison content |
Most companies invert this — 70%+ TOF, <10% BOF. The biggest revenue opportunity is having enough BOF content for prospects who are ready to buy.
Founder Case Studies
Real numbers from founder-led LinkedIn strategies:
| Company | Result | Key Tactic |
|---|
| Wynter | 80% of demo signups from founder's LinkedIn | Personal storytelling + industry expertise |
| RB2B (Adam Robinson) | $0→$5M ARR in 12 months | 75% of time on content, never writes about product — writes about SaaS struggles |
| ClickUp | $300M ARR | Systematized leadership team's social presence |
| Drift | $1M→$10M | Founder David Cancel's social profile as primary channel |
| Hootsuite | $15M pipeline influenced | CEO's LinkedIn activity |
| Aligned | 65% of total leads | Founder thought leadership |
Common pattern: None of these people primarily write about their product or service. They write about the problem space, their decisions, and their journey. The business sells itself once trust is established. This applies equally to SaaS, consulting, and builder brands.
BOFU — The Revenue Gap
Only 21% of content programs target bottom-of-funnel. The assets that actually close deals:
- Comparison/alternatives content — 8.43% conversion rate (nearly 2x broader keywords). Geekbot: BOFU converted 2,400% better than TOFU.
- Case studies with hard metrics — Lead with the number. Include before/after, team size, what almost went wrong. "Our client saw great results" is not a case study. Works for product results AND consulting engagements.
- ROI calculators — Give finance a number to approve budget.
- Transparent pricing — "Contact Sales" filters OUT buyers. For consulting: publish your engagement model (retainer, project-based, advisory).
- Internal champion content — Help the person inside the prospect's org sell to their buying committee.
- Objection-handling posts — Pre-empt blockers before they happen. Works for product objections AND consulting objections ("why hire you vs. do it ourselves?").
CTAs That Convert
- Embedded scheduling lifts booking from ~30% to 66.7% (Chili Piper, 4M submissions)
- Soft CTAs: content does the selling, CTA opens the door
- Thought Leader Ads on organic winners: 1.7x higher CTR than brand graphics. Boost what already works.
- 81% of buyers choose a vendor before speaking to sales. Your content IS the sales process.
Post Formats
Hook Post (Opinion/Take)
[Controversial statement — under 8 words]
[2-3 sentences expanding why this is true]
[Personal experience or specific data point]
[The reframe — how to think about it differently]
[One-line takeaway]
Objection Post
"[Exact objection from a real sales call]"
That's what a [ICP role] told us last week.
And honestly? They're not wrong.
[Why the concern is valid — 2-3 lines]
[What's different about your approach — 2-3 lines]
[Outcome/result that addresses the objection — specific numbers]
Lead Magnet Post
[Statement about a painful manual process ICP deals with]
I put together a [resource type] that walks through exactly how to do it.
It covers:
→ [Benefit 1]
→ [Benefit 2]
→ [Benefit 3]
[Soft CTA — not "comment YES", that's penalized. Use "DM me" or link in comments.]
Data/Proof Post
[Specific metric or result — numbers in the first line]
Here's what actually happened:
[Context — 2-3 lines on the situation before]
[What changed — the intervention, 2-3 lines]
[Specific numbers — before vs after]
[What this means for anyone in a similar position — 1-2 lines]
"How I Did It" Post
[Result or decision — specific]
[Why this matters — 1-2 lines of context]
Here's exactly what we did:
1. [Step with specific detail]
2. [Step with specific detail]
3. [Step with specific detail]
[What surprised us or what we'd do differently]
[Takeaway the reader can apply]
Writing Rules
- No corporate speak. Write like a human talking to another human.
- One idea per post. If it needs a subhead, it's two posts.
- Lead with the most interesting/controversial thing. Don't bury it.
- Use line breaks aggressively. Dense paragraphs die on LinkedIn.
- Specific > generic. "$83K in LTV" beats "significant revenue."
- End with something worth engaging with (question, reframe, or CTA — but NOT generic "thoughts?").
- Mobile-first: 57%+ of LinkedIn is mobile. Preview shows ~140 chars. Short lines. Generous whitespace.
- Zero-click: deliver ALL value in the post. No "click the link to read more."
- See
references/full-playbook.md for the complete unabridged system with examples.