Using Platform

Helping to spread the good will really pay off for our ambassadors - please use this platform to make your Social Media Posts very popular

Quickly multiply your LinkedIn endorsement powers by inviting people with this personal link - your powers will be multiplied as many times as the number of people you invite: https://www.thetopperson.com/ambassador_application.php?a=1706

FURTHER YOURSELF WITH LINKEDIN


LinkedIn is the best place to boost success for almost everyone in the history of mankind. Never before have over 900 million economically active people been just one free click away. Most of the World’s wealth is directly or indirectly present on LinkedIn – again just one click away.

Unfortunately, people seem to make the same mistake on LinkedIn as they do offline - they shout out what they want to say to everyone they can. This has a low conversion rate both offline and on LinkedIn; it's mostly a waste of time and an irritation to the audience.

The highest conversion rate is achieved by making the decisionmakers who would most benefit from or want your offering aware of it and your name.

THIS HOW YOU CAN ACHIEVE THAT WITH OUR HELP:



THE SPHERE OF INFLUENCE USERS

1. Define your offering

Unless you define your offering very precisely, the other steps in the process cannot produce great results.

You will not reach the right decisionmakers and those you will reach, will be wondering why you approach them.

If you have more than one offering, process each of them separately. Always keep your offering and your message about it very sharp.


2. Define your target decision makers

Research which organizations would most benefit from your offering or who would most want it. Then make a list of their decision makers who can make decision about your offering.

Make as big a list of target decisionmakers as possible, but do not select anyone outside your criteria. Collect their first and last names as well as the name of their company.


3. Produce content about your offering

You need to make content about your offering that resonates with the targeted decisionmakers. Otherwise, they will not truly get it. It is not their job to put extra effort into understanding your offering as they can always deal with your competitors.

This is a common mistake – almost everyone pushes their own views of their offering rather than cultivating understanding from the perspective of the decisionmakers so that they would choose your offering.

I recommend using the PDF format for your main content, as LinkedIn appears to favor this format. Your PDF can include up to 300 pages, URLs, forms, and a cover page with a striking photo, of which the top 75% will be visible on the LinkedIn feed.

You will also need to create a LinkedIn post text of up to 3,050 characters. Aim for a concise and compelling heading, ideally no more than three lines. Avoid including any URLs in this post or using more than three hashtags in the text; violating these guidelines can result in LinkedIn's algorithm reducing your post's visibility.


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About Hashtags

Hashtags are important as they point to LinkedIn the possible group of LinkedIn members to whom to show your post in case the LinkedIn algorithm judges it to be popular. The most popular hashtags can have up to 70 million followers, so this can be very important for the visibility of your post.

But… you will be penalized for using too many hashtags in a single post as that is viewed as hashtag spamming. Another form of hashtag spamming involves using hashtags that have nothing to do with the content of your post. LinkedIn actually analyzes the text content of your post and compares it with the hashtags you have set. If there is a clear mismatch, LinkedIn will penalize your post by reducing its visibility and substitute the hashtags it thinks fit better for your post.

In case you do not set any hashtags to your post, LinkedIn will set hashtags the algorithm considers suitable for your post. In fact, one of my LinkedIn posts trended even without any hashtags just with the hashtag LinkedIn set for it.

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Lastly, you will need a first reply to your post, which should be up to 1,250 characters long. This should be a shorter version of the LinkedIn post text and may include URLs.


4. Optimize your LinkedIn profile to be as credible as possible

Long, professional LinkedIn profiles full of attachments inspire confidence in decision-makers. They will check your profile to see if they trust your professional reputation when dealing with you.

I can't stress this enough, because every decision maker considering your offering will check your LinkedIn profile.

In addition, don't forget to show your contact details, booking service link, or even your WhatsApp URL so they can talk to you straight away. After all, you want the decision makers important for you to be able to contact you as easily as possible.


5. Publish your content on LinkedIn

Publish a post with your PDF attachment, the LinkedIn post text, and the first reply text to your post.

Email everyone on the weekly list we provide, including the URL of your LinkedIn post in the message. Then, add replies to your first reply to tag the people from the tag list that we provide in our weekly list.

Make sure you like and respond to each reply your LinkedIn post receives because LinkedIn's algorithms will like that, too.


6. Consider whether you are ready to approach your target decisionmakers

Today, popularity equals credibility in the minds of business decisionmakers. Of course, it is not so, but good luck changing that in the minds of hundreds of millions of business decisionmakers.

Almost everyone wants to be popular, but most busy business decisionmakers are not popular on LinkedIn when they post something because they do not have time to post often enough and build communities around them via frequent engagement.

As a result, they suffer from perception bias on LinkedIn and that gives anyone having a popular post with a topic important to them an advantage of getting their attention in a positive way.

Without popularity, your post lacks very much-needed credibility in their eyes, and they will label you as a timewaster.

So, wait until your post has received all the engagement it can get before you move on with the process.


7. Tag the targeted decision makers

Anyone can tag almost anyone to any LinkedIn post or reply to it for free. Only a small percentage of LinkedIn users have disabled tagging them.

The greatness of tagging is that LinkedIn notifies the tagged person instead of you doing it. Around 66% of LinkedIn members receive the notification fairly immediately because they access it through the mobile app. The rest of LinkedIn users will be notified that they have been tagged the next time they visit LinkedIn on their web browser.

A single LinkedIn account can tag 200 people a day in just 15 minutes, 6,000 per month. Naturally, the volume can be multiplied: 10 people doing tagging means 2,000 people per day, 60,000 per month; 20 people doing tagging means 4,000 people per day, 120,000 per month; 100 people doing tagging means 20,000 people per day, 600,000 per month.

If you tag more than 200 people per day, you may not be able to tag 200 people the next day. I have tagged 270 people in one day, but could only tag 140 people the next day.

Since it only takes 15 minutes to tag 200 people a day, you can ask the employees of your organization or friends to help you. Another method is to hire freelancers to do tagging for you for a fixed price of 200 tags per day, as there is no limit to the number of people you can target.


8. Why does this method work?

If the material you are offering resonates with your targeted people, and your LinkedIn post and profile are credible, how could you not become successful with these volumes?

If not, evaluate your process and find out what you did wrong and fix it.

REGULAR PLATFORM USERS

1. Define your offering

Unless you define your offering very precisely, the other steps in the process cannot produce great results.

You will not reach the right decisionmakers and those you will reach, will be wondering why you approach them.

If you have more than one offering, process each of them separately. Always keep your offering and your message about it very sharp.


2. Define your target decision makers

Research which organizations would most benefit from your offering or who would most want it. Then make a list of their decision makers who can make decision about your offering.

Make as big a list of target decisionmakers as possible, but do not select anyone outside your criteria. Collect their first and last names as well as the name of their company.


3. Produce content about your offering

You need to make content about your offering that resonates with the targeted decisionmakers. Otherwise, they will not truly get it. It is not their job to put extra effort into understanding your offering as they can always deal with your competitors.

This is a common mistake – almost everyone pushes their own views of their offering rather than cultivating understanding from the perspective of the decisionmakers so that they would choose your offering.

I recommend using the PDF format for your main content, as LinkedIn appears to favor this format. Your PDF can include up to 300 pages, URLs, forms, and a cover page with a striking photo, of which the top 75% will be visible on the LinkedIn feed.

You will also need to create a LinkedIn post text of up to 3,050 characters. Aim for a concise and compelling heading, ideally no more than three lines. Avoid including any URLs in this post or using more than three hashtags in the text; violating these guidelines can result in LinkedIn's algorithm reducing your post's visibility.


- - -

About Hashtags

Hashtags are important as they point to LinkedIn the possible group of LinkedIn members to whom to show your post in case the LinkedIn algorithm judges it to be popular. The most popular hashtags can have up to 70 million followers, so this can be very important for the visibility of your post.

But… you will be penalized for using too many hashtags in a single post as that is viewed as hashtag spamming. Another form of hashtag spamming involves using hashtags that have nothing to do with the content of your post. LinkedIn actually analyzes the text content of your post and compares it with the hashtags you have set. If there is a clear mismatch, LinkedIn will penalize your post by reducing its visibility and substitute the hashtags it thinks fit better for your post.

In case you do not set any hashtags to your post, LinkedIn will set hashtags the algorithm considers suitable for your post. In fact, one of my LinkedIn posts trended even without any hashtags just with the hashtag LinkedIn set for it.

- - -

Lastly, you will need a first reply to your post, which should be up to 1,250 characters long. This should be a shorter version of the LinkedIn post text and may include URLs.


4. Optimize your LinkedIn profile to be as credible as possible

Long, professional LinkedIn profiles full of attachments inspire confidence in decision-makers. They will check your profile to see if they trust your professional reputation when dealing with you.

I can't stress this enough, because every decision maker considering your offering will check your LinkedIn profile.

In addition, don't forget to show your contact details, booking service link, or even your WhatsApp URL so they can talk to you straight away. After all, you want the decision makers important for you to be able to contact you as easily as possible.


5. Create a Supporter Mailing List

One parameter of LinkedIn's algorithm that will judge how many people LinkedIn will show your post to is how many people will engage with the post within the first hour of its publication. This makes sense because if your post is not popular at first, it is unlikely to be the one that masses of people will enjoy.

Gather everyone who has a positive view of you to a mailing list after explaining to them why you would like to receive their help and asking their permission to be bothered from time to time.


6. Publish your content on LinkedIn

Publish a post with your PDF attachment, the LinkedIn post text, and the first reply text to your post.

Request support from your fellow ambassadors and email everyone on your supporter mailing list the URL of your LinkedIn post.


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About Receiving Support

Receiving support from your fellow ambassadors in our program is not automatic as all actions here are voluntary. Therefore, everyone makes their own decision about whether or not to support your content and you.

This is a design feature as our platform is powerful if your content receives a significant amount of support. So, without this feature, we would risk becoming a spamming machine, which would force LinkedIn to shut down our activity, regardless of whether we're a charity or not.

Your posts will not receive much more support if you don't build goodwill by engaging with your fellow ambassadors' posts. If your content does not align with what your fellow ambassadors want to be associated with, your posts may not receive much support.

Our platform mirrors life itself - help others, and you will receive help in return; talk about things that others don't mind being associated with, and they will support you.

- - -

Add additional replies to your first reply in order to tag people from the tag list you received during the support request process.

Make sure you like and respond to each reply your LinkedIn post receives because LinkedIn's algorithms will like that, too.


7. Consider whether you are ready to approach your target decisionmakers

Today, popularity equals credibility in the minds of business decisionmakers. Of course, it is not so, but good luck changing that in the minds of hundreds of millions of business decisionmakers.

Almost everyone wants to be popular, but most busy business decisionmakers are not popular on LinkedIn when they post something because they do not have time to post often enough and build communities around them via frequent engagement.

As a result, they suffer from perception bias on LinkedIn and that gives anyone having a popular post with a topic important to them an advantage of getting their attention in a positive way.

Without popularity, your post lacks very much-needed credibility in their eyes, and they will label you as a timewaster.

So, wait until your post has received all the engagement it can get before you move on with the process.


8. Tag the targeted decision makers

Anyone can tag almost anyone to any LinkedIn post or reply to it for free. Only a small percentage of LinkedIn users have disabled tagging them.

The greatness of tagging is that LinkedIn notifies the tagged person instead of you doing it. Around 66% of LinkedIn members receive the notification fairly immediately because they access it through the mobile app. The rest of LinkedIn users will be notified that they have been tagged the next time they visit LinkedIn on their web browser.

A single LinkedIn account can tag 200 people a day in just 15 minutes, 6,000 per month. Naturally, the volume can be multiplied: 10 people doing tagging means 2,000 people per day, 60,000 per month; 20 people doing tagging means 4,000 people per day, 120,000 per month; 100 people doing tagging means 20,000 people per day, 600,000 per month.

If you tag more than 200 people per day, you may not be able to tag 200 people the next day. I have tagged 270 people in one day, but could only tag 140 people the next day.


Since it only takes 15 minutes to tag 200 people a day, you can ask the employees of your organization or friends to help you. Another method is to hire freelancers to do tagging for you for a fixed price of 200 tags per day, as there is no limit to the number of people you can target.


9. Why does this method work?

If the material you are offering resonates with your targeted people, and your LinkedIn post and profile are credible, how could you not become successful with these volumes?

If not, evaluate your process and find out what you did wrong and fix it.

LinkedIn Post Algorithm counts each engagement you do as a LinkedIn Company Page excactly as with your LinkedIn profile. A comment counts as 3 points, a like counts as 2 points and a share counts as 1 point for LinkedIn Post Algorithm.

Use The TOP Person LinkedIn Pages you have earned admin rights to multiply your engagement in the very critical first 60 minutes after a post has been published and LinkedIn Post Algorithm will boost its visibility.

The TOP Person has 600 LinkedIn Pages and you can earn admin rights to them by ranking within top30 in monthly activity ranking. The higher you rank, more pages will be signed to you as ranking measures how much you have supported your fellow ambassadors.

Local partners will have admin rights to all the 600 pages from the start so that they will have 600 times the endorsing powers of regular LinkedIn user to boost themselves and The TOP Person locally.