Applying the “Six Questions” to LinkedIn Self-promotion

(UPDATE OCTOBER 23, 2023: “SIX QUESTIONS YOUR CONTENT CREATOR SHOULD ASK YOU IS SO 2022. DOWNLOAD THE NEWER “SEVEN QUESTIONS YOUR CONTENT CREATOR SHOULD ASK YOU” HERE.)

I’ve previously talked about the six questions your content creator should ask you. And I eat my own wildebeest food. I used the six questions to create a self-promotion blog post and LinkedIn post.

But since you care about YOUR self-promotion rather than mine, I’ll provide three tips for writing and promoting your own LinkedIn post.

How I promoted my content

Before I wrote the blog post or the LinkedIn post, I used my six questions to guide me. For my specific example, here are the questions and the answers.

QuestionPrimary AnswerSecondary Answer (if applicable)
Why?I want full-time employmentI want consulting work
How?State identity and marketing qualifications, ask employers to hire meState identity and marketing qualifications, ask consulting clients to contract with me
What?Blog post (jebredcal), promoted by a personal LinkedIn postBlog post (jebredcal), promoted by a Bredemarket Identity Firm Services LinkedIn post
Goal?Employers contact me for full-time employmentConsulting prospects contact me for contract work
Benefits?(1) No identity learning curve
(2) No content learning curve
(3) Proven results
(same)
Target Audience?Identity companies hiring Senior Product Marketing Managers and Senior Content Marketing ManagersIdentity companies contracting with content marketing consultants
For more information on the six questions, see https://bredemarket.com/2022/12/18/six-questions-your-content-creator-should-ask-you-the-e-book-version/.

You’ll notice that I immediately broke a cardinal rule by having both a primary goal and a secondary goal. When you perform your own self-promotion, you will probably want to make things less messy by having only a single goal.

So based upon these responses, I created…

First, the blog post

The Bredemarket blog is primarily to promote my consulting work. I have a different blog (jebredcal) to promote my full-time employment (or attempts to secure full-time employment).

Because the primary goal was to secure full-time employment, I posted to jebredcal instead of Bredemarket.

After the introduction (pictured above) with its “If you need a full-time employee” call to action, I then shared three identity-related blog posts from the Bredemarket blog to establish my “biometric content marketing expert” (and “identity content marketing expert”) credentials. I then closed with a dual call to action for employers and potential consulting clients. (I told you it is messy to have two goals.)

If you want to see my jebredcal post “Top 3 Bredemarket Identity Posts in June 2023 (so far),” click here.

So how did I get the word out about this personal blog post? I chose LinkedIn. (In my case, hiring managers probably aren’t going to check my two Instagram accounts.)

Second, the LinkedIn post

I often reshare my Bredemarket blog posts on various Bredemarket social media accounts. In this instance I only reshared it on LinkedIn, since that’s where the hiring managers are. While I shared the blog post to my Bredemarket Identity Firm Services LinkedIn page (since the post talked about identity), my primary goal was to share it to my personal LinkedIn feed.

It was simple to write the LinkedIn text, since I repurposed the introduction of the blog post itself. I added four hashtags, and then the post went live. You can see it here.

And by the way, feel free to like the LinkedIn post, comment on it, or even reshare it. I’ll explain why below.

Third, the “LinkedIn Love” promotion

So how did I promote it? Via the “LinkedIn Love” concept. (Some of you know where I learned about LinkedIn Love.)

To get LinkedIn love, I asked a few trusted friends in the identity industry to like, comment, or reshare the post. This places the post on my friends’ feeds, where their identity contacts will see it.

A few comments:

  • I don’t do this for every post, or else I will have no friends. In fact, this is the first time that I’ve employed “LinkedIn Love” in months.
  • I only asked friends in the identity industry, since these friends have followers who are most likely to hire a Senior Product Marketing Manager or Senior Content Marketing Manager.
  • I only asked a few friends in the identity industry, although eventually some friends that I didn’t ask ended up engaging with the post anyway.

I have wonderful friends. After several of them gave “LinkedIn Love,” The post received significant engagement. As of Friday morning, the post had acquired over 1,700 impresions. That’s many, many more than my posts usually acquire.

I don’t know if this activity will directly result in full-time employment or increased consulting work. But it certainly won’t hurt.

Three steps to promote YOUR content

But the point of this post isn’t MY job search. It’s YOURS (or whatever it is you want to promote).

For example, one of my friends who is also seeking full-time employment wanted to know how to use a LinkedIn post to promote THEIR OWN job search.

Now you don’t need to use my six questions. You don’t need to create a blog post before creating the LinkedIn post. And you certainly don’t need to create two goals. (Please don’t…unless you want to.)

In fact, you can create and promote your own LinkedIn post in just THREE steps.

Step One: What do you want to say?

My six questions obviously aren’t the only method to collect your thoughts. There are many, many other tools that achieve the same purpose. The important thing is to figure out what you want to say.

  • Start at the end. What action do you want the reader to take after reading your LinkedIn post? Do you want them to read your LinkedIn profile, or download your resume, or watch your video, or join your mailing list, or email or call you? Whatever it is, make sure your LinkedIn post includes the appropriate “call to action.”
  • Work on the rest. Now that you know how your post will end, you can work on the rest of the post. Persuade your reader to follow your call to action. Explain how you will benefit them. Address the post to the reader, your customer (for example, a potential employer), and adopt a customer focus.

Step Two: Say it.

If you don’t want to write the post yourself, then ask a consultant, a friend, or even a generative AI tool to write something for you. (Just because I’m a “get off my lawn” guy regarding generative AI doesn’t mean that you have to be.)

(And before you ask, there are better consultants than Bredemarket for THIS writing job. My services are designed and priced for businesses, not individuals.)

After your post is written by you or someone (or something) else, have one of your trusted friends review it and see if the written words truly reflect how amazing and outstanding you are.

Once you’re ready, post it to LinkedIn. Don’t delay, even if it isn’t perfect. (Heaven knows this blog post isn’t perfect, but I posted it anyway.) Remember that if you don’t post your promotional LinkedIn post, you are guaranteed to get a 0% response to it.

Step Three: Promote it.

Your trusted friends will come in handy for the promotion part—if they have LinkedIn accounts. Privately ask your trusted friends to apply “LinkedIn Love” to your post in the same way that my trusted friends did it for me.

By the way—if I know you, and you’d like me to promote your LinkedIn post, contact me via LinkedIn (or one of the avenues on the Bredemarket contact page) and I’ll do what I can.

And even if I DON’T know you, I can promote it anyway.

I’ve never met Mary Smith in my life, but she says that she read my Bredemarket blog post “Applying the “Six Questions” to LinkedIn Self-promotion.” Because she selects such high-quality reading material, I’m resharing Mary’s post about how she wants to be the first human to visit Venus. If you can help her realize her dream, scroll to the bottom of her post and donate to her GoFundMe.

Hey, whatever it takes to get the word out.

Let me know if you use my tips…or if you have better ways to achieve the same purpose.

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