Consistent, strategic LinkedIn activity compounds over time — building credibility for individuals and for Asymmetric as a whole. The core principle: consistency beats perfection. A weekly post that's good enough outperforms a polished post every three weeks.
See also: [1] · [2]
| Goal | Frequency |
|---|---|
| Minimum viable presence | 1× per week |
| High-growth mode | 2–3× per week |
Best days: Tuesday through Thursday
Best time: ~9:00 AM local time
Posts can be scheduled natively in LinkedIn — use the timer icon in the post composer to set date and time in advance.
Posts that include a photo of you, or document an event you attended, consistently outperform text-only or graphic-only posts. Authenticity drives engagement on LinkedIn more than polish.
Examples: Photo from a client meeting, conference attendance, team offsite.
Announce launches, milestones, and results on behalf of Asymmetric. Frame wins as team accomplishments, not individual ones — "Asymmetric launched the new Finwell website" rather than attributing to a single person.
Why it works: Promotes the client (they appreciate it), promotes Asymmetric, and gives every team member something shareable regardless of their direct involvement on the project.
Examples: New website launches, Amazon sales results, campaign performance milestones.
Share or comment on relevant articles, trends, or takes in your area of expertise. This positions you — and Asymmetric — as a thought leader in the space.
Examples: Commentary on a marketing trend, a take on a platform algorithm change, a useful tool or resource.
Polls generate high engagement and are easy to produce. Use them to spark conversation around a relevant question in your field.
When posting about a team win or shared project, tag relevant colleagues using @name. This surfaces the post to their networks as well, significantly expanding reach without any additional effort.
"The more people you can tag in there, other pages that you can tag, an event that you can tag, that's going to get a further reach." — Karly Oykhman
If a colleague posts a team win, sharing their post is often more effective than writing a separate post. It amplifies the original post's engagement while also giving you visibility. Recommended default for team members who weren't the primary author of a win.
Spend a few minutes each morning liking and commenting on posts in your feed. This keeps your name visible and supports your network's content.
Always reply to comments you receive. Each reply counts as additional engagement and signals to the algorithm that the post is active, extending its reach.
Use 5–10 relevant hashtags per post. Hashtags in posts do help with discoverability — some users follow specific hashtags on LinkedIn. Hashtags in profile headlines/titles are a different matter and their SEO value is unclear (worth researching).
This is especially useful for team members who work on fewer client accounts — they can still participate in Asymmetric's LinkedIn presence by sharing and engaging with others' posts.
An active LinkedIn presence across the team:
"A lot of decision makers are on LinkedIn and will kind of vet you on LinkedIn as well." — Karly Oykhman
Sourced from the 2026-02-24 Asymmetric professional development session led by Karly Oykhman. See also [3] for full meeting notes.