LinkedIn Lead Flow: What most entrepreneurs get wrong 🤦🏾♀️
Most people are sitting on warm leads right inside LinkedIn and never realise it. Your next client isn't a cold stranger. They're already in your notifications, your follower list, your comments section. They're watching. They're curious. They're waiting. Here's where most people go wrong: 1. They never check their followers list Every time you post, someone new silently follows. No like, no comment... just a quiet "I see you." Most entrepreneurs never open that tab. The fix: Go to your Followers list. Scan the headlines. Ask: is this my ideal client? Do they serve my audience? If yes send a connection request. Followers can see you, but you can't message them until you connect. That's a dead-end you can fix in 5 minutes. 2. They treat notifications like noise Those red dots aren't admin. They're a live feed of people who are already interested in you. The fix: Check who's commenting (engaged → keep them close), who's tagging or mentioning you (free visibility), and who's sharing your posts (potential collaborators). Respond. Start a conversation. Offer a free resource. Your content is working...don't let the lead die in the comments. 3. They treat their profile like a CV For entrepreneurs, your LinkedIn profile is not a résumé. It's a funnel. And it should be working every single day. The fix: Run this quick audit: - Banner: Does it show who you help and how? - Headline: Is it specific and searchable? - Featured Section: Are you directing people to a clear next step? - Contact Info: Is there a direct link to your offer, website, or lead magnet? If someone landed on your profile with 10 seconds to spare; would they know exactly what you do and what to do next? If the answer is no, fix it today. 4. They wait for the perfect post instead of working what they already have More content is not the answer when you haven't converted the interest you've already generated. Visibility without follow-through is just performance. The fix: Before you write your next post, spend 20 minutes working what you already have.