Why Publish Newsletters on LinkedIn?
LinkedIn content can be published in various ways to enable creators and thought leaders different options to appeal to their audiences. One of their most powerful is the LinkedIn newsletter. More than 500 million professionals have subscribed to the 146,000+ LinkedIn Newsletters spanning a variety of professional topics, and daily newsletter readership has more than doubled year-over-year. Writing a LinkedIn newsletter gives authors a double benefit: they get to stay in touch with their stakeholders while showing them their value.
LinkedIn newsletters are a powerful marketing tool for all LinkedIn creators; whether they’re entrepreneurs, employees, or CEO’s. It’s important to note that LinkedIn newsletters can be published from personal profiles and also from company pages, so they are a valuable marketing tool for companies too.
What are LinkedIn newsletters?
A LinkedIn newsletter is a set of regularly published articles on LinkedIn. The newsletter is the ‘umbrella’ under which the articles (or episodes) are housed. LinkedIn newsletters are a powerful feature that allow creators to share ideas, insights, and updates with their followers. Because of their potential length – newsletter episodes can be over 100,000 characters - LinkedIn newsletters can provide a space for the writer to showcase a depth of knowledge and begin to establish themselves as a thought leader in their respective industry.
You may have heard of LinkedIn articles, it is still possible to publish these on LinkedIn without housing them in a newsletter, however, using a newsletter to showcase articles opens up the engagement opportunities considerably.
What are the differences between LinkedIn newsletters and articles?
Even though the newsletter has a name, each ‘episode’ or article published within it will be its own separate entity and is a stand-alone piece of content with its own name and supporting image.
The main advantage of articles is that they are public by default, meaning they can be discovered by anyone on LinkedIn, even those who are not connected with the author. This can help in reaching a broader audience beyond their immediate network.
Newsletters on the other hand can be used to target a specific audience. When a newsletter is first created, every single one of the creators’ followers gets a notification to that effect – yes – every single one! This notification appears in LinkedIn and, potentially via email also. That’s powerful.
Newsletters can also elicit engagement from the readers. Users can like, comment and share individual updates fostering a real sense of community and relationship building around the newsletter as well as increasing engagement.
Why set up a LinkedIn newsletter?
Should I post my newsletter on my company page or my personal profile?
Newsletters were originally only able to be published from personal profiles but now it is possible to publish newsletters from company pages also as long as the page has at least 150 followers. Because the first newsletter published is brought to the attention of all page followers, I advise waiting until the page has at least 500 followers before publishing a newsletter on it for the first time.
I will be covering newsletters on company pages in more detail in a separate newsletter so look out for that if it’s something you’re interested in.
How to create a LinkedIn newsletter from a personal profile
Before we can discuss LinkedIn newsletter best practices, let’s go through the steps to create a newsletter. Fortunately, it is relatively easy to get started. The following steps apply only if you haven’t set up a newsletter. Once it’s set up using this process, it’s even more simple to publish.
For future newsletters, this part is already set up for you. The process will be much more simple.
What should my newsletter be about?
Always be mindful of your own goals when writing any content. Newsletters are the ideal place for showcasing your thought leadership so this should always be the primary goal. Making a newsletter ‘salesy’ will put readers off so avoid this at all costs. Avoid ‘fluffy’ or non-consequential content. Think about the psychology of someone who invests their time clicking through to read a newsletter; they’re expecting something different from the posts they see scrolling through their feed. Disappoint them and you could lose them - not only for this newsletter but for all future newsletters and potentially.
How to get maximum reach for your LinkedIn Newsletter
When the first issue of your newsletter was published, it was automatically sent to all your connections and followers. But this only happens once. After that, persuading people to subscribe is up to you. And the more you promote it, the more subscribers you will attract.
Pin it to the ‘Featured’ section of your profile
When people visit your profile and they see a snippet of your newsletter in the featured section, it’s really easy for them to click through to read it.
Recommended by LinkedIn
Make it the live link in your profile intro
You can also add a live link to the Introduction section of your profile to invite people to read or subscribe to your newsletter.
Share the URL of your newsletter page
Wherever you share links to your resources, add your newsletter URL. This could be in your email signature, on your website, in your marketing emails, at the end of your articles or blogs and in any other places you market yourself. I’ve added mine to my Linktree with my other resources which most people find through my Instagram feed.
Send it to new connections
Instead of sending a plain ‘thank you for connecting’ message when you gain a new connection, send them something useful that isn’t sales-focused. What could be better than a link to read your value-packed newsletter?
Examples of great newsletters
Piers Linney ‘Business As Usual’
Ex Dragon Piers Linney, publishes a monthly newsletter offering business and personal guidance.
What’s good? Powerful titles, interesting and educational content, and accessible layout.
VentureBeat - The AI Beat
Software development company who publish a tech-driven newsletter from their company page.
What's good? String headline, lots of backlinks.
Anthony Day - This week in Web 3
Another tech-related newsletter from a personal profile.
What’s good? Particularly good for visual learners - lots of colour, images and lists. Content is high quality and well spread out.
Ed Forteau
Email marketing expert publishes bi-weekly newsletters
What’s good? Innovative content, easy to access and funny.
In summary
LinkedIn newsletters provide an incredible opportunity to share insights and thought leadership to a wide and targeted audience. Whether they’re published via a personal profile or a company page, newsletters encourage conversation, and subscribers get a notification whenever they’re published.
They stay on LinkedIn as long as you leave them there, they get found in Google searches and can be republished in other places too. Yes, they take time to compose, to design and even to publish but in my view that is time very well spent for the potential ROI.
Do you publish a newsletter regularly? If not, what is stopping you?
I would love your comments below and if you enjoyed this newsletter, please hit ‘subscribe’ at the top right of the page so you’ll see next months too. (see what I did there?!).
Sarah 💜
Keeping #LinkedInSimplifed for you 🧡
Health & Wellness Coach | NBC-HWC Cohort 2025 | Fitness & CPR/AED Instructor | Author | Advocate for Holistic Living
8moGreat article Sarah Clay! Thank you for sharing!
Keynote speaker, fantasy detective author, inspiring your students through fiction writing to fall in love with learning.
9moThis was a fantastic article! I loved how well it introduced writing LinkedIn articles and now my brain is buzzing with what the possibilities are! I did get a giggle out of "pubålication" and some of the spacing after the headlines made the flow skip like a scratched record, but the information here and the delivery is fantastic!
Absolutely love the initiative, Sarah! 🌟 As Steve Jobs once said, "The only way to do great work is to love what you do." Your dedication to informing and empowering others about LinkedIn newsletters truly reflects this ethos! Keep shining and adding value to the LinkedIn community. 💪🧡 #Inspiration #LinkedInGrowth
Director | Arrei Ltd
11moThanks for this Sarah Clay - you’ve brought me up to speed quickly (again!)