LinkedIn has made a significant change to how content is ranked and shown in the feed. If you rely on LinkedIn to generate visibility, leads, and conversations, this update directly affects how your posts perform.
The shift is simple to understand, but important to act on. LinkedIn is moving away from matching content based purely on keywords, and towards understanding meaning, intent, and relevance.
If you want your content to reach the right people, you need to adapt.
LinkedIn now uses more advanced AI and large language models to interpret content in a deeper way.
Instead of scanning posts for exact keywords or hashtags, the platform now looks at:
This means LinkedIn can connect your post with the right audience, even if you are not using the exact words they searched for.
It also means the platform can respond more quickly to emerging topics, showing relevant posts to users while those conversations are still active.
The feed is becoming more personalised and adaptive over time.
LinkedIn uses a combination of signals, including:
This matters because your content is no longer competing purely on reach or keyword optimisation. It is competing on relevance.
If your post aligns with what your ideal customer is interested in right now, it is more likely to be shown.
Keywords and hashtags still have a role, but they are no longer the main driver of visibility.
LinkedIn can now understand:
So while keywords can support your content, they will not compensate for unclear or unfocused messaging.
Clarity now matters more than optimisation tricks.
This update changes how you should approach LinkedIn content.
You no longer need to force exact keyword matches into every post. Instead, you need to focus on being clear, relevant, and consistent.
Here is what that looks like in practice:
Every post you publish should have a clear topic.
Avoid vague or mixed messages. If LinkedIn cannot easily understand what your post is about, it will struggle to categorise and distribute it.
Decide the focus before you write, and stick to it.
LinkedIn learns what you talk about over time.
If you regularly post about specific topics, such as sales strategy, manufacturing challenges, or SaaS growth, the platform builds a stronger understanding of your expertise.
That makes it easier for LinkedIn to match your content with the right audience.
If your content is inconsistent or scattered, that signal becomes weaker.
Because LinkedIn can now respond faster to emerging topics, timing matters more.
When you create content around current trends, challenges, or changes in your industry, you increase your chances of being surfaced while interest is high.
This does not mean chasing trends for the sake of it. It means staying close to what your audience is already thinking about.
This is the most important point.
Your ideal customer is not looking for content that is optimised for an algorithm. They are looking for content that helps them solve problems, make decisions, and grow their business.
For many SME managing directors, the real frustration is not social media performance. It is generating leads and increasing sales in a predictable way.
If your content speaks directly to those challenges, LinkedIn is now better equipped to recognise that and show it to the right people.
To make this practical, focus on these actions.
LinkedIn should not sit in isolation.
If you want consistent lead generation, you need a joined-up approach that includes:
This is exactly how our six-step system works. You attract the right audience, convert them into leads, and then turn those leads into sales through a defined process.
LinkedIn plays a key role in building visibility and trust, but it works best when it is part of a wider system designed to generate revenue.
LinkedIn is getting better at understanding content, not just scanning it.
That means you do not need to rely on keywords to be found. Instead, you need to focus on:
If you get those three things right, LinkedIn is more likely to put your content in front of the people who matter.
And ultimately, that is what you want – not more impressions, but more conversations with the right potential customers.