According to LinkedIn, document sharing will boost your engagement significantly. Some great examples and the stats to back up the results are provided in the linked article: like Gary Vaynerchuk who received over 26,000 likes and 1,600 comments on his 7-slide document share in 2020. Wow, Gary! Who wouldn't love that kind of engagement….? For free!
But how do you do it? What makes the perfect mini ebook for LinkedIn?
The perfect cover combines two things: a good title and a catchy design. What does that entail?
The title should be short and quickly readable. Like social headlines, a nice play on words or alliteration is great. Use an uncommon word or catchphrase. But never compromise clarity for the sake of cleverness. The title should be easily understood at a glance. What can help to make it "punchy" and communicate even stronger is design. The design should help illustrate, providing a sneak-peak into what the ebook is about. The design and mood should complement the message being presented. And it should provide strong contrast and visual impact that grabs attention without getting in the way of readability. Don't forget to make it consistent with your personal or company brand, so it clearly looks like original content. (Check out this link for more cover tips.)
Respecting the medium delivery means keeping it simple. Don't muck up the content by using too many words, images that don't work at this scale, or by cluttering up the user experience with video or animation. You want the content to be easily digestible and scannable -- that's why the document carousel works. So, don't overcomplicate it in any way.
Express only one thought per page. And keep the design simple. Let the story play out with each panel, coming to a conclusion and call to action. This is still social media, not long-form content. So, if the content is derived from another source edit it to work on this medium and then take them to the longer version in the call to action.
Data shows that many (most?) users view social media on their phones or tablets. So, follow the recommended specs to optimize your document for mobile devices.
In addition to the rules for simplicity above, keep the overall size of the file below 100 MBs, and keep the page count no more than 10 pages (anything longer is just too much for social scanning). The file formats that work best are PPT or pdf (PPT files tend to be larger, so consider converting to pfd and compressing the file). While landscape files work on LinkedIn desktop, square files work best for desktop or mobile. So I recommend designing for square formats (1080 x1080 pixels).
Remember, engagement is the goal here. Ask a question. Solicit opinions. Encourage audience dialogue to boost audience reach.
By keeping this goal in mind from the beginning, your content should be provocative or enlightening. Emotional or revealing content works well these days so perhaps your ebook can tap into a social cause or reveal new industry trends.
If you get people to interact with the content, keep the conversation going by responding to comments and tagging other people. This exchange will boost your audience reach and build your credibility. But the ultimate engagement is the call to action (see below).
We've all heard the advice to repurpose content and this is a great way to do that. Take the high-level concept from another piece of content and repackage it into a mini ebook to tease your reader into wanting more. Give them just one conclusion from a white paper. Or deliver just one key data point from a survey report or infographic. Offer one testimonial and key industry highlights from a fully developed case study.
Here are some content ideas to pull from:
The ultimate call to action is to get the read to want to know more. Click to a landing page for some sort of lead-generating asset. Click to your website and read an article, blog or product information. Click to your profile to make a connection or to reach out.
Never forget the end game when developing your ebook content.
Clearly make the offer to act clear at the end of your ebook and provide them the link, both in the ebook and in your post comments. Don't be shy. No one is fooled that this isn't your attempt to "advertise" your business. If the rest of your content is not too "salesy" then the ulterior motive won't be offensive. They can take it or leave it.
Hopefully you've enlightened, entertained or otherwise engaged them. You provided something of value for their time, so if they are ready to take the next step there is no doubt in their mind as to how to do that. If they are not? No harm no foul, as they say.
Are you ready to give this content style a try? If you need some help developing your own mini ebook document for LinkedIn engagement, just give me a shout and let's chat. From repurposing your content to design and production, I've got you covered.
Thank you for subscribing.
Updates and blog announcements will be sent to your inbox.
All Rights Reserved | [doubleb design + copy] LLC
Privacy Policy: Download