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Smriti Maan's Linkedin Analytics

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Building my personal brand before I need it.

Check out Smriti Maan's verified LinkedIn stats (last 30 days)

Followers
3,886
Posts
20
Engagements
4,308
Likes
2,040

Smriti Maan's Best Posts (last 30 days)

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Writing on LinkedIn is an absolute VIBE. I wasted my time and energy just consuming. Now, I post every day on LinkedIn for a reason: - Writing online = More writing problems - More writing problems = More solutions - More solutions = More problems solved It doesn't mean I write all day. And put out random content. Instead, I use a simple execution system: • Spot ideas throughout the week • Define my own consistency  • I decided my 3 or 4 topics • Choose one day… - Write full-week content in one go - The rest do whatever I want to - Bizz, job or internships - Trying new things And in return, you get: • Awesome writing skills • Meet amazing people • Immense support • Monetization if • You want it Most people stress about writing online. ( Big same.) But all you need is to spot ideas and execute. It will solve your problems and others too. P.S. Do you write on Twitter or LinkedIn?


    116

    I got on LinkedIn just to get a job reference. Because I didn't have a perfect resume. - Sadly, I didn’t get a job. - Barely posted. Flat, trash posts. - Looked like I never wrote once in my life. I got so upset that this option didn't work out. 0 writing skills. It felt like a waste of time. This was the end of 2024. Then out of nowhere, someone • Tagged me in her post and said • She saved my posts to learn how to write. The same posts I thought were trash. I was like, f*ck. That’s when I realised 1 thing for real: - No idea is useless. Not even one. - It’s all about how you write it. Most of you don’t write because you think: • Your ideas are flat and trash. • They make no sense. But in reality, they make sense. - Write them. - Turn into posts. - Put them out there. Your “useless” idea might be useful to someone else. Don't waste any of your ideas. Write it down and learn how to write it. That's how you learn to put your ideas into words. P.S. When did you start writing seriously on LinkedIn?


      109

      How I started writing on LinkedIn without overthinking: (And how it 10x'd my execution) I used to overthink every single word. It was frustrating. But now I've stopped overthinking: • Ideas • How to write • What to write I only focus on: • Writing • Creating • Improving → Post by post on LinkedIn. I simply spot ideas from: - Newsletters - My past experiences  - My current experiences  - Always see every idea through my lens - Write my opinion on someone else’s idea I draft in Google Docs first ↳ Then, turn it into a post. This simple ''change" made writing easier. Because I’ve realized → everyone has knowledge ↳ But overthinking? It kills execution. The minute you switch from overthinking to executing You learn and improve your writing faster → Than anyone else on this planet. Next time you write, try this out. P.S. Do you rewrite posts endlessly because of overthinking?


        108

        1 Month as a “Trash Writer” on LinkedIn. I started on LinkedIn last year for a job. Didn’t get one. Barely posted. Hated it. But on Feb. 3, 2025 → I said f*ck it. • Took LinkedIn writing seriously. ↳ Removed every excuse. • Today is my 1 month of showing up on LinkedIn. ↳ With purpose. How’s it been? F*cking amazing and fun. Some days, writing flows. Other days, it’s a mess. But the awesome part is? I: 6. Showed up, no matter how I feel 7. Write according to my decided topics 8. Writing improves too (people noticed it). 9. Took my connections from comments to DMs 10. Got lil clarity on what works (and what doesn’t). 11. Met some real, awesome people and continue to. Struggles? Countless. 5. Whom to write. Will I ever be good at writing? 4. How to find ideas. What and how to write. 3. Deleted posts and rewrite again. 2. Overthink at first every day. 1. Staying consistent is hard. But I slowly found answers to my struggles. Did many mistakes and will do too. Learn/improve every time. And here’s what keeps me going, now and ahead: • Your support. Your comments. Your DMs. • And my mindset to figure it out, no matter what. • Create and learn until I make it on LinkedIn for real. 1 month down. Many more to go. ↳ Let’s see where this writing on LinkedIn takes me. Still a ‘trash writer’? Maybe. But I’m not stopping. Thank you for your infinite love. - Smriti No P.S. today.


          96

          Who the f*ck I’m. Why would someone listen to me? This was my thought before writing on LinkedIn. Because in my wildest dreams, I never imagined: • Writing publicly • With my trash-writing skills • And nearly 0 writing experience But despite this feeling: • I promised myself to write in public • Write what my past self needed • And write to get 1% better This feeling is still with me, but I realised: It comes and goes like a wind. Sometimes this feeling is high. Sometimes low. The only way I deal with this feeling is: 1. Put my reps in every emotion ↳ Act with discipline, not with feeling 2. If post flop ↳ I feel sad one moment ↳ Next, I try to improve it only 3. If post goes well ↳ Why good? Double down on it. This whole process isn't easy but doable too. Your thoughts come and go. But your improvement stays. Don't let it stop you from getting better. P.S. What's the #1 thing you do every Sunday?


            95

            Your emotion is a real currency (not attention) LinkedIn writing isn’t dead. You make it dead. Why? • No unique lens. • Only tips and tricks. • No human connection. You write it boring. → No vibe. No real connection. Don’t fight for attention. Fight for awesome LinkedIn writing. Make it: • Scannable • Intentional • Inspiring or emotional • Filled with real experiences I know this mistake because I made it. My posts were damn flat. Not now. → I made 1 change: Whenever I write LinkedIn post, I mix it with my • Real learning • Real experiences • Unique perspective Try this, you'll see the difference: 1. Example. Don't write: Consistency makes writing better. ↳ 90 days of consistency made my trash writing awesome. 2. Don’t fake emotions. It has a strong fake scent. ↳ Try new things. Write about your experiences. 3. Format like a premium food menu: ↳ Bullets. Lists. Arrows. → It only works if you add your real experience. I didn’t know these little details before. But as I write more, I'm learning more. Make your reader feel some emotion. Attention is a byproduct of your awesome LinkedIn writing. P.S. How often have you changed your LinkedIn headline?


              94

              "Look stupid on the internet before you have to." "Endless" job rejections taught me this. I’m on my career break. Most would only relax. But I write on LinkedIn because: I’m not desperate to get anything right now ↳ And desperation has a strong scent. ↳ It pushes people away. Instead, I: • Enjoy being a beginner. It's tough • Like the freshness of new things • Don’t force anything on me This gets me to: - Naturally connect with others with no agenda - Learn new things every day - Improve my writing skills - Experiment a lot No matter who you're and what you're doing ↳ Pick one platform. ↳ Start writing on the internet ASAP. ↳ Write what you know. Share how you learn. Don't wait until you're desperate. Look stupid today. Write online. So you don't have to later. P.S. Do you go to the gym on Sundays?


                89

                Every Monday, I batch-write my LinkedIn posts. But every time, my writing feels different. One post makes me think ↳ Wow, my writing is getting awesome. Another post makes me go, ↳ Sh*t, am I even improving? And I realised 1 thing through this feeling: • This is the thriller phase of writing. • It fluctuates every time. • It's never constant. If your work gives you the same feeling every day, ↳ You’ll get bored. But in this way, you're always obsessed with: • The thrill of making it more awesome. • The thrill of learning by doing. • The thrill of getting better. That's what keeps it fun. • You don't stop. • You let the thrill take over • And it makes you better every time. Thrill in writing > Fear of Mistakes P.S. Do you love the thrill of writing?


                  88

                  I write “clean and clear” posts on LinkedIn when: I’m "curious" about a topic. That’s why I write about topics that excite me → Not what makes me yawn. My examples: 1. LinkedIn writing ↳ I'm creating and learning about it. Current experience.         2. My career ↳ My current and lived experiences 3. I took Parker’s Worth Storytelling course ↳ I'm excited to write about it here. I don’t get bored writing about these. Because they’re new to me. → That’s what makes writing fun. You can’t write well if you’re not curious. You’ll get bored, and your reader too. Do cool things. Write about your current or past experiences. Mix them with your reader’s problems. And most importantly, try different angles. → So your writing never gets boring. It becomes exciting for you and your reader. P.S. What’s one interesting thing you’ve tried recently?


                    86

                    Right before I hit post, my confidence crashes to 0. EVERY. SINGLE. TIME. Doesn’t matter if it’s my 1st or 30th post. Underconfidence, come and say hi to me. That moment before the post goes live? Confidence? Shaken. Heartbeat? Crazy fast. Brain? Completely blank. My underconfident vibe whispers, Rewrite the hook just once. My brain yells, Just f**ing post it. And I listen to my brain. Post it anyway. Every time I post, I get a little stronger. Every time I show up, my confidence builds. Most people think confidence comes before action. But the reality is damn different. You act first. You shake off the nerves. You become confident by doing. So, if your confidence drops to 0 before you post: ↳ JUST CHILL.... You’re in the right lane. You're just new to this, like me. Have fun. Vibe with this feeling and WRITE. P.S. If you're new to this, do you feel the same before posting? Happiest Holi, my cool friends.


                    86

                    Writing on LinkedIn is a ‘’low and high game’’. "Low version" makes you want to quit: • Struggle to get ideas • Posts are getting flop • Don’t know what to write  • How to write and for whom • Thinking nonstop about ideas • Forced writing every single day • Inconsistent, scared and self-doubt "High version" keeps you going: • You become awesome at writing with practice • Write on LinkedIn and get direct feedback • You define your own consistency  • You test your ideas and find • What works best for you? • Repeat it from a different  • Angle until you make it • With crazy experiments This game isn’t easy, and most people quit. Nobody likes going low. Everyone wants to go high. But first? You have to pay the price. Feel the pain of your low version And figure it out. I like getting high. That’s why I started showing up. This ''low and high game'' makes you unstoppable. P.S. What's the best LinkedIn comment you've ever received?


                    85

                    Everyone writes the same thing on LinkedIn. It’s boring. This is what most people say. But why not write what YOU like? If you like writing → Write on LinkedIn. If you like videos → Make videos. • Write from your lens. • Show your personality. • Share your career things. • Or things beyond your career. That’s how you make LinkedIn writing exciting for YOU. When I started commenting here, I had the same thought (it’s boring) But I'm giving it a serious shot. Now? • I create/write from my lens. • I built my writing habit, too. • I write for fun right now. And look... Bizz and money? They're damn important. They'll also come through trying things. But first... ↳Try to enjoy the creating/writing process with experimentation. • Short or long posts • Different formats • Play with hooks • Visuals Try things your way. The rest will figure it out as you go. P.S. Happiest Women's Day to every woman out there.


                      92

                      Last month, I faced the most annoying writing problem. (As a beginner writer on LinkedIn.) → How to do LinkedIn writing without wasting hours. Because every time I’d sit down to write... • Hours gone. • Only a few ideas got. • Energy and time wasted. • Still stuck on writing one LinkedIn post. Annoying as hell. Until I did this 1 simple thing... → Set a strict deadline for myself. How? Simple, I: • Give myself a set time to finish a post. • Fixed the time for formatting. • Set a timer to dump ideas. The results amazed me: 1. Writing improves. 2. No overformatting. 3. More ideas spit out. 4. No overfixing words. This time trick changed my writing game. No more time wasted. Pure focus on writing. Try this once... You'll save time and have more focus on writing. P.S. Do you set deadlines when you write?


                        92

                        In 2024, I bought every top 0.1% creator’s course. (And all I felt was guilt.) Charles Miller. Justin Welsh. Dan Koe. You name it. ↳ Guilt wasn’t from buying. It was from doing nothing. Buying courses just to let them sit, collecting dust. At the end? Time wasted to consume information. My energy wasted Money wasted All 3 are luxurious resources. That was late 2024 when I quit everything. But in 2025? I picked one course. Charles Miller. Applied it. ↳ Now, the guilt is going away slowly. And I’m finally feeling good. One thing I changed: ↳ I stopped collecting information. The cold reality is: ↳ Consuming courses and books is easy. But creating is damn hard. But the truth is: You never improve by just consuming. You only get *awesome* by doing. And it's important if you: Watch a YouTube video? Write what you learn. Read one book? Write 1 lesson and apply. Doing a course? Go all in and apply. The world is full of consumers. But creators? Rare. And the rare ones? Improve. Fail. Grow. Improve again. Do the work and grow before you need it. P.S. Have you ever taken courses?


                          89

                          Rejection isn’t as cool as it looks on LinkedIn. 1. It hurts. 2. Pisses you off. 3. It makes you doubt yourself. I got rejected 100+ times despite having: • 1 corporate job • Best education • Top college • Internships • 2 degrees My first rejections felt the same. But I paused. Reflected. Took my time. ↳ My mindset on rejection shifted. I realized it’s just an improvement phase. ↳ Now, I bounce back faster. Because I let that feeling sink in early. ↳ Rejection feels normal now. So, if you’re upset with your first rejections: On LinkedIn or in your career. → Don't rush. Take your time. Let it sink in. Then, watch how fast you bounce back next time. P.S. When were you first rejected in your career?


                            98

                            LinkedIn writing isn't tough. Your "I will write later on'' excuse is tougher. Because 99% of YOU think like this: - I’ve got an idea, but I’ll write it later on. - And later on = never ever. I know this because it happened to me, too. I delayed. Wasted my infinite ideas. But people are becoming ELITE writers by: 1. Write down every single idea. • Don't waste any idea. • Be it good or bad. Simply write it down. 2. Executing ideas ASAP. • No fancy system. • Use Google Docs. Write a post on 1 idea. 3. Finding topics fast. • Scroll LinkedIn/Twitter. • Agree or disagree with a topic. Write an opinion. 4. Get in the flow before niche down. • Write what they know. • Build a writing habit, not perfection. 5. Steal ideas smartly. • If read newsletters → Grab topics→ Write your version. • They don't force writing. 6. Focus on discipline, not motivation. • No waiting. Just execution. • Write and test. This works 10,000% because: - Fast execution makes writing fun. - No overfixing = More writing. - More writing = Faster learning. Simple ideas. Simple system. But FAST execution. The more you execute → The better you write. The better you write → The more you grow. Most excuses are LAME. Remove it. Write. Hit post. Test. Move on. P.S. What's the 1 thing you love the most about LinkedIn?


                              98

                              How I write when my brain is frying to death: I read the email newsletters. • No kleo • No Twitter • Not scrolling LinkedIn • Not even my own written ideas Why newsletter? - Bold headlines instantly give tons of fresh ideas - People express ideas freely in newsletters - Tons of advice on how to write - Cool analogies they use - Unfiltered and fun That's how I write a few raw LinkedIn posts quickly And edit it later on. ELITE newsletters I’ve read so far on this earth: • Matt Barker • Jacob Pegs • Dickie Bush • Charles Miller • Lessa raebiger The thing is: Never think → Oh, I can’t write Just because your brain feels fried. Find cool ideas to beat whatever situation you've Show up every single day Until you make it. Show up = You grow and win Excuses = You never get better at your work. P.S. Do you like to scroll LinkedIn or Twitter casually?


                                96

                                I fear every time I post on LinkedIn. I write here to learn: • How to write on LinkedIn • How to write a dang copy • How to grab and hold attention That’s my current goal. Still, I fear hitting post. It feels like everything’s going to end. Because our mind grabs negative vibes quickly. But do you know why I keep going? ↳ Because I don’t know when fear will disappear. And waiting won’t help. Before things get delayed, it’s better to hit post And move on. With every post: Fear feels like a never-ending feeling Some days → it’s high. Some days → it’s low. I can handle fear. What I can’t handle is delays and regrets. ↳ They’re more dangerous than drugs. And you know what? It happens with everyone. Everyone who’s skilled AF feels this, too. The next time you feel fear? ↳ Keep moving. Vibe with it. P.S. How do you deal with fear?


                                  170

                                  “Write for impact, not for likes.” You hear this 10,000 times on LinkedIn daily. But “impactful content” isn't a quick magic trick. When I started writing, I thought I needed big influence. ↳ Like an A-class expert. Later, I realised it doesn't work like this. Because "impact" comes from your own experiences. • Not theories. • Not fancy templates. • Not fancy frameworks. ↳ Just doing things and sharing what you learned. Here’s how it works 10,000% every time: • Execution is a VIBE. • Do things in real-time. • Solve your own problems. • Give yourself solutions. • Self-educate like crazy. Document how you figured it out. That’s where the value is. My examples: I learn about writing. My struggles: • Who would someone listen to me? • How do I write awesome hooks? • Is LinkedIn the right place? • What if my post flops? • What to write? • Consistency? I educate myself. I live through them. And I give myself advice while writing. When you start on LinkedIn... ↳ You won’t write impactful content from day 1. Write how you help yourself. This helps others for real. It happens when you: execute - create - learn - write - share. Simple. P.S. Do you like to scroll reels on Instagram?


                                    127

                                    Beginner’s writing chaos is real on LinkedIn: • LinkedIn seems high-end pool party with no invite • No idea what and how to write • You’re scared AF → But it’s an (unfair) advantage to you. I know because I’m in this phase right now. It sucks, but it's cool if you put in the work. Here are 6 instant fixes to beat this situation: ( Try this out once. You'll know.) 1. Get into the flow first • Start by writing comments for at least 2 weeks. • 3-4 lines, sometimes just 2. • Get the hang of writing → You only need to show your personality 2. Start with short posts (Thanks, Matt Barker) • Keep it simple. Whether you have a job, internship • Or nothing. You know something • Share your lived experiences → Your real experiences and perspective is your identity 3. Use a structure (so your writing isn’t messy) Example: Try PAS • Write the problem. • Make it hit harder. • Tell the solution. → Problem - Agitate - Solution 4. After writing a few 50-short posts • See what you like to write the most • Check what's working for you or what's not • What people like, which posts are getting comments → Every post would be a mini test. Don't be scared. 5. Think long-term, not in a few days. • Don’t quit. Create it until you make it. • Once you know this, you’ll improve • And so your writing is. → Create. Experiment. Fail. Learn. Chill. 6. Find your tribe • Check other creators • Vibe with them • Make friends → Everyone loves a genuine person. That's what I'm doing to improve my writing on LinkedIn. Chaos writing first. Clear writing later. Stick with it. Because you never know when it all clicks. P.S. Do you show your personality in the comments?


                                      126

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