When I was a recruiter at Google, the first thing I did after a resume landed on my desk was check LinkedIn. Ninety percent of the time, the profile told me absolutely nothing I could not already see on the resume. LinkedIn is not a longer version of your resume. It is a completely different tool with a completely different purpose.
What Recruiters Actually See in Three Seconds
Recruiters spend about three seconds on your profile before deciding whether to read more or move on. They notice: Your headline (not your job title). Your photo. Your current title and company. The first line of your About section. If your headline says "Experienced Professional | Passionate Leader | Strategic Thinker" you have just described about 500,000 profiles.
The Headline Problem
Your headline has one job: to give someone a reason to click. It should answer: "Who do you help, and how?" Instead of "Marketing Executive with 10+ Years Experience," try "I Help B2B SaaS Companies Scale Customer Acquisition." One is about you. The other is about what you do for someone else.
Your About Section Is Not Your Bio
Your About section is a positioning statement. It answers three things: Who you serve. What problem you solve. How you do it differently. The story and passion can come in a blog post, not in the first 200 words of your LinkedIn profile. Be direct. Be specific. Be useful.
Content Matters More Than Connections
One thoughtful post that gets 50 meaningful interactions tells recruiters far more about your expertise than 100 generic connection requests. You do not need to post every day. But you need to be visible enough that when someone searches for someone like you, you are someone they want to talk to.
LinkedIn Optimization as Career Investment
Spend an hour optimizing your headline and About section. Spend 15 minutes every couple weeks engaging with content. Share an insight every month. Review your profile every quarter and ask: Does this still represent where I am and where I am going?