The platform's shift toward meaningful conversation and original expertise means your engagement strategy needs a complete rethink. We break down what works now.
If your LinkedIn strategy still looks like it did in 2024, you're losing. The platform has shifted. Generic engagement plays, comment-bait posts, and surface-level metrics no longer drive growth. In 2026, LinkedIn's algorithm is built to reward meaningful conversation, original expertise, and video content. That means the posts that spark real discussion and demonstrate genuine knowledge win. Everything else gets buried.
For industrial, commercial, and small business owners, this is actually good news. The algorithm now favors substance over polish. You don't need a PR team or a viral moment. You need a clear point of view, audience research, and the discipline to show up consistently with content your buyers actually care about.
A strong LinkedIn marketing strategy starts with four non-negotiable pieces: clear goals, audience research, an optimized Company Page, and a content plan built around what your audience actually wants. Most businesses skip this and jump straight to posting. That's why they fail.
LinkedIn's 2026 algorithm explicitly prioritizes video. This doesn't mean every post needs Hollywood production value. It means showing your face, your process, or your team in action. A 30-second video of you explaining a common problem in your industry will outperform a 500-word written post every time.
For industrial and commercial businesses, video is a chance to show what you actually do. A manufacturing company showing a production process. A contractor walking through a job site. A service provider explaining what they do and why it matters. This builds credibility in a way text never can.
Enterprise teams are scaling LinkedIn by combining employee advocacy (encouraging staff to share company content from their personal profiles), thought leadership ads, and unified management tools. This approach multiplies reach without requiring a massive internal team.
Employee posts reach farther than company posts. When your team members share your insights, ideas, or company news from their profiles, LinkedIn's algorithm treats it as peer-to-peer conversation, which the algorithm favors. Thought leadership ads amplify this further by getting your best content in front of decision-makers who don't follow you yet.
LinkedIn's upgraded ad tools, including BrandLink and Accelerate campaigns, make it easier to test messaging and scale what works. But the real power comes from unified dashboards like Hootsuite that let you manage publishing, analytics, and engagement from one place. You can schedule posts, track performance, respond to comments, and measure ROI without switching between five different tabs.
For small teams, this is the difference between LinkedIn being a time sink and LinkedIn being a channel that actually drives business results.
Meaningful conversation, original expertise, and video content. Surface-level engagement (likes, generic comments) no longer moves the needle the way it did before. According to Hootsuite's 2026 research, the algorithm rewards posts that spark real discussion and demonstrate genuine knowledge in your field.
Start with clear goals and audience research, then optimize your Company Page, and build a content plan around what your audience actually wants (not what you want to say). This foundation prevents wasted effort and makes every post count.
Yes. Video is now a primary ranking factor in LinkedIn's algorithm. It doesn't have to be polished, but the platform explicitly favors video over static posts. For industrial and commercial businesses, this means showing your process, team, or expertise on camera.
Enterprise teams combine employee advocacy (encouraging staff to share company content from personal profiles), thought leadership ads, and unified tools like Hootsuite to manage publishing, analytics, and engagement from one dashboard. This removes bottlenecks and multiplies reach.