# First Comment Strategy Your first comment is a strategic tool, not an afterthought. Used correctly, it extends your post's value without triggering algorithm penalties. Used poorly, it looks like spam. ## Why First Comments Matter LinkedIn's 360Brew algorithm penalizes external links in post bodies by 25-40% reach suppression. The first comment is the accepted workaround — but it's much more than a link dump. **First comment benefits:** - Avoids link penalty while still providing resources - Adds a second engagement surface (people reply to comments) - Signals to the algorithm that the post is generating conversation - Lets you add context that didn't fit the post's character limit - Creates a natural CTA without cluttering the main post ## Timing Strategy ### Immediate (within 60 seconds) **Best for:** Link-sharing, resource lists, CTA **Why:** Ensures the comment appears at the top before others comment. LinkedIn treats author comments as pinned by default when posted first. ### Delayed (15-30 minutes) **Best for:** Engagement boost, conversation starter, hot take **Why:** Adds a new engagement signal during the critical first-hour window. The algorithm re-evaluates distribution when new activity appears. ### Strategic Delay (1-2 hours) **Best for:** Follow-up data, poll results teaser, additional perspective **Why:** Gives the post time to gain organic engagement first, then re-ignites distribution with fresh activity. **Rule of thumb:** If the comment contains a link or resource, post immediately. If it's a conversation starter or additional perspective, delay 15-30 minutes. ## First Comment Templates ### 1. Link Sharing **When:** You reference an article, tool, or resource in the post **Template:** ``` Here's the [resource type] I mentioned: [URL] Key takeaway: [1-sentence summary of why it's worth clicking] ``` **Example:** ``` Here's the Microsoft research paper I mentioned: [URL] Key takeaway: They found that AI assistants improve developer productivity by 26% — but only when the developer already understands the fundamentals. ``` ### 2. Extra Context **When:** Your post makes a bold claim that needs nuance **Template:** ``` Some context that didn't fit the post: [2-3 bullet points with additional detail, data, or caveats] What's your experience with this? ``` **Example:** ``` Some context that didn't fit the post: - This pattern works best for teams of 5-15 people - We tested it over 6 months with 3 different departments - The 40% improvement was measured in deployment frequency, not lines of code What's your experience with this? ``` ### 3. Resource List **When:** You want to provide multiple references without cluttering the post **Template:** ``` Resources if you want to go deeper: 1. [Resource name] — [1-line description] 2. [Resource name] — [1-line description] 3. [Resource name] — [1-line description] Which of these resonates most? I can elaborate. ``` ### 4. Call to Action **When:** Your post is educational and you want to drive a specific action **Template:** ``` If this resonated, here's what I'd suggest: 1. [Specific first step] 2. [Follow-up action] 3. [Where to learn more or connect] DM me if you want [specific offer — template, checklist, conversation]. ``` ### 5. Contrarian Addition **When:** You want to add a nuanced take that would weaken the post's hook **Template:** ``` One thing I deliberately left out of the post: [Counterpoint or caveat that adds depth] This doesn't invalidate the main point, but it's worth knowing if you're [specific context]. ``` ### 6. Behind-the-Scenes **When:** You share a lesson or result and want to add the messy reality **Template:** ``` What I didn't mention in the post: [The failure, struggle, or unexpected twist that preceded the lesson] The polished version makes it sound easy. It wasn't. ``` ### 7. Question Redirect **When:** You want to steer the conversation toward a specific topic **Template:** ``` Curious about something: [Specific question that narrows the discussion to your expertise area] I'll share my take once I've heard a few perspectives. ``` ## Self-Comment as Engagement Boost Commenting on your own post is not just for adding links. Strategic self-comments can: 1. **Re-ignite distribution** — A new comment triggers the algorithm to re-evaluate the post 2. **Model the conversation** — Your comment style sets the tone for how others respond 3. **Add social proof** — Responding to early commenters shows you're present and engaged 4. **Extend reach window** — Comments in the 2-4 hour window can extend the post's active distribution ### Self-Comment Timing Sequence | Time | Action | Purpose | |------|--------|---------| | 0 min | Post goes live | — | | 0-1 min | First comment (if link/resource) | Avoid link penalty | | 15-30 min | Reply to first 3-5 commenters | Build early engagement momentum | | 1-2 hours | Add additional perspective or data | Re-ignite algorithm distribution | | 4-6 hours | Respond to remaining comments | Maintain conversation signal | ## What NOT to Put in First Comments - **"Link in comments"** in the post body — LinkedIn recognizes this phrase and may still suppress reach - **Multiple links** — One link per comment. More looks like spam - **Self-promotional CTAs on every post** — Reserve for 1 in 5 posts maximum (90/10 rule) - **Generic comments** — "Thanks for reading!" adds no value - **Hashtags** — Put these in the post body, not the comment ## First Comment for Different Post Types | Post Type | First Comment Strategy | Timing | |-----------|----------------------|--------| | Educational | Resource link or deeper context | Immediate | | Story/Personal | Behind-the-scenes addition | 15-30 min delay | | Opinion/Hot take | Nuanced caveat or data | Immediate | | Question post | Your own answer to model responses | 30 min delay | | Carousel | Summary or "which slide resonated?" | Immediate | | Poll | "Here's why I'm asking..." context | Immediate | | Quick post | Skip first comment (keep it pure) | N/A | ## Quality Checklist Before posting your first comment, verify: - [ ] It adds genuine value (not just "link below") - [ ] It's 2-5 lines maximum (comments aren't posts) - [ ] It has a conversational element (question or invitation) - [ ] It doesn't repeat what's already in the post - [ ] It doesn't contain "link in comments" phrasing - [ ] Links are relevant, not self-promotional spam