The LinkedIn Algorithm Didn’t Get Harder: You’re Just Playing the Wrong Game…
A practical breakdown of what the algorithm favors today
Okay star, let’s talk about something that’s been driving me crazy.
Every week someone DMs me like: “Melissa, the algorithm is broken. My reach is dead. LinkedIn hates me now.”
And every time I’m like... no, babe. The algorithm isn’t broken.
You’re just still playing the 2023 game in 2026. And that game? It’s over.
I see it so often that I turned it into two FREE PDFs: one on the content mistakes that quietly cap reach, and one on the growth traps that stall progress even when you’re consistent.
Get them here 👉https://citrinecreators.co/resources
Let me explain what’s actually happening because once you get this, everything changes✨
LinkedIn isn’t ranking your posts anymore. It’s ranking YOU!
Read that again.
The algorithm is now trying to answer one question:
“Is this person actually credible on this topic for this audience?”
That’s it. That’s the whole game now.
This is why two creators can post the same exact format and get wildly different results. One person’s carousel flops. Another person’s identical carousel gets 500K impressions.
The difference isn’t the content. It’s the person behind it.
You’re not being rewarded for activity anymore. You’re being rewarded for consistency of expertise.
Here’s what LinkedIn is actually looking at in 2026:
What your profile says you’re good at. What topics you post about repeatedly. How people interact with your content. Whether conversations continue after the post. Whether people come back to you over time.
LinkedIn’s latest update (internally they’re calling it 360 Brew) now reads your headline, about section, and experience to verify your authority BEFORE distributing your posts.
If your content doesn’t match what your profile claims? LinkedIn limits your reach.
Think about it: A healthcare professional randomly posting about crypto? The algorithm is like “...girl, what? This doesn’t match. I’m not showing this to people.”
Your profile and your content need to tell the same story. Period 💅
The new game is topic ownership, not virality
I know everyone wants to go viral. Trust me, I get it. When my layoff post went mega-viral, it felt amazing.
But here’s what I’ve learned: Virality is unpredictable. Topic ownership is not.
The accounts winning right now do one thing extremely well: they train both humans AND the algorithm to associate them with a small number of ideas.
Not five topics. Not ten. Two or three.
I talk about brand partnerships, LinkedIn strategy, and creator monetization. That’s my lane. I don’t randomly post about fitness or politics or whatever’s trending. I stay focused.
When you do this consistently:
Your posts travel further without crazy spikes. Old posts resurface weeks later (this happens to me ALL the time now). New audiences find you automatically.
Reach feels slower but lasts way longer. That’s the trade-off. And honestly? It’s so worth it.
Why video matters and why most people still get it wrong 🎥
2-4 minutes (not 30 seconds, not 10 minutes)
Starts with a specific insight, NOT “hey guys welcome back”
Explains ONE idea clearly
Ends with a perspective shift or action step
No fancy edits needed. No virality tricks.
Saves are the metric that matters now. Not likes.
Comments that add real thought
Replies that keep the conversation going
Saves that signal “I need this later”
Every meaningful interaction tells LinkedIn: “This content is worth staying with.”
The creators winning right now:
Don’t chase formats: they master ideas
Don’t post daily: they post deliberately
Don’t optimize for reach: they optimize for recall
People don’t remember your best post. They remember what you consistently help them understand.
💫Remember:
Topic chaos
Shallow takes
Performative posting
More rewarding of:
Clear expertise
Repeated insights
Trust built over time
If your content clearly signals expertise, your profile reinforces it, and your engagement deepens it, well… the algorithm does the heavy lifting for you.


