The Reality Check Nobody Asked For
Here’s the thing that’s not making headlines: LinkedIn got more crowded. Impressions dropped 23%, interactions fell 14%, and everyone’s posting more than ever. The platform didn’t get worse, it just got busier. Way busier.
Think about what that actually means for your business. You can’t just show up anymore and expect people to see your content. The lazy LinkedIn strategy of posting once a week with zero thought behind it? That’s dead. Quality just became the only currency that matters.
What’s Actually Working Right Now
The good news is that people are still seeing massive results on LinkedIn, but they’re the ones who adapted. Metricool’s research found that video content grew by 14% and engagement on videos keeps climbing. Long-form videos are back, which honestly makes sense because people are tired of being sold to in seven seconds.
LinkedIn Live is having a moment too. Businesses are using it for real conversations, not just polished presentations. Webinars, study launches, behind-the-scenes looks at how things actually work. The kind of content that makes people feel like they’re learning something useful, not just being pitched to.
And here’s something we’ve been saying forever: storytelling is everything. The LinkedIn accounts that are growing right now are the ones sharing actual stories from their work, the messy parts included. Interview disasters, client wins, the time everything went wrong and what they learned from it. Real experiences from real people beat corporate speak every single time.
The Content Formats You Need to Know About
Carousels are still crushing it. Those multi-slide PDF posts that people can swipe through? They’re consistently getting the best engagement because they give value without making people leave the platform. Take your best insights, break them into digestible slides, and watch what happens.
Interactive posts are working. You know the ones. “Comment ‘YES’ if you want the template” or polls about industry trends. They feel a bit engagement-baity because they are, but they work because LinkedIn’s algorithm loves comments. Just make sure you’re actually delivering value when people engage, otherwise you’re just annoying everyone.
AI content is everywhere, and this is where it gets interesting. People are using AI to generate images, write drafts, brainstorm ideas. The ones winning are using AI as a starting point and then making it sound like an actual human wrote it. The ones losing are the accounts that sound like a robot had a breakdown trying to write inspirational quotes.
What This Means for (Small) Businesses
If you’re a small business owner in Curaçao or anywhere in the Caribbean, LinkedIn is not the platform to ignore anymore. Your competitors are there, your potential clients are there, and the people who could refer business to you are definitely there.
But here’s the part that matters: you don’t need to post every day. You don’t need to go viral. You don’t need to become a LinkedIn influencer (please don’t try to become a LinkedIn influencer). You need to show up consistently with content that actually helps people or tells them something worth knowing.
Post about what you’re learning in your industry. Share client wins without breaking confidentiality. Talk about the problems you solve and why they matter. Ask questions that get people thinking. Be the person in your space who sounds like a human, not a press release.
The Stuff Everyone’s Doing Wrong
Stop writing like you’re trying to impress your high school English teacher. Nobody on LinkedIn wants to read three paragraphs of buzzwords strung together. They want to know if you can help them, if you understand their problem, and if you’re worth their time.
Stop posting just to post. If you don’t have anything useful to say this week, it’s okay to not say anything. One great post beats seven mediocre ones every single time.
And please…. Stop using LinkedIn like it’s Instagram. It’s not. People are there for business reasons, professional development, industry insights. They’re not looking for beach pics and inspirational sunset quotes. Save that for the platforms where it belongs.
How to Actually Use This Information
Start with one thing. Pick one format that makes sense for your business and commit to doing it well. If you’re good on camera, try video. If you like writing, go with carousels or longer posts. If you have a team, get them involved with employee stories and behind-the-scenes content.
Watch what’s working in your industry, but don’t copy it word for word. Take the concept and make it yours. The reason storytelling works is because your story is different from everyone else’s. Use that.
And track what happens. Not obsessively, but enough to know if what you’re doing is working. Are people engaging? Are you getting messages? Are conversations starting? That’s the stuff that matters, not vanity metrics.
The Bottom Line
LinkedIn in 2026 is more competitive than it’s ever been, but that’s actually good news if you’re willing to put in the work. The businesses that are going to win are the ones that treat it like a real marketing channel, not an afterthought.
You don’t need a massive following to get results. You need to show up with something worth saying, say it in a way that sounds like you, and keep doing it long enough for people to notice.
The data from Metricool’s study makes it pretty clear: quality beats quantity, video is king, and people want to connect with actual humans. If you can nail those three things, LinkedIn can be one of the best tools in your marketing toolkit.
Now go post something that brings value to your audience!
This blog post is based on insights from Metricool’s 2026 Social Media Study, which analyzed over 1 million accounts and nearly 40 million posts across major platforms. You can check out their full research at metricool.com.




