Socialware Blog

Do people actually read LinkedIn Status Updates?

Best Practices, Marketing, News — By Adam Salamon on July 8, 2010 5:06 pm

An interesting experiment was conducted recently by a gentleman named Blair Joss.  With a network of 403 connections on LinkedIn,  Joss posed the question of whether people actually read LinkedIn Status Updates.  Within 3 days, over 350 people had commented on his status update and over 1,700 people said they “liked” his update.  The numbers have been growing every hour.

LinkedInScreenShotAt this point you are probably as shocked as I was. You may also be scratching your head as to how 1,700 people could like his update. What happens on LinkedIn is that when someone in your network “likes” a comment or status update it is automatically shared with that person’s network – instantly multiplying the reach each message has.

For employees who are looking to build their personal networks and for companies looking to build their brand within their business communities, this simple experiment shows how quickly a compelling message can spread throughout a network.  Unlike Facebook updates, where you need to be directly connected to someone, the majority of commenters and fans of Joss’ update have never met Joss face to face.

As a follow up message, Blair posted “Blair Joss is hunting for a professional in the oil and gas industry with experience in Reservoir Engineering and has a network in Norway.”  LinkedIn has clearly given him a platform to meet prospects, colleagues, and customers who may have never been connected to him otherwise, but given that he has a great message and a network that can spread it, he has truly taken advantage of the tools available to him.  How are you helping your employees spread their message?

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2 Comments

  1. Gerri says:

    I’m trying the same experiment on LinkedIn to see if the results come out in a similar fashion or if they were possibly due to the type of connections that he had.

  2. mic adam says:

    Hi, i am doing a larger study on social media monitoring and linkedin will be one of my test areas. So far I have looked at how many reaction “Answers” and discussion posts get. The conclusion is that you better post a question on “Answers” 45% likely to get at least 1 answer while 78% of all discussions (in my 50 groups) have NO comments (agreed that a lot of the discussions are announcements about events or links to articles) but still!

    I like the idea of the monitoring of the status line. Will try it too.

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