I started posting consistently on LinkedIn 20 days ago.
I had 1,000 followers.
Today… almost 6,000 new people have shown up.
I did not change my strategy.
I finally got one.
Consistency.
On day one, my post got so little engagement I thought LinkedIn asked the algorithm,
“Who invited this person?”
On day six, I stared at my draft like it was written by a bored dishwasher.
On day eleven, I almost skipped posting because my brain felt like it was powered by low-quality WiFi.
But I kept going.
I showed up every day even when my confidence felt like a sad pancake.
I shared real stories instead of trying to sound like a leadership textbook.
That is when things shifted.
If you want real growth, here is what actually worked for me:
→ Show up even when your idea feels slightly embarrassing.
→ Tell stories you could repeat over dinner without cringing.
→ Stop writing like a corporate memo.
→ Treat consistency like a non-negotiable, not an optional workout.
The follower growth feels great.
But the real win is proving to myself that consistency is not a talent.
It is a habit you choose every day.
And now that the habit is built, I am not slowing down.
#LinkedInGrowth #ContentCreatorLife #ConsistencyWins #Storytelling #BuildYourBrand #GrowingTogether
Founder & CEO of Anviera & Adoldia | Entrepreneur | Building Personal Brand Through Content Creation & Storytelling | UI UX Designer | Indie Web App Developer
14 days ago
I’m also trying to achieve similar numbers — 6k new followers in such a short period is insane!
I started LinkedIn in April 2021, but stopped posting. I can’t imagine how many followers I’d have had if I had kept posting consistently. But I’m back now, and reading success stories about creators like you gives me hope & inspiration.
I strongly believe that a day without marketing is a day wasted. Even when you don’t have fresh content, you should repost something old, share a story, leave a meaningful comment, or engage with others via DMs or in any form. Cuz a day without marketing isn’t just a missed opportunity — it’s a day your audience’s attention share gets taken by someone else.