Footprints over fireworks
Self-promotion isn't optional, but it doesn't have to be cringe. Read on hasmukhkerai.com Read time: 5 mins Hi Reader, Promoting myself is no longer optional, whether I find it cringe or not. I constantly debate which platform to use.
Even if I used them, would they help me reach the right people? I hear this frustration often: Instagram's declining reach, and LinkedIn's outdated reputation. But I've seen LinkedIn has changed. A few years ago, it was full of dry corporate updates, generic conference stage photos, and job seekers. Now:
Some of this is great. Some of it still feels as try-hard as the jargon it replaces. I'm trying to find the balance between standing out and selling out. Most people take one of two approaches to LinkedIn:
I find that both miss the mark. What I find works is posting as a natural extension of doing. The best posts don't feel like a performance. They feel like footprints. Evidence of work you're already doing. Today's email at a glance:
Useful content > viral content The strategy at LinkedIn has shifted to rewarding useful content over viral content.
"It's rare for someone to stand up in the office and yell with a megaphone. So, if stuff's not going viral at work, it shouldn't be going viral on LinkedIn either." - Dan Roth, Editor-in-Chief, VP of LinkedIn Posting without the try-hard energy Optimise for reputation, not reach. Viral posts feel good, but long-term opportunities come from credibility, not likes. Last month I had a TikTok video reach 450k views. It didn't matter. More important were the replies to the previous newsletter. 10 thoughtful connections > 1,000 passive followers. Skip the engagement chasing Their algorithm prioritises knowledge and advice over raw engagement. Instead of chasing likes:
Engagement fades. Trust lingers. Posting should be downstream of doing If you're constantly "building a personal brand," when do you have the time to build anything else? Content should be a natural byproduct of current work and projects. Your best posts should feel like footprints, not fireworks. The silent audience: low engagement ≠ low impact A big misconception about self-promotion and posting in general is that if a post doesn't get likes or comments, it means nobody saw it. Engagement metrics don't tell the full story.
Escape the algorithm Sources for today's issue, to break free from your regular scroll: Strategy Breakdown: LinkedIn: A creator platform of choice. From cringe to creator magnet Entrepreneur: LinkedIn Changed Its Algorithms — Here's How Your Posts Will Get More Attention Now Inc.com: 3 Reasons LinkedIn Will Be the Social Platform of 2025 Podcast: Creator Science: Justin Welsh's approach to LinkedIn Best believe that Justin Welsh knows LinkedIn Podcast/Blog: Personal Branding in the Digital Age - Tim Ferris - “Personal branding is about managing your name — even if you don’t own a business — in a world of misinformation….” Video: Death of the Personal Brand - Dan Koe, who argues that "personal brands are no longer personal if all you do is chase trends and algorithms." If you got this far... you're part of 71% of subscribers, so thank you, Reader. This is my take on how LinkedIn has evolved and what’s working for me as I navigate self-employment. For me, it’s about balancing visibility with authenticity, sharing useful insights without falling into engagement traps. I don’t follow company accounts. If I need to know something, I’ll check their page. I do follow the people who work there. I want to see their projects, their challenges, and their insights. Over time, I’ve learned this: people don’t want emails from companies. They want emails from interesting people who work there. This isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach. If you have thoughts, struggles, or different experiences, I’d love to hear them. Let’s make this a conversation.
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