There are many lawyers and professionals doing sophisticated, high-value work whose LinkedIn presence doesn’t reflect that reality. They’re advising on complex matters, managing demanding clients and operating at a high level, yet if someone were to look them up on LinkedIn, that wouldn’t come through clearly. Without context, it’s hard to understand what they focus on or how they think.
That gap has real consequences. Visibility plays a role in how often someone comes to mind, how easily others can describe what they do and whether they’re included in opportunities. Most people aren’t sitting around trying to remember who to call. They think of the names they’ve seen, the people who show up, the ones who feel familiar. When that visibility isn’t there, even very strong professionals can get overlooked outside of their immediate network.
LinkedIn recently shared data on what increases visibility on the platform. What stands out is how practical it is. There’s nothing complicated here, but there is a level of consistency that most people don’t maintain. That’s where the difference comes from.

Posting once a week can increase your profile views by up to 4x and can double your followers. That sounds significant, but it lines up with how people actually use LinkedIn. No one is tracking everything you post. People are busy and they’re scrolling quickly. When someone shows up occasionally, it’s easy to miss or forget. When someone shows up regularly, their name starts to feel familiar and their focus becomes clearer over time.
A lot of professionals treat posting as something they’ll get to when they have time or when they have something important to say. That usually leads to long gaps and makes the whole process feel heavier than it needs to be. A better way to approach it is to connect content to what’s already happening in your day. The questions you’re answering, the patterns you’re noticing and the explanations you’re giving to clients are all natural starting points. When you share those observations in a clear way, your experience starts to come through without forcing it.
Commenting is another area where there’s an easy opportunity that often gets missed. LinkedIn’s data shows that commenting at least once a week can increase your profile views by up to 3x. That’s meaningful, especially because it doesn’t require you to create something from scratch. It puts you into conversations that are already happening and often already getting attention.
The way you comment matters. Short reactions are easy to scroll past and don’t leave much of an impression. A thoughtful comment that adds perspective, highlights something specific or connects the topic to what you’re seeing in your own work stands out. It shows how you think and what you pay attention to. Over time, those interactions build familiarity and help people associate your name with certain topics.
Another factor that influences visibility is the use of visuals. LinkedIn has shared that adding an image to your post can increase reactions, comments and reposts by up to 40%. That reflects how people engage with the platform. Most users are moving quickly through their feed and posts without visuals tend to blend in. A well-chosen image can make someone pause long enough to read.
This doesn’t require anything elaborate. A photo from an event, a simple graphic with a takeaway or something that reinforces your point can all work. The goal isn’t to create something complex. It’s to give your content a better chance of being seen.
What stands out across all of this is how manageable it is. Posting once a week, engaging thoughtfully in a few conversations and using visuals when they add value doesn’t require a major shift in how you spend your time. It does require consistency, which is where most people struggle.
There’s often an assumption that LinkedIn requires a full strategy or a large volume of content. That assumption can make it feel overwhelming and lead to inaction. A simple approach that you can maintain over time is far more effective. When you show up regularly, people begin to recognize your name and understand your focus without you having to explain it directly.
It’s also important to think about how your content lands with other people. Many professionals focus on what they’ve done, but don’t always provide context that helps others understand why it matters. Adding a clear takeaway or insight makes your content more relevant and easier to engage with. It gives people something to think about and a reason to pay attention.
A consistent presence also creates opportunities to stay in touch. When you share something, it gives you a natural reason to reach out to a client or a contact and mention it. That kind of outreach feels timely and grounded in something real. Over time, those small touchpoints help maintain relationships without it feeling forced.
One of the reasons people stop is because they expect immediate results. They post a few times, don’t see much engagement and assume it’s not working. Visibility builds over time. People need to see your name more than once, connect you with certain topics and start to recognize your perspective. That doesn’t happen overnight, but it does happen with consistency.
As that builds, the results become more noticeable. More profile views, more engagement and more conversations that start because someone saw something you shared. Those outcomes are a direct result of being visible on a regular basis.
At the end of the day, this comes down to closing the gap between the work you’re already doing and what people can actually see. The expertise is already there. The experience is already there. LinkedIn gives you a way to make that visible to a broader audience.
A consistent approach, even a simple one, can change how often you come to mind and how easily others understand where you add value.
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