Post by account_disabled on Dec 26, 2023 0:22:06 GMT -5
The impact is stronger if you post directly on your wall. Post, wait for the first interactions, then add to the album if you wish. 4) Optimize the length of your texts According to some experts, you need at least 80 words to boost engagement. Without going so far as to tell your life story in detail, you need a minimum of context on Facebook. 5) Work on punctuation Punctuation also has an impact on your results. Posts with hashtags (#) have on average 60% more interactions. THE "!" : 27% and the "?" : 23%. As stated before, experiment to see what works best for you. 6) Link titles: less than 100 characters Edit your links so that they are not cut by Facebook when you add them. 7) Post at the right time On Facebook as elsewhere, the days and times of publication are key. A priori, outse office hours (before or after), it is better than during. The weekend is not a bad option either.
8) Try emoticons According to a study by American Express (AMEX LinkedIn is a bit like Email Data Google: in permanent beta. The platform is evolving all the time. Features appear and then are deleted: keywords that generated traffic to your profile; full profile at X%; how we got to your profile... The algorithm is changing: linkedIn has long prioritized level 1 contacts in the results pages. Summer 2014, linkedIn moved up levels 2 instead. Fall 2014: we can now put the skills in French and no longer only in English. At the end of 2014, LinkedIn launched a new interface , gradually deployed in all countries. Despite this, we still often have different interfaces and functionalities depending on whether we put the interface in French or in English. January 2015, LinkedIn has just announced 2 major changes.
On the one hand, more visibility : we will now be able to see level 3 profiles, which (excluding bug) is only possible by paying. But, on the other hand, there are limits: from now on the number of monthly searches will be limited. Level 3 Visibility Today, when we conduct a search on LinkedIn, we have an unlimited view of the names and profiles of our level 1 and 2 contacts. When we arrive at a level 3 profile, we see the first name, the initial of the last name, the headline, and that's it. For the rest, you have to pay. You can also search the profile via Google with the headline, but this does not work in 100% of cases since you do not know the name of the contact. LinkedIn has just announced that in the coming weeks (no date), we will be able to see the names and profiles of all the contacts in its network (levels 1, 2 and 3).
8) Try emoticons According to a study by American Express (AMEX LinkedIn is a bit like Email Data Google: in permanent beta. The platform is evolving all the time. Features appear and then are deleted: keywords that generated traffic to your profile; full profile at X%; how we got to your profile... The algorithm is changing: linkedIn has long prioritized level 1 contacts in the results pages. Summer 2014, linkedIn moved up levels 2 instead. Fall 2014: we can now put the skills in French and no longer only in English. At the end of 2014, LinkedIn launched a new interface , gradually deployed in all countries. Despite this, we still often have different interfaces and functionalities depending on whether we put the interface in French or in English. January 2015, LinkedIn has just announced 2 major changes.
On the one hand, more visibility : we will now be able to see level 3 profiles, which (excluding bug) is only possible by paying. But, on the other hand, there are limits: from now on the number of monthly searches will be limited. Level 3 Visibility Today, when we conduct a search on LinkedIn, we have an unlimited view of the names and profiles of our level 1 and 2 contacts. When we arrive at a level 3 profile, we see the first name, the initial of the last name, the headline, and that's it. For the rest, you have to pay. You can also search the profile via Google with the headline, but this does not work in 100% of cases since you do not know the name of the contact. LinkedIn has just announced that in the coming weeks (no date), we will be able to see the names and profiles of all the contacts in its network (levels 1, 2 and 3).