LinkedIn Hits Reset with 360Brew AI Algorithm
A more level playing field has arrived for LinkedIn users...
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Something few LinkedIn marketers admit but know is true: LinkedIn has been rigged for quite some time.
LinkedInâs 360Brew AI Algorithm changes this for everâŚ
The truth for most social media platforms has always been âpost good content, solve peopleâs problems, and youâll find your audience.â
Something about LinkedIn in particular meant this is harder to achieve on the platform, while a select cast of seemingly priveleged LinkedIn characters (gurus) pop up on our feeds time and time again making it look easy, telling us itâs easy, and making us feel as though weâre doing something wrong.
Company pages are a separate problem, but also fall victim to the same root cause. Admittedly, most company pages do not share good content or follow best practices, but even the good ones struggle with engagement.
The thing is, none of this is necessarily LinkedInâs fault. Rather, the LinkedIn growth gurus had figured out how to game the algorithm, which left little room for anyone else. Either play their engagement games, or youâre in Lonely Town.
Thankfully, LinkedIn noticed this problem and has just tore up its old ranking system and dropped its new version - 360Brew.
In this post, Iâm breaking down what it is, how it works, and what you can do about it.
Whatâs happening:
360Brew is a single AI model that now decides what shows up in your feed, who sees your posts, and even which jobs land in front of you. This represents a full rebuild of how LinkedIn works.
For years, the platform ran on a patchwork of small algorithms - one for the feed, another for jobs, another for search. They werenât aligned, and they were manual-heavy. 360Brew replaces all of them with one giant model that reads text, interprets meaning, and learns from your behavior.
That means your posts arenât going to be pushed out because you posted at the âright time.â Theyâre pushed if theyâre relevant, and theyâll go to a group of people who will actually care.
Frequency, timing, tagging sprees, engagement pods, âviral formatsâ⌠all of that is losing power fast.
The results of this are already playing out: previous big name content creators are losing reach. These are mostly the âhow to grow on LinkedInâ people whose posts were deliberately gamed.
They way these creators played the system was to overload early engagement on their posts - sometimes using bots and sometimes using artificial engagement pods - which triggered the algorithm into pushing these posts out to literally everyone on the platform.
360Brew means itâs Game Over for them.
To be clear, itâs not the end of âhow to grow on LinkedInâ creators. The good ones will still have an audience. Liam Darmody from The Fold put together a great piece on this on what it means for creators.
It does mean, however, that their posts wonât necessarily show on all of our feeds - unless you are a user that engages with that type of content.
In short: LinkedIn is no longer distributing broadly. Itâs distributing precisely. Post about a topic, and those interested in that topic will see it.
What This Means for YouâŚ
360Brew is prioritising topic alignment, clarity and authentic behaviour across profiles, pages and networks.
For marketing teams, this means that growth no longer comes from volume or âalgorithm-friendly formatting,â but from consistent expertise and fully aligned brand activity across the organization and individuals.
The system now evaluates your brandâs identity over time - not just one post. It looks at:
What your company consistently talks about
Which audiences engage with it
Who inside the company is part of those conversations
How employees behave across their own networks
Your ongoing âactivity patternâ - across the brand, executives and subject-matter experts - becomes the signal that teaches LinkedIn where your content belongs and who is likely to benefit from it.
This also means precision beats scale. LinkedIn is no longer distributing broadly to chase reactions or quick reach. Viral posts are deprioritised if theyâre not relevant to a user, even if theyâve performed well at scale. For brands, the strategic goal shifts from âhigh visibilityâ to âhigh contextual visibilityâ - being visible to the right people, not everyone.
Importantly, smaller individuals and new company pages can now compete more effectively. If your subject matter is focused, useful and clearly tied to a defined expertise, you donât need a huge follower base for LinkedIn to surface your content. Relevance signals outweigh distribution history.
The losers? Any strategy built on shortcuts: hashtags for reach, reciprocal commenting groups, templated AI posts, manufactured engagement, or keyword stuffing. 360Brew isnât ranking patterns - itâs interpreting meaning. Manipulation sends negative quality signals.
And hereâs something we should all think about:
Broad interest pages.
Does your company page cover a multitude of products, across market segments and topical interests?
If so, there may need to be some thought on how to realign your strategy specifically for this new LinkedIn environment.
What You Should Do Next
1. Tighten your positioning and narrative
Your company page description, messaging hierarchy and product narratives must align with the topics you want LinkedIn to associate you with. If the platform canât clearly connect your brand to a defined expertise area, your organic reach will underperform.
2. Increase content clarity
Focussed topical content will outperform multiple interest. Focus on clarity, utility and distinctive perspective.
Have a wildcard product or service that doesnât necessarily fit with what your company is best known for? For example: an investment management company known for American markets, but also has an emerging market team? They may want to use a separate page, or utilize individual influencer profiles instead for non-core offerings.
3. Go deep AND broad
Define two or three priority themes that directly connect to your commercial objectives and stay there. Think long-term: LinkedIn is now tracking topic consistency to determine which audiences you âbelongâ with.
4. Build conversations, not campaigns
Thoughtful dialogue is now a relevance trigger. Quality comments from internal experts, partners or customers carry more value than surface-level reactions. Content that is saved, referenced or discussed outperforms content that is merely liked.
5. Shape your network intentionally
Your companyâs reach is shaped not just by what you publish, but by who from your organisation engages and where. Strategic outbound engagement - from brand accounts and subject-matter experts - teaches the model which communities your brand should be visible inside.
LinkedIn 360Brew: the bottom line
While a lot of the LinkedIn influencers are in disarray about their disappearing reach, this reset is a good thing overall. It levels the playing field, meaning: good targeted content will be shared with those who will be interested in it.
It does follow the wider social media trend labelled the âTikTokification of the internetâ - whereby followers no longer matter and the whole thing becomes algorithmically driven.
And you might hate me for saying this: it probably also means video becomes more and more important.
LinkedInâs 360Brew will reward clarity, expertise and genuine interaction. It punishes shortcuts. The creators and companies who win next will be the ones who communicate with intent, stay consistent in their topics, and deliver insights worth saving.
Shaun
P.S. - since weâre talking LinkedIn, letâs connect!
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Thanks for the mention. This was a delight to read (I know, thatâs nerdy of me). Exciting times over there. Very happy the gurus are not able to game the system anymore (yet).