LinkedIn algorithm – how does it work?

LinkedIn is all about networking and one of its most powerful tools is the connections one is able to make with other professionals in a variety of industries, as well as the relationships you can maintain and build with them through posts, articles and other interaction.

Nicholas Kalavas, CEO of CFM Group, writes:

It used to be that you only add the contacts that perhaps can offer you something in terms of employment or people you have worked with, but I strongly  advise my clients against that practice nowadays.

So one might argue, “ok then, I might as well add as many contacts as possible to maximise the views of my posts or content in general. The more contacts I have, the more the likelihood of my articles being seen by a greater audience'.

Well, it is not exactly that simple. Having spent quite a significant time studying and analysing some of the documentation put out by the LinkedIn Engineering team, I am going to attempt to simplify  the latest insights and ideas that I’ve learned.

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LinkedIn has officially implemented a 4-Step process for content distribution across its platform as a way to minimise inappropriate content and spam posts. It is therefore paramount for your strategy to be successful, to get a clear understanding of the steps that LinkedIn takes before amplifying, or reducing, your content’s reach.

The first step of the process occurs the minute you publish the content it may be a post or article) on your account, Director of Engineering, Rushi Bhatt explained in a blog post describing the strategies used to keep the newsfeed relevant:

“Our online and nearline classifiers label every image, text, or long form post as “spam,” “low-quality,” or “clear” in near real time.”

Once the content goes through this initial filtering, it is then shown to a small sample of your contacts to ascertain its quality by the number of likes, views, engagement, etc. At that point, the content is then scored from a quality perspective before being passed along to human editors who determine whether or not the content should continue to be displayed or be demoted. So effectively, your content or posts are initially shown only to a small amount of your connections as a test and if those people engage, it’s then passed along to editors (LinkedIn editors) to determine whether it should continue to be displaying to its millions of users.

I managed to extract the below from the LinkedIn engineering blog which displays the process by which your posts are accordingly rated and shared to your contacts.

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Conclusively, the 4-Step process that determines your content’s worth to users is as follows:

  1. Content is classified as Image/Text/Video/Long Form/Link
  2. Depending on the classification, content is then distributed to a sample of the users’ connections
  3. Once placed in front of these people, different actions have different weights to determine whether the post should be either (1) demoted because it’s low quality or (2) shown to more people because it’s high quality
  4. Editors then review the content to see if it’s worth distributing beyond that user's network

Now you are aware of  how your posts and articles get ranked on LinkedIn, try to make sure your posts are high quality and will attract that initial attention required.

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