Every LinkedIn profile in your industry says the same things. The audit identifies what's generic, what's missing, and what would make yours the obvious one to click. https://t.co/w0n3aFuaxp
Spending more than 30 minutes on a LinkedIn post and still not sure if it's good? That's a feedback problem. This fixes it. https://t.co/3kKbJFiA0d — Free 30-day trial in May. DM me here: https://t.co/5Ab5Y7sYTX
The goal of every LinkedIn post isn't to get likes. It's to make one specific person think "I need to talk to this person." Get that right and the likes follow.
Writers don't get stuck because they have nothing to say. They get stuck because they're afraid of saying the wrong thing in front of the right people.
Great posts drive profile visits. A weak profile wastes them. If you're investing in content, your profile needs to close. The audit shows you how. https://t.co/w0n3aFuaxp
You've read the threads. You've taken the courses. You're still not sure if your post is ready. This tells you — no opinion, just signals. https://t.co/3kKbJFiA0d — Free in May. DM me to start: https://t.co/5Ab5Y7sYTX
Short sentences land. Long ones can too, but they have to earn the space, and most of them don't, and you know it when you read them back, and this is what editing is for.
You've been in your industry for 10 years. Your LinkedIn presence looks like you started last Tuesday. The audit fixes the disconnect between who you are and how you appear. https://t.co/w0n3aFuaxp
Most people are writing C-grade posts and wondering why B-grade accounts are growing faster. Find out what grade yours is actually getting. https://t.co/3kKbJFiA0d — Free 30-day trial in May. DM me: https://t.co/5Ab5Y7sYTX
The biggest mistake I see on LinkedIn: writing to impress the people who already respect you instead of connecting with the people who don't know you yet.
People hire ghostwriters for the same reason they hire accountants. Not because they can't do it. Because their time is worth more doing something else.
A good briefing call is half the writing. If you know the story, the words usually follow. If you don't know the story yet, no amount of clever phrasing will save it.