Why LinkedIn Matters More Than Your Resume in 2025
87% of recruiters use LinkedIn to find candidates. Your LinkedIn profile is viewed 4x more often than your resume. Yet most professionals treat their profile as a copy-paste of their resume β which is exactly why they get overlooked.
The LinkedIn Headline Formula (Most Important 220 Characters)
Your headline appears everywhere β in search results, connection requests, and comments. The default "Job Title at Company" headline is the worst thing you can use.
Winning Formula: [Role] | [Key Skill] | [Value Proposition]
Examples:
- Before: "Software Engineer at Tech Corp"
- After: "Senior Software Engineer | Building Scalable SaaS Products | Python, AWS, React"
- Before: "Marketing Manager"
- After: "Marketing Manager | Driving 3x ROI for B2B SaaS | Content Strategy & Paid Media"
Key rule: Include the keywords recruiters search for. If you want to be found for "product manager" roles, the words "Product Manager" must be in your headline.
The About Section: Your 2,600-Character Sales Pitch
Structure That Works:
- Hook (first 2 lines): Start with your biggest achievement or a compelling question. This is all that shows before "see more".
- What you do (3-4 sentences): Describe your expertise and what makes you different.
- Key achievements (3-5 bullets): Quantified results that prove your impact.
- What you're looking for (1-2 sentences): Only if actively job searching.
- CTA: "Open to connecting with [type of person]. Feel free to reach out!"
Experience Section: Beyond Copy-Pasting Your Resume
Each role should include:
- Company description: 1 line about the company (helps with context)
- Your scope: Team size, budget, markets
- 3-5 achievements: Using the [Action] + [Result] + [Number] formula
- Media attachments: Add presentations, articles, or project screenshots
Skills Section: The Hidden Algorithm Factor
LinkedIn's algorithm uses your Skills section to determine which searches you appear in. Add at least 15 skills, with your top 3 pinned as "featured."
| Skill Type | Examples | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Core technical | Python, SQL, Figma | Recruiter search terms |
| Industry-specific | SaaS, E-commerce, FinTech | Niche targeting |
| Soft skills | Leadership, Cross-functional | Management roles |
Ask 10 colleagues to endorse your top 3 skills β this validates them for LinkedIn's search ranking.
Profile Photo and Banner: First Impressions
- Photo: Professional headshot, face taking up 60%+ of frame, solid or blurred background, smiling
- Banner: Custom graphic showing your expertise area, personal brand, or current company branding
- Profiles with photos get 21x more views and 36x more messages than those without
"Open to Work" Settings: The Right Way
LinkedIn has two "Open to Work" modes:
- Visible to recruiters only: β Always use this. Only recruiters see your green badge. Your current employer won't know.
- Visible to all: β οΈ Only use if you've already left your job. Some hiring managers view the green frame negatively (unfairly, but it happens).
Content Strategy: Become a Thought Leader
Post 2-3 times per week. Top-performing content types on LinkedIn in 2025:
- Career lessons learned β "5 things I wish I knew when I started as a [role]"
- Industry insights β Share your take on a trending topic
- Behind-the-scenes β Show your work process
- Contrarian opinions β (Respectfully) challenge conventional wisdom