LinkedIn changing feed, will show less low-quality content, polls
LinkedIn is now reducing the visibility of several types of content in its feed, including polls and engagement bait.
Hereâs what LinkedIn announced it is changing.Â
Less âlow-quality content.â Any posts that explicitly ask for or encourage engagement, such as comments or reactions, will have less visibility in the feed. LinkedIn said users find these types of posts that exist solely to boost reach âmisleading and frustrating.âÂ
Fewer polls. You had to know this one was coming. If you regularly browse LinkedIn, itâs become common to see multiple polls in your feed every day. Many of these are from people you donât know. LinkedIn said it has better filtering and promises to show only âhelpful and relevantâ polls, from people in your network. Â
Less irrelevant updates. Ever seen a connection congratulate someone youâve never met about a recent job change? LinkedIn says it will reduce how often users see this and try to show âmore targeted activityâ from your network.Â
âI donât want to see this.â In addition to algorithmic feed changes, LinkedIn is giving users a way to tell LinkedIn what they donât want to say. All individual posts will include an âI donât want to see thisâ option. You can limit content by authors or topic â plus you can choose to not see any political content.Â
Why we care. These are positive and needed changes that LinkedIn hopes will result in a feed full of relevant, reliable, credible and authentic content. Hopefully, you havenât been using engagement-baiting tactics on LinkedIn for your clients or brands (or yourself). If you have, expect engagement and reach to decline as LinkedInâs algorithm will no longer reward these tactics with greater visibility.
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