Wow, Crystal! Thank you so much for your comment and kind words. I'm inspired this was helpful to you and I hope that you use what you learned to spread the word about your book writing services. It was great seeing your work as a Christian novelist. Best wishes and blessings.
Talha...thanks for the comment and question. There are a TON of landing page builders out there, from Click Funnels to High Level and they all work very well. I like to have more control, so my preference is to register a domain, install Wordpress and a theme (I like Be Theme) and build a landing page myself. I build these for my clients as well. The Wordpress route is not that difficult and can be done in an hour or so. And I get flexibility...for example here's the landing page for my Force Acceleration Mastermind: ninetwice.com/force-acceleration/ When I have openings, there's an application to join on that page. When I do not have openings, it turns into a wait list. The key is do to what you will get done and get it done quickly! Let me know if I can clarify anything for you. Chris
Sir, Thank you for sharing the video. In my case the editor is not working properly, also the interface is different from yours. Is this because of you have mac and I'm using windows or there is some other reason for this.
How does adding URL's in the content impact the LinkedIn algorithm? I keep hearing that URLs directly placed in the content will limit the reach the content will receive on LinkedIn. Great video with easy to follow steps!
Hi Jennifer! How about we approach this from a business model standpoint (instead of trying to figure out the algorithm)? LinkedIn (and every social platform) makes money from selling advertising on their platform. The longer a user stays on the platform, the more money LinkedIn can make, especially if advertisers are charged by impression (meaning someone *saw* the ad). If we do things that send people away from the platform, we are directly impacting the revenue model of the platform. So, we can conjecture that the platform (LinkedIn in our example) will suppress our reach to keep our content from sending people away and losing potential ad revenue. And we have to make a choice, do we risk it, place a link so that we can get traction on our off-LinkedIn conversion points? Maybe. Should we put a "link in the comments" - You've got to imagine the LinkedIn has figured that out. "Link in my bio"? LinkedIn encourages links in your profile...that's reasonable but requires the reader to take an additional step (visit profile and find link). The way I proceed is to use a combination of all of these things. I'm using LinkedIn as a "feeder" source for my main social, which is RUclips, so I'm more risk tolerant when I include links in my content. Does this answer your question? Chris
@@jenniferrousejustaskjen thank you so much for letting me know… And I’m super grateful that you became a subscriber! I promise I’m gonna bring you only my best. With gratitude, Chris
Ok...good on you for publishing the article and for getting a decent amount of subs. 0 likes is not the worst thing in the world and it gives you some great feedback...try mixing up the content a bit and see if you get more interaction on your next newsletter. And come by the channel on Friday at 12pm ET (New York Time) for my open Q&A, I can give you more advice there. Chris
Want more clients from LinkedIn? Watch this free workshop: proutyclass.com
Awesome
Micheal, thank you as always for being a part of this channel and for your kind comments
thanks for this! chris
Marife, it's people like you that I make these videos for. Thank you!
This is excellent!! Thank you!!
Wow, Crystal! Thank you so much for your comment and kind words. I'm inspired this was helpful to you and I hope that you use what you learned to spread the word about your book writing services. It was great seeing your work as a Christian novelist. Best wishes and blessings.
Outstanding advice !
Thank you so much!
Very good resouce for freelancers. Thanks
I'm honored by your kind words!
That's really great Chris.. but how do you create landing pages?
Do you create via wordpress or any other platform?
Talha...thanks for the comment and question. There are a TON of landing page builders out there, from Click Funnels to High Level and they all work very well.
I like to have more control, so my preference is to register a domain, install Wordpress and a theme (I like Be Theme) and build a landing page myself. I build these for my clients as well.
The Wordpress route is not that difficult and can be done in an hour or so.
And I get flexibility...for example here's the landing page for my Force Acceleration Mastermind:
ninetwice.com/force-acceleration/
When I have openings, there's an application to join on that page. When I do not have openings, it turns into a wait list.
The key is do to what you will get done and get it done quickly!
Let me know if I can clarify anything for you.
Chris
Sir, Thank you for sharing the video. In my case the editor is not working properly, also the interface is different from yours. Is this because of you have mac and I'm using windows or there is some other reason for this.
Hello. Happy to help. LinkedIn changed things a few months ago. I'll make an updated video and message you with the link.
How does adding URL's in the content impact the LinkedIn algorithm? I keep hearing that URLs directly placed in the content will limit the reach the content will receive on LinkedIn. Great video with easy to follow steps!
Hi Jennifer! How about we approach this from a business model standpoint (instead of trying to figure out the algorithm)?
LinkedIn (and every social platform) makes money from selling advertising on their platform. The longer a user stays on the platform, the more money LinkedIn can make, especially if advertisers are charged by impression (meaning someone *saw* the ad).
If we do things that send people away from the platform, we are directly impacting the revenue model of the platform.
So, we can conjecture that the platform (LinkedIn in our example) will suppress our reach to keep our content from sending people away and losing potential ad revenue.
And we have to make a choice, do we risk it, place a link so that we can get traction on our off-LinkedIn conversion points? Maybe.
Should we put a "link in the comments" - You've got to imagine the LinkedIn has figured that out.
"Link in my bio"? LinkedIn encourages links in your profile...that's reasonable but requires the reader to take an additional step (visit profile and find link).
The way I proceed is to use a combination of all of these things.
I'm using LinkedIn as a "feeder" source for my main social, which is RUclips, so I'm more risk tolerant when I include links in my content.
Does this answer your question?
Chris
@@ChrisProutyVideos - Thank you for clarifying and for the guidance. You have a new subscriber!
@@jenniferrousejustaskjen thank you so much for letting me know… And I’m super grateful that you became a subscriber! I promise I’m gonna bring you only my best.
With gratitude,
Chris
Yesterday I created my first article and I got 240 subs in one day but 0 likes 😢
Ok...good on you for publishing the article and for getting a decent amount of subs. 0 likes is not the worst thing in the world and it gives you some great feedback...try mixing up the content a bit and see if you get more interaction on your next newsletter. And come by the channel on Friday at 12pm ET (New York Time) for my open Q&A, I can give you more advice there.
Chris