Love it or loathe it, blogging is one of the pillars of content marketing and it is difficult to imagine an effective digital strategy without it. Businesses who publish blogs these days have a choice of several intuitive and powerful platforms, with WordPress being the most popular. You can also publish blogs through a marketing automation platform, such as HubSpot, and directly through LinkedIn on their Pulse platform. There isn’t necessarily a right or wrong way to publish blog content, so long as you use a platform that’s relevant to your target buyer personas, but in this article, we examine the pros and cons of using LinkedIn as a blogging platform.
What distinguishes a LinkedIn blog post from a lengthy profile post? A LinkedIn blog is content published specifically through LinkedIn Pulse. Pulse is easy-to-use and can be accessed through the interests menu on your LinkedIn profile. Here you will see the option to write an article, which when clicked will take you to LinkedIn’s blog publishing interface. You can use the platform to write, edit, and publish blog articles in the same way as any other platform, and in terms of accessibility it ranks alongside WordPress and Blogger.
Blogs can cover any topic, but we recommend researching trending discussions and news items within your industry or LinkedIn network as starting points before you put pen to paper, as these have the best chance of visibility. LinkedIn Pulse tends to favour long-form blog articles of 1,200- 1,500 words or more, so it is a good opportunity to cover a topic in depth and demonstrate your knowledge and authority.
What are the benefits of using LinkedIn to blog? You can effectively target the right audience and make sure the right people are seeing it. It can help you boost your exposure, raise brand awareness, drive more traffic to your blog and create numerous connections that can pave the way to greater growth and profitability.
Not everyone is a fan of using LinkedIn as a blogging platform, so what are the negatives?
To be fair to LinkedIn, many of these criticisms, however justified, could also be levelled at any other microblogging site, such as Quora, Medium, or Reddit. And we can’t close off a section about the negatives of LinkedIn blogging without mentioning the thorny issue of content duplication – which isn’t a technical problem with the platform at all.
Some users who operate both a LinkedIn blog and external blog simply copy and paste the same content onto both platforms. This risks the content on both blogs being flagged up as duplicate content on Google and penalised in the search engine results pages. If you want to cover the same material on multiple platforms, please ensure that each blog is written differently, and preferably covers the topic from a unique angle to suit the audience – to avoid your followers being spammed by very similar content.
LinkedIn is the best social networking platform for business decision-makers, and comes with a complex set of tools that, when used correctly, are a great benefit to businesses looking for more B2B leads and sales. To help customers use LinkedIn to their best advantage, we have written a free e-book – How to use LinkedIn for Business, which you can download by [clicking here]. If you’d like to discuss your social media or lead generation strategies in person and find out more about how to cut costs and get better results, please don’t hesitate to get in touch.
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