For years, many professionals measured success on LinkedIn by likes, comments and visibility. A post that performed well was often treated as proof of influence, even when it did not necessarily say much about the person behind it. But the professional world is changing, and LinkedIn is changing with it.
As artificial intelligence, layoffs, and growing competition reshape the way people build careers, professional reputation is becoming more important than ever. LinkedIn is no longer just a place people visit when they are looking for their next role. It has become a space where trust is built long before a resume is sent, an interview takes place or a business conversation begins.
This shift reflects a broader change in the market. Employees are thinking differently about job security, candidates are trying to stand out in a crowded environment, leaders are working to build trust, and companies are trying to maintain credibility while adapting to new technologies and changing business conditions. In this reality, professional presence is no longer only about being seen. It is about helping others understand how you think, what you know and what kind of value you can provide.
LinkedIn's changing direction
LinkedIn itself is moving in that direction. The platform is placing more emphasis on relevance, professional value, and meaningful content, while taking steps against artificial engagement, automated interactions, and posts created mainly to trigger reactions. The message is clear: popularity is becoming less important than credibility.
That distinction matters. Visibility alone does not create trust. A post can reach many people and still say very little. The real question is whether the people reading your content understand your expertise, gain value from your perspective and develop confidence in what you bring to the table. This applies not only to executives and founders, but also to managers, lawyers, product experts, recruiters, consultants, and employees at every stage of their careers.
At the same time, professionals and companies are facing a flood of generic content. AI tools now make it possible for almost anyone to create a polished post within minutes. But when everyone can produce content, content that sounds like everyone else quickly loses value. Broad statements about innovation, leadership, growth and success may look professional, but they often disappear into the feed because they do not reveal real experience.
What stands out is substance. Lessons from real projects, practical observations, industry insight, and perspectives that come from actual expertise are harder to fake. AI can help refine ideas, improve structure, and make writing clearer, but it cannot replace judgment gained from the field. In an era where content creation is becoming easier, authentic expertise becomes more valuable.
Companies need to adapt as well. A corporate LinkedIn page is no longer enough. People want to understand the people behind the organization: leaders, employees, experts, and professionals. They want to see how a company thinks, how it approaches challenges and what exists beyond official messaging.
The future of LinkedIn and the future of work are moving in the same direction. Generic content is losing value, while real expertise is becoming more important to show. Experience still matters, but in today’s market, knowing how to communicate that experience matters too.
The writer is co-founder and CEO of MAIA Digital, a company that helps organizations, executives, and management teams build and manage their professional presence on LinkedIn