From short-form video to BrandLink ads and AI-powered targeting, here’s what enterprise marketers need to know
LinkedIn has become indispensable for B2B marketing, with ad revenue projected to reach $9.7 billion in 2026 . As the platform continues to evolve, marketers must adapt their strategies to keep pace with new features, algorithm changes, and shifting audience expectations.
What is LinkedIn marketing?
LinkedIn marketing is the practice of using LinkedIn to build brand awareness, generate leads, develop relationships, and establish thought leadership with a professional audience. It covers both organic activity (Company Page posts and employee content) and paid promotion (Sponsored Content and Thought Leader ads).
What sets LinkedIn apart is the context. People show up there in a professional mindset, ready to learn, network, and make business decisions. That makes it fundamentally different from platforms built around entertainment.
How the LinkedIn algorithm works in 2026
The LinkedIn algorithm decides which posts to surface based on how much real value and conversation they create, not just how many likes they collect. LinkedIn has rolled out new AI systems that scan every post before it hits the feed, and they are serious about quality.
What the algorithm rewards:
- Original ideas and fresh perspectives
- Real expertise that demonstrates genuine knowledge
- Actual human perspective—posts that sound like a person, not a template
- Meaningful conversation and thoughtful, back-and-forth discussion
- Dwell time—people who read your full post or watch your whole video
What it penalizes:
- AI-generic writing that reads like low-effort content with no point of view
- Duplicate or plagiarized content
- Engagement bait that chases quick reactions rather than real discussion
What’s new in LinkedIn marketing in 2026
Short-form video dominance
Video viewership on LinkedIn has grown 36% year-over-year, and video creation is now growing 2x faster than all other post types. LinkedIn has rolled out several new video features, including a “Videos For You” section in the feed, a full-screen video mode on mobile, and a CapCut integration that lets users send videos straight to LinkedIn.
Hootsuite’s data shows that video content has the highest engagement rate among content types on LinkedIn.
BrandLink
LinkedIn’s Wire Program has been renamed and expanded into BrandLink. Marketers can now place in-stream video ads before trusted publisher content (Forbes, Business Insider) and top creator videos. Creators receive a cut of the ad revenue, marking LinkedIn’s first real step toward creator monetization.
Early performance shows viewers are up to 18% more likely to become a lead, with 130% higher video completion rates than standard video ads.
New Campaign Manager features
LinkedIn has rolled out several upgrades to help marketers plan, optimize, and measure performance more effectively:
- Marketing Overview: A full account-level snapshot across campaigns
- Media Planner: Forecast reach, impressions, and average frequency before launching campaigns
- Ads Duplication: Quickly duplicate or test variations of high-performing ads
- Dynamic UTMs: An automated tool for generating consistent UTMs across campaigns
- Measurement Insights: Deeper, journey-level analytics
- Campaign Performance Digest: AI-powered, actionable insights and benchmarks
How to build a LinkedIn marketing strategy
Set specific goals
Identify what you want LinkedIn to do for your brand. Common LinkedIn KPIs include engagement rate, follower growth rate, click-through rate, lead gen form completions, cost per lead, share of voice, and referral traffic.
Research your target audience
LinkedIn users tend to skew older and have higher income. Use LinkedIn analytics to understand your specific audience’s industries, job functions, seniority, location, and company size. Audience Insights within Campaign Manager can help research target audiences, while social listening takes understanding to the next level.
Optimize your Company Page and executive profiles
Complete Pages get 30% more weekly views. Ensure your Company Page is fully filled out with all available tabs and sections. Executive profiles should include strong profile and background images, a clear headline, and a human-sounding summary.
Develop a LinkedIn content strategy
LinkedIn is, at its core, a place for connection. People show up to learn, share ideas, and build relationships. Content should feel like part of that ecosystem.
Content types that perform well in 2026:
- Short-form video (fastest-growing and highest-engagement format)
- Carousels and document posts (swipeable, value-packed content)
- Text-only posts (quick, off-the-cuff updates that spark conversation)
- LinkedIn newsletters (build a subscribed audience around expertise)
- LinkedIn articles (long-form thought leadership)
- Polls (low-effort engagement and audience insights)
Best practices:
- Use eye-catching visuals to help posts stand out
- Share relevant content including industry trends and timely insights
- Use hashtags strategically to reach the right people
- Add SEO-friendly titles, descriptions, and tags
- Spotlight and celebrate your team—people love seeing real humans behind a brand
Analyze and refine results
Track how content performs to double down on what works and fix what doesn’t. LinkedIn’s native analytics provide a solid read on Page and post performance. For deeper detail, Hootsuite’s LinkedIn analytics can show how content fits into your larger social strategy.
LinkedIn marketing best practices for 2026
Get involved in real conversations
LinkedIn has evolved from a notice-board feel to a truly social platform. Posts with thoughtful, back-and-forth comments outperform posts with hundreds of quick emojis. Questions, reflections, and real storytelling earn the most engagement. Shallow “post and pray” updates don’t go far anymore.
Format posts for engagement
LinkedIn comments increased 37% year-over-year in January 2025. More users are treating LinkedIn like X—sharing short, off-the-cuff, and reactive content that makes scrolling more dynamic and fun.
Best practices:
- Keep captions brief when linking out—let the headline do the heavy lifting
- Lead with value in the first line
- Use line breaks to make posts easy to scan
- Ask genuine questions to spark conversation
- Tell stories—personal experiences and lessons learned resonate more than generic advice
Maintain a healthy content mix
The 4-1-1 rule is a simple framework: for every 6 pieces of content, share 4 pieces of relevant content from others, 1 soft promotional post, and 1 hard promotional post. Always add your own perspective to everything you share.
