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Tips for Posting on LinkedIn for Recruiters in 2024

Whether you like it, loathe it, or are merely indifferent to it at this point, LinkedIn remains a key part of a well-thought-through marketing strategy for recruiters. As with any social networking platform, having strategies for posting on LinkedIn will get you much more mileage than winging it.


With 2024 firmly in place, now is an ideal time to review your approach to posting on LinkedIn, to get the most out of the site and maximise the efficiency of your marketing efforts. Time saved is money earned!

Use the ‘What’s In It for Me?’ Principle


LinkedIn announced major changes to its algorithm in 2023, with the stated aim of delivering more relevant content to users and strengthening their existing connections on the site. In practice, that means your posts will work best when they offer something of value to the audience – a solid foundation of every marketing strategy for recruiters.


In other words, sharing knowledge, advice or insights is the name of the game. When creating posts, pause and imagine potential and existing clients and candidates asking, ‘what’s in it for me?’ as they read them. The posts that will perform best are those that inform your audience, provoke thought or conversation.


You may be tempted to think, ‘what’s the harm in posting an occasional boast about billing big or making record placements?’ Plenty, in fact! LinkedIn is quite explicit about this, actually. In an announcement about the new algorithm last year, LinkedIn’s Alice Xiong noted the site’s users overwhelmingly value content that is grounded in knowledge or advice and enables them to feel connected with people they know to help them discover the right opportunities or learn something from their time spent on the site.


“On the flip side,” she added, “we’ve heard that the posts that are the least valuable were humblebrags and personal professional updates from people you don’t know.” You’ve been warned!



Use Hashtags Wisely


Hashtags are a powerful link between your business, prospective clients and candidates on LinkedIn. With a bit of hashtag savvy, more of your content will be seen by people who are actively looking for it – always vital for converting those eyeballs into genuine prospects!

Hashtag Do’s:


  • Research: Identify trending and popular hashtags on LinkedIn related to your business, services and target audiences. What are your competitors using? What are people searching for? What kind of content do you find on certain hashtags?


  • Use a mix of broad and niche hashtags: This allows you to gain a balanced audience reach. For example, #NowHiring, #recruiters, and #leadership are as broad as they come, while a tag like #sydneytech will be focused on a specific community and location.


  • Create hashtags based on your company’s brand: These could highlight your workplace culture, candidate communities, or the company in general. Just remember to make them easy to read by capitalising each separate word, and avoid using word combinations that are too common to be linked to your company.


Hashtag Do’s:

  • Overdoing hashtags on each post: The limit is 30 hashtags per post on LinkedIn, but it’s wise to go with far fewer (more like 3-5) and keep them as relevant to the post as possible. Stuffing hashtags in each post can easily look amateurish and spammy!


  • Jumping on hashtag bandwagons: It can be tempting at times to make posts for the sole purpose of capitalising on a hashtag that has gone viral. At best, the overall reach of such post might be underwhelming; at worst, people will roll their eyes when they see it. Instead, focus on hashtags that are industry-specific or at least seasonally relevant (e.g. the festive season, or a charity event you’re involved in).


  • Not measuring the performance of your posts: LinkedIn doesn’t have a feature dedicated to analysing hashtags alone, but you can measure how your posts perform nonetheless. (To view your company’s page analytics, go to the Admin view on the page and click ‘Analytics’ on the left hand side.) Performance metrics to look at include impressions, clicks, and engagement rates. The trick is to compare the performance of similar posts with different hashtags, which you can do using LinkedIn’s dashboard. Try it out over a few weeks and see.


Stop the Scroll with Catchy Visuals


Without images or video, your posts can get lost in the wash very quickly. Think of how a LinkedIn news feed appears when you’re scrolling through it – the posts with visuals attached are much more likely to catch your eye first.


Perhaps the worst of all posting sins is huge blocks of text. With attention spans shrinking by the day, visuals are now a matter of life and death when it comes to reaching your audience! Aim to include an image (in the form of an infographic or suitable photo), or a video, with each post.

LinkedIn’s own
research shows that posts with images have a two times higher comment rate, and larger images have a 38% higher click-through rate than other images (LinkedIn recommends 1200 x 627 pixels for single images).


If you have the means to produce video content, you can upload up to 15 minutes of footage (10 from your phone) to LinkedIn’s native video platform.


Adding visuals is an instant boost in storytelling power. When you’re posting about a team achievement, new hire or helping a client reach their goals, including a photo will make it more meaningful. Infographics are useful for simplifying data and statistics, making them more accessible to your audience.

More Quick Tips for Posting on LinkedIn for Recruiters


  • Establish a regular posting schedule over the week and month and stick to it, to maintain consistency.


  • Experiment with posting times to identify the best time windows throughout the day for maximum engagement. Generally speaking, however, you’re more likely to get the highest engagement when people are more likely to be using the site, which is typically during lunchtime and commuting hours.



  • Leave out external links from your posts and add them into the comments instead. More than one digital marketer has observed that posts without outbound links perform better than those that have them. Ultimately, LinkedIn wants users to stay on their site as long as possible, so external links tend to get less traction.



Learn More About Digital Marketing for Recruiters


Want more tips on digital marketing for recruiters, or a guiding hand for developing social media-ready content? Get in touch with the team at Prominence to get your recruitment marketing strategy on the right footing. 

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Latest Blogs

By Amber Loach February 7, 2025
To stand out from the competition, effective marketing is more important than ever for recruitment agencies. Without it, your business growth can quickly hit a brick wall and force your consultants to fish in the same pool of prospects. That’s hardly enjoyable or productive (even if your consultants won’t admit to it!) In a highly competitive market, the good news is that you can optimise your costs with outsourced recruitment marketing and access capabilities that can take years to build in-house. We’ll explain why and how. The Real Costs of In-House Marketing The average marketing budget sits somewhere between 7-10% of company revenue, as surveys by Deloitte and Gartner suggest. (If you’re in start-up or high growth mode, that percentage will be higher.) Plans to increase marketing budgets over the coming years will, of course, vary by industry and business needs, but it’s clear that internal marketing teams don’t come cheap. For businesses based in the UK, the average marketing coordinator salary is in the vicinity of £24,000. With the recent increase in the employer National Insurance Contributions rate (from 13.8% to 15%), recruitment agencies are now facing significant payroll costs – and that’s before any marketing is being done to speak of! Breaking it down, an in-house marketing coordinator on a minimum salary of £22k will cost an additional £770 annually from 2025, whilst a midweight marketer on £45k will cost at least another £1,000. Add that up over a team of two to four people (or more), along with leave entitlements and other employee costs, and those pounds sure add up. Not to mention the cost of replacing and onboarding marketing employees. Recruitment agencies in Australia don’t get off lightly, either. To employ a full-time marketing coordinator, you’re looking at an average salary range of $70,000-$80,000 AUD. Add in superannuation, payroll tax, minimum leave entitlements, along with onboarding and training, the actual annual cost of that coordinator will be 1.25 to 1.4 times higher than their base salary. That’s up to $122,000 annually for one employee with a limited skillset. Here’s the catch: a junior or midweight marketing coordinator can handle the basics, but when your business needs specialised marketing skills to grow, you’ll need to hire more specialists – and that’s when your costs will skyrocket. Access to Marketing Expertise Without Hiring With outsourced marketing, you can skip the fixed, ongoing expenses of an in-house marketing team. Outsourcing gives you access to specialised skills like graphic design, paid advertising and copywriting when you need them, without the ongoing overhead of salaries and taxes. After all, your business might not need the same set of marketing skills all year. Certain expertise is more important for some campaigns and marketing plans and not others. When using an outsourced marketing agency like us, you get access to an embedded marketing team where you only pay for work you need during a given project or timeframe. We act as an extension of your business to manage your marketing, giving you a range of established skills and strategic knowledge at your fingertips. All without making a single hire. Scalability Based on Business Needs An outsourced marketing solution gives you precious scalability. As all recruitment business leaders are aware, business conditions fluctuate. Your goals will inevitably be adjusted to meet changing market conditions. Based on our experience in working with recruiters, here are common scenarios where marketing scalability is a survival issue: 1. Crowded Markets In crowded industries and sectors, recruiters face stiff competition from rivals with big marketing budgets. To stay ahead, they need smart and adaptable strategies that pack a punch without overspending. 2. Start-Up Challenges For new recruiters with limited revenue and an unproven offering, the focus is on generating interest and building momentum quickly. Outsourced marketing will provide that essential lift-off without the risk of hiring an untested marketing coordinator. 3. New Ventures and Expansions Recruitment agencies launching a new service or breaking into a new market will need a surge in marketing resources to ensure their efforts pay off. Scalable marketing means recruiters can dial their efforts up or down as needed. No overcommitting, nor missing out on opportunities! How do you achieve this sweet scalability? With an outsourced marketing solution, one that gives you flexible pricing options and a solid range of capabilities. If you want to pay on a project basis or have a marketing team on retainer, a good marketing agency will give you those options, too. This helps you forecast and manage costs over any length of time. Reduced Hidden Overheads On top of staffing costs, there are a few other cost gremlins lurking under the floorboards that most companies aren’t aware of until it’s too late. Infrastructure expenses like marketing software and tools quickly add up, especially when you need a group subscription or must pay a premium for basic functionality. An outsourced marketing provider has all these necessary tools, so you don’t need to duplicate them. Even the office space you need for an in-house team can sometimes get overlooked – an often astronomical cost that is becoming harder to justify for many businesses! Engaging a marketing agency gives you access to a marketing team at your fingertips, without the expense of bums on seats. The Final Word Of course, there are many situations where it makes good business sense to maintain or grow an in-house marketing team. The key, however, is to understand the big picture: your balance sheet, the ROI you can reasonably expect from an in-house team, and which options will best enable you to stay agile in a challenging market or business phase. Understanding these factors will guide you to the right marketing solution and avoid expensive mistakes. Outsourced Marketing for Recruiters, Done Your Way We’ve sung the praises of outsourced marketing here, but we’re also experts at helping our clients get the best out of their internal marketing teams. Whether you’re seeking marketing specialists that can dovetail with your internal team, or a standalone solution, or something else, we can do it for you. Let’s talk! Get in touch with Prominence today – we’d love to hear from you.
A person is holding a cell phone with social media icons coming out of it.
By Amber loach January 15, 2025
Social media just won’t stop evolving, and neither do we as marketers. Algorithm updates, new features, changes in audience demographics and preferences – there is just so much to keep up with! The fundamentals, however, are more straightforward than some might think.
By Amber Loach December 5, 2024
We can’t think of a single instance of a recruiter saying they love admin. And yet, administrative tasks eat up increasingly large chunks of a recruiter’s workday. It’s a given that job application volumes will keep rising, leaving recruiters with shrinking resources to carry out other vital functions – like nurturing passive candidates, engaging clients, or building a social media following. Marketing automation can solve many of the resource problems recruiters face. Trying to juggle activities like generating leads for new clients and candidates alongside the day-to-day practicalities of sourcing, interviewing and client consultation gets painful fast – unless you have the right tools to automate the process. We’ll explain how marketing automation for recruiters works in the wild, and how you can use it to connect with your target audiences. How Marketing Automation Helps You Target Clients Marketing automation for recruiters can be applied to every stage of the sales funnel, from raising awareness of your brand to building relationships with your long-term clients. Its potential for generation BD leads is second to none. Generating leads is one of the most effective uses of marketing automation and is generally an ‘always on’ feature, as long as you’re in business! Email Marketing
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