Two posts, same topic, same person. One gets thousands of views, the other disappears without a trace. The difference is rarely the content — it's what happens in the first hour. LinkedIn tests your post on a small audience first, and only if they react and comment does reach open up.
Which means views are something you can influence. More views are the result of early engagement — and early engagement is the result of five levers you control.
Five levers that expand your reach
From the first line to the first hour — it's all about earning engagement early.
Sharpen the first lineThe biggest lever. If the first line doesn't earn the tap on "see more", nothing else in the post gets a chance. Write it to stop the scroll — not to summarize.
Make it easy to readShort paragraphs, air between the lines and one thought per sentence. What looks heavy in the feed never gets read — and what isn't read gets no reactions.
Invite quick repliesEnd with a question that can be answered in ten seconds. Comments carry the most weight of all engagement — make it easy to leave one.
Reply to everything in the first hourEvery reply you write is fresh engagement that signals life in the post. Block 30–60 minutes after publishing and be present in the thread.
Post when your audience is activeThe test audience needs to be awake. Post when your buyers are actually scrolling — for most B2B audiences that means weekday mornings.
The algorithm doesn't reward the best-written post. It rewards the one that starts the conversation.
// Engagement before perfectionWhy do some posts get thousands of views and others none?
Because reach is handed out in rounds. LinkedIn tests your post on a small audience first — if they react and comment, the post is shown to the next ring, and the next. If it stays quiet, it stops there. That's why two equally good posts can live completely different lives, and why the five levers above all target the first hour. Want to go deeper into how the feed prioritizes? Read our breakdown of the LinkedIn algorithm.
The first line is the ticket. Without it, the rest of the post doesn't matter.
// Earn the "see more"Is good technique enough?
No — the levers amplify, they don't replace. Posts that help your audience always beat posts that chase views, because helpfulness is what makes the right people comment, and the right comments are what lead to business. Combine the levers with posts written to create value and both reach and pipeline grow.
Win the first hour
More views come from early engagement: a first line that stops the scroll, a post that's easy to read, a question that invites replies, presence in the thread for the first hour, and a publishing time when your audience is active. Technique amplifies — value decides.
LinkedCoach helps B2B teams turn LinkedIn into real conversations and booked meetings — without the cold-pitch playbook. With a team of nine coaches we help everyone from global companies to the one-person business get their sales teams working LinkedIn consistently. The common denominator for our clients is the insight that their potential customers are already on LinkedIn.
Frequently asked questions
How do you get more views on LinkedIn posts?
By earning strong engagement early, since LinkedIn expands a post's reach only after it performs with your first audience. Sharpen your first line, make posts easy to read, ask a question that invites quick replies, reply to every comment in the first hour, and post when your audience is active.
Why do some posts get thousands of views and others none?
Early engagement. LinkedIn tests your post on a small audience first and only expands reach if those readers react and comment.
What's the single biggest lever for more views?
The first line. If it doesn't earn the tap on "see more", nothing else in the post gets a chance to perform.
Where do I start?
Take our free LinkedIn test to see where you stand today and which step will make the biggest difference for you.
