Archive for June 25th, 2019
LinkedIn, Algoed Up
Happy Tuesday.
Yesterday was a bad tooth day. I had my first root canal since I don’t want to remember when.
The headphones with classic rock with Pandora, some deep bone antisthetic shots to fully numb my tooth, and a steady stream of nitrous oxide made a root canal a nearly fun experience.
Endondontists everywhere, more nitrous for all root canals.
While I was down in the endo’s chair, I learned this AM how a small ISP in Pennsylvania “tanked a big chunk of the Web” yesterday.
According to a story from Slate’s “Future Tense,” a Web outage in the Northeast affected “Verizon users and thousands of Website serviced by Cloudflare.”
Cloudflare provides security and performance services to 16 million websites and demonstrates how “one little error…can cause swaths of the Web to break with little warning.”
The outage started around 7 a.m. and affected Verizon before spreading to Amazon Web Services, web-hosting provider WP Engine, live-streaming platform Twitch, Reddit, and several others.
While we wait for the 404s to fade away, know that Axios is reporting some big time algo changes over at LinkedIn.
Axios reports the company has made the algorithm changes over the past 12-18 months to favor conversations in the LI feed that cater to “niche professional interests,” as opposed to elevating viral content.
Specifically, Axios reports LinkedIn is focused on:
- Elevating content that users are most likely to join in conversation, which typically means people that users interact with directly in the feed through comments and reactions, or people who have shared interests with you based on your profile.
- Elevating a post from someone closer to a users’ interests or network if it needs more engagement, not if it’s already going viral.
- Elevating conversations with things that encourage a response (like opinions commentary alongside content), as well as posts that use mentions and hashtags to bring other people and interests into the conversation and elevating posts from users that respond to commenters.
- Elevating niche topics of conversation will perform better than broad ones. (When it comes to length, LinkedIn says its algorithm doesn’t favor any particular format, despite rumors that it does.)
This matters because…advertisers want higher-quality engagement, which in turn leads to happier advertisers, which in turn leads to more ad revenue for LI.
Have *you* noticed a difference in your LI feed?
Written by turbotodd
June 25, 2019 at 10:04 am
Posted in 2019, advertising, cybersecurity, linkedin, outage, social media
Tagged with 2019, advertising, cybersecurity, linkedin, outage