Posting on LinkedIn Isn’t Risk-Free. But Silence Carries a Cost Too.

May 21, 2025 | LinkedIn, LinkedIn Posts, Personal branding

Is it really worth it to post on LinkedIn?
 
You’re already busy. You don’t necessarily feel the need to be seen as a thought leader. You’re not trying to build a large following. 
 
And the last thing you want is to attract the wrong kind of attention.
 
The truth is that you’re right to be cautious.
 
At your level, your reputation is one of your most valuable assets. And when your name is tied to a team, a function, or a company brand, every word you post feels like it carries weight.
 
But staying silent doesn’t keep you safe.
 
It just keeps you out of the conversation. And sometimes, it keeps you off the short list for the opportunities you very much want.
 
You don’t need to ignore the risks. Let’s walk through them, because when you think through what the risks are, you’re in a better position to manage them well.
 

1. Getting Tied to a Company That Later Gets Discredited

This is rare, but when it happens, the consequences are significant. If your posts are tightly aligned with the company’s leadership, its message, or its moral high ground – and that trust later collapses – you may find your words quoted back to you in the wrong context.
 
It happened to leaders at Enron. We’ve seen it more recently at Theranos and FTX. It’s happening now in social and political contexts, too.
 
How to manage it:
Stay anchored in your leadership voice. Don’t just amplify company posts and news. Share what you believe in, how you think, and how you lead, so you have a brand that is distinct from your company.
 

2. Being Misunderstood

Tone doesn’t always land the way you expect. A well-meaning post can come across as self-congratulatory. Thoughts about leadership can sound out of touch. A comment on DEI or layoffs can hit a nerve.
 
Even if your intent is good, social media doesn’t always get nuances right.
 
How to manage it:
Stick to what you know. Share your own experience. Ask someone to read it before you post. If you’re not sure how something will land, don’t say it.

 

3. Making a Mistake (Even a Small One)

A typo may not matter. In fact, the occasional typo can be taken as evidence that your LinkedIn presence is authentic.
 
But a factual error or a data point taken out of context can do real damage to your credibility, especially in roles where precision matters.
 
How to manage it:
Give yourself time. Let your post sit for a few hours or overnight. Read it again with fresh eyes. Or better yet, have someone else read it. If you’re working with a ghostwriter, make sure review is part of your process.

 

4. Being Seen as Self-Promotional

This is the most common fear. Most executives do not want to be seen as bragging or promoting themselves. But don’t let this keep you from venturing beyond safe posts.
 
How to manage it:
You don’t have to make your posts all about yourself. You can do a lot with posts about your team and your customers. When you are talking about yourself, come from a place of gratitude and appreciation, or tell a story.

 

5. Posting Something Off-Brand (for You or the Company)

Sometimes it’s not what you say, it’s that it doesn’t sound like you. Or it doesn’t reflect the culture your company tries to project. That disconnect can be jarring to people who know you.
 
How to manage it:
Post in your own voice. If it doesn’t feel like something you’d say out loud, it’s probably not the right tone. The best posts don’t sound like a campaign. They sound like a human.

 

6. Saying Too Much or Too Soon

This is a real concern in finance, legal, product, or roles where compliance matters. You don’t want to share something too soon or reveal too much.
 
How to manage it:
If you are in one of these roles, you are probably very good at knowing where the line is. If you’re not sure, err on the side of caution.

 

How to Move Forward?

Posting comes with risk. But not posting has a cost, too.
 
It makes you harder to find when the right opportunity is forming.
It makes your leadership less visible to the people watching from a distance. It makes it harder for people to understand who you are and how you lead.
 
You don’t need to post every day or even every week. But showing up in a thoughtful, consistent way builds trust, reach, and momentum.
 
Let’s talk if you want to make that easier.

Who else should read this? Please share!

Recent Posts

You Don’t Have to Be Vulnerable on LinkedIn

There’s a lot of talk about being vulnerable in your LinkedIn posts. Scroll through your feed and you’ll see personal stories, emotional reflections, and touching anecdotes, all in the name of being authentic. While that kind of content can work well for some, most...

Why Female VPs at Major Tech Companies Post More Often Than Men

We have been looking at the way thousands of VPs at the largest U.S.-based technology companies are using LinkedIn, and one pattern stands out:   Female VPs post nearly twice as often as their male counterparts.   This held true across companies where hundreds of VPs...

How to Activate Your Network

If you’re considering stepping away from corporate life and into consulting, your first instinct might be to start building a brand or launching a website. But the truth is, you probably already have what you need to get started: a strong professional network. The...