Your LinkedIn Company Page is working for you or against you
LinkedIn is the only social platform where a well-optimized Company Page actively generates B2B leads without paid ads. But only if you actually work it.
A half-complete, inactive page tells a prospect: this business either doesn't care or isn't around. This 10-point checklist tells you exactly where your page stands, and what to fix first.
How to rate each point
For each of the 10 points below, mark the state your Company Page is in:
The foundation
Foundation
Points 1, 2 & 3 · What the algorithm reads first
Complete profile (every field filled)
Logo (400x400px minimum), banner (1128x191px), tagline, About section, website URL, company size, industry, headquarters location, founding year, specialties.
⚡ LinkedIn's algorithm surfaces complete pages significantly more often in search results and "Companies to Follow" suggestions. An incomplete page is a missed distribution opportunity on every search.Why it matters beyond the algorithm: every prospect who considers contacting you will check your LinkedIn page first. A missing logo or blank About section answers their question before you get a chance to.
Tagline: value proposition, not category
Your tagline appears in search results, on every post your company publishes, and in "People also viewed" recommendations. It's your 120-character first impression across the entire platform.
"Digital Marketing Agency" = category.
"AI-Powered Digital Marketing for Latin American B2B" = value proposition with audience clarity.
About section: problem → solution → proof structure
3-paragraph structure:
- The specific problem your target client faces (not "we help businesses grow")
- How you solve it, specifically, what you do and how
- A specific result or credential, a number, a client outcome, a differentiator
Include your primary keywords naturally (LinkedIn search indexes this field). End with a clear next step: your website URL or what to do to contact you.
The content
Content
Points 4, 5 & 6 · What keeps your page alive
Posting cadence: minimum 2x per week
LinkedIn's content algorithm heavily weights consistency. Pages posting 2+ times per week see 5x more impressions than pages posting monthly, even if the monthly post is higher quality.
The content doesn't need to be elaborate. A 3-sentence insight from a client conversation, a question for your industry, a short lesson from a project. These outperform long-form articles that take 3 hours to write.
Calendar it. Two slots per week, non-negotiable. The algorithm responds to consistency more than quality.
Content mix: 3 types in rotation
Best-performing mix based on LinkedIn 2025 content data:
"Here's what we found when we audited 50 business websites this quarter." Teaches something, demonstrates expertise, gives value before asking for anything.
"A client came to us with [problem]. 60 days later: [specific result]." Anonymized or named, both work. Specificity converts skeptics.
"We take 8 clients per month. 2 spots remain for May. Here's what happens in the first 30 days." Direct, specific, with urgency. Once in 10 posts is the right frequency.
Native video and documents
LinkedIn's algorithm gives native content (video uploaded directly, PDFs uploaded as documents) significantly more reach than external link posts.
Native video: 5x more reach than link posts. 60-90 seconds is the optimal length. No need for production quality. A phone video with subtitles outperforms a polished YouTube link.
Native documents (PDF carousel): 3x more impressions. Take your checklist, your guide, your process. Turn it into a 5-10 slide PDF and upload directly as a document post. Each slide becomes a scrollable card.
The engagement
Engagement
Points 7 & 8 · Where the page stops being a billboard
Respond to every comment within 24 hours
LinkedIn's algorithm uses comment response rate as a signal for content quality. A post where the author responds to comments gets re-distributed more widely than one where comments go unanswered.
Practical benefit beyond algorithm: every comment is a potential lead who just raised their hand. A response that asks a genuine follow-up question ("What's your biggest challenge with X?") frequently opens a conversation that leads to a DM and eventually a demo.
Set a 24-hour response window as a team standard.
Employee advocacy
When team members share Company Page posts from their personal profiles, LinkedIn counts it as an engagement signal and extends distribution. A team of 5 sharing 2x per week can generate 3-5x the organic reach of the Company Page alone.
System: every Monday morning, send a Slack or WhatsApp message with that week's 2 posts and a request for the team to share. Takes 30 seconds per person. Compounds significantly over 90 days.
The lead generation
Lead Generation
Points 9 & 10 · Where traffic becomes opportunities
CTA button: lead capture, not homepage
LinkedIn Company Pages have a CTA button visible on your page and on mobile. Options: "Visit Website," "Contact Us," "Learn More," "Sign Up," "Register."
This button should link to your lead capture landing page, not your homepage. Every visit to your Company Page from a search result or post engagement is a potential lead. Give them one action to take, with a specific offer.
The 3-step LinkedIn DM system
LinkedIn Company Pages cannot send automated DMs. But a systematized manual process converts better than most automation because it feels genuinely personal.
When someone comments on your content, follow this sequence:
-
Reply to the comment (within 24 hours)
Acknowledge their comment + a genuine follow-up question or additional value. Not "Thanks for commenting!"
"Great question. The thing we find most often in audits is X, does that match what you're seeing?" -
Connection request from your personal profile
From Todd or Naty's personal profile, not the Company Page.
"Hi [Name], I saw your comment on our Hub365 post about [topic]. I'd love to connect, [one sentence about why it's relevant to them]." -
DM after they accept
Share specific resources based on their comment. Personalized, not template.
"Hi [Name], thanks for connecting. I wanted to share the two resources from that post directly: [guide link] + [assessment link]. Based on your comment about [specific thing], I think [specific point] is especially relevant. Happy to answer any questions."
What your score means
Count your ✅. Find your tier and the priority of your fixes.
| Points ✅ | Status | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| 0-3 | Inactive Page | Fix Points 1-3 this week |
| 4-6 | Present, not working | Add Points 4-6 next week |
| 7-8 | Building Momentum | Implement Points 9-10 |
| 9-10 | LinkedIn Working | Optimize mix + deepen DM system |
Get your personalized LinkedIn score
Take the interactive LinkedIn Page Grader. Walks you through all 10 points. Generates your score and a prioritized optimization sequence specific to your page.
Take the LinkedIn Page Grader →Or skip ahead and book a free LinkedIn audit. We go through all 10 points on your actual page. Specific findings, specific optimization sequence. Todd handles the technical layer. Naty maps the content strategy.
Book a free LinkedIn audit →Free · 45 minutes · Specific findings, no pitch