ktg-plugin-marketplace/plugins/linkedin-studio/references/engagement-frameworks.md
Kjell Tore Guttormsen 0c9c02a2b1 fix(linkedin-studio): S9 — full algorithm-magnitude sweep + lint rebuilt to the criterion
Closes the S8 re-review (BLOCK 3/4/1). The S8 fix patched only the 2 strings S7 named; the re-review found 6 more same-class survivors. Per the systemic read, this is a comprehensive sweep, not a per-line patch.

Reconciled every retired engagement-coefficient + model-fact survivor against the canonical references/algorithm-signals-reference.md (order, not coefficients; comment ≈ 2x a like; no model name/params):
- glossary.md: coefficient table + Save-Signal '10x weight' → canonical ordering (citation now true)
- engagement-frameworks.md, analytics-interpreter.md, content-optimizer.md, pipeline.md, engagement-coach.md: the 10x/8x/7-9x/2.5x/0.2x system (incl. 4 survivors the re-review did not cite) → ordering
- playbook: '15x more algorithmic boost' + video '5x more conversations' → directional, sourced
- profile.md + linkedin-voice/SKILL.md: '150B parameter foundation model' → '2026 relevance-ranking model'
- quality-scorecard.md: '360Brew Validation' → topic-relevance framing
- setup.md: 'thought leadership plugin' → 'LinkedIn Studio plugin'

Lint (MAJOR 4): rebuilt scripts/test-runner.sh STALE_STATS to forbid EVERY retired-class phrasing (not the 2 S7 strings) + widened scope to assets/checklists/. Targets retired phrasings (7-9x, (10x), '10x weight', '5x more conversations'), NOT bare 10x/15x/5x (legit 5x5x5 / cadence / pixel-dims / '10x your reach' hyperbole). Proven non-vacuous: catches all 10 retired strings, ignores all 10 legit uses.

Tests (MAJOR 7): added no-anchor fall-through tests for recordFirstHourPlan + recordOutreachContact (date scalar not written/reported, section still appended). MINOR 8: reflowed newsletter.md content-repurposer wiring onto one line.

test-runner.sh 66/0/0; node --test 94/94 (was 92, +2). NO push until /trekreview re-clears the gate.

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.8 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-30 09:56:49 +02:00

11 KiB

Engagement Frameworks

Proven structures for maximizing LinkedIn engagement through hooks, storytelling, and calls-to-action.

Hook Frameworks (First 110-140 Characters)

The hook determines whether people click "see more." It must work standalone on mobile.

10 High-Performing Hook Types

1. The Surprising Stat Pattern: Lead with a number that challenges expectations

  • "84% of organizations say their data infrastructure can't support AI."
  • "We spent €2M on infrastructure. It bought us 6 months of delay."
  • "3 out of 4 AI projects in my organization failed this year."

2. The Bold Statement Pattern: Make a strong, clear claim

  • "AI readiness is a leadership problem, not a technology problem."
  • "Your data strategy is probably backwards."
  • "We need to stop calling them 'AI projects.'"

3. The Provocative Question Pattern: Ask something that makes people stop

  • "What if the AI revolution requires doing less, not more?"
  • "Why are we implementing AI before fixing our data?"
  • "Is your organization brave enough to wait?"

4. The Contrarian Opening Pattern: Challenge what "everyone" believes

  • "Everyone's rushing to implement AI. That's the mistake."
  • "Popular opinion: We need more data. Reality: We need better questions."
  • "The advice you're getting about AI transformation? It's 3 years too late."

5. The Personal Confession Pattern: Admit something unexpected

  • "I was wrong about AI readiness. Here's what changed my mind:"
  • "Our €2M AI platform failed. Here's why:"
  • "I used to think data quality was our problem. I was looking at the wrong problem."

6. The Pattern Observation Pattern: Point out something others might miss

  • "I've noticed a pattern: Every successful AI project shares this one thing."
  • "There's a gap between what executives want and what actually works."
  • "The organizations succeeding with AI aren't the ones you'd expect."

7. The Time Frame Pattern: Create urgency with specific timing

  • "In 18-36 months, most AI initiatives will fail. Here's why:"
  • "We have 6 months to fix this. Here's the plan:"
  • "This week, I learned something that changes everything about AI strategy."

8. The Lesson Learned Pattern: Promise a valuable takeaway

  • "Three years of AI projects taught me this uncomfortable truth:"
  • "We failed at AI implementation. The lesson was worth the cost:"
  • "After 12 failed experiments, we finally figured it out:"

9. The Scenario Opening Pattern: Set a scene that resonates

  • "You're in a meeting. Everyone's excited about AI. Nobody mentions the data."
  • "It's 2027. Your AI initiative just failed. Here's what you missed:"
  • "Picture this: You've spent millions on infrastructure, and nothing works."

10. The Direct Address Pattern: Speak directly to a specific audience

  • "If you're an AI leader in the public sector, we need to talk."
  • "To everyone implementing AI right now: Pause and read this."
  • "Fellow AI advisors: Are we being honest about timelines?"

Hook Writing Rules

  1. Frontload value: Put the most interesting part first
  2. Avoid weak openings: No "Happy Monday!" or "I hope you're well"
  3. Be specific: "We spent €2M" beats "We spent a lot"
  4. Create curiosity: Make people want to know more
  5. Test on mobile: Does it work in 110 characters?

The Hook Psychology Research

Analysis of 9,000+ viral posts reveals the science behind what works:

Pattern Interrupts:

  • Viral posts contain 2.7x more pattern interrupts in first two lines
  • Pattern interrupts create information gaps that psychologically demand closure
  • Trigger dopamine release and heightened attention
  • Brain's prediction error system activates when expectations disrupted

Optimal Hook Structure:

  • First line: ~49 characters (tested optimal length)
  • Full opening: Utilize all 140 characters visible on mobile
  • Keep sentences under 15 words
  • Use three short lines with spaces between them
  • Front-load value in first two lines
  • Skip one line after hook before continuing

Justin Welsh's Three-Step Viral Formula:

  1. Create scroll-stopper by attacking relatable enemy
    Example: "The 9 to 5 is getting pummeled."

  2. Flip the script with positive force
    Example: "The great resignation is growing faster than ever."

  3. Add gasoline and teaser
    Example: "And I love it. Why?"

This structure creates positive response by opposing forces and compels the "see more" click through strategic curiosity gaps.

The Information Gap Technique:

  • Create question in reader's mind
  • Make answer visible only by reading
  • Hook promises resolution
  • Satisfaction drives sharing

Psychological Mechanisms:

  • Curiosity Gap: Gap between what they know and want to know
  • Cognitive Closure: Brain demands resolution of incomplete narratives
  • Prediction Error: Unexpected statements force attention
  • Emotional Resonance: Personal relevance creates immediate connection

Example Application:

Weak: "I learned something about AI this week"

  • No pattern interrupt
  • Vague promise
  • No information gap

Strong: "84% of organizations can't support AI. Here's the part nobody talks about:"

  • Surprising statistic (pattern interrupt)
  • Creates information gap (what's the hidden part?)
  • Demands cognitive closure
  • Promises insider knowledge

Story Structure Frameworks

The Standard Thought Leadership Structure (1,200-1,800 chars)

Hook (110-140 chars) → Grab attention, create curiosity

Context (200-300 chars) → Set up the situation/problem/observation → Why should they care? → What's at stake?

Insight/Argument (400-800 chars) → Your main point → Supporting evidence or logic → This is the "meat" of the post

Implication (200-300 chars) → What does this mean? → Why does it matter? → Connect to bigger picture

Call-to-Action (50-100 chars) → What should the reader do/think? → Engagement prompt

The Narrative Arc (For Story-Based Posts)

Setup (200 chars) → Scene setting → "Let me tell you about..."

Challenge (300 chars) → The problem/obstacle → What went wrong or what was at stake

Turning Point (300 chars) → The realization/decision/change → "Then I realized..."

Resolution (300 chars) → What happened → The outcome

Lesson (200-300 chars) → What this teaches us → The broader application

CTA (50-100 chars) → Engagement prompt

The Data-Driven Post (For Research/Statistics)

Stat Hook (100 chars) → Lead with the surprising number

Context (200 chars) → Where this data comes from → Why it matters

Breakdown (500-700 chars) → What the data actually means → Deeper analysis → Connect to reader's reality

Action (200-300 chars) → What to do with this information → Practical takeaways

CTA (50-100 chars) → Engagement prompt

The Contrarian Post (For Challenging Norms)

Bold Claim Hook (110 chars) → State the contrarian position clearly

Common Wisdom (200 chars) → Acknowledge what "everyone" thinks → Show you understand the conventional view

The Challenge (400-600 chars) → Why the common wisdom fails → Evidence or logic for your position → Personal experience or data

Alternative View (300-400 chars) → What we should do instead → The better approach

CTA (50-100 chars) → Invite discussion/disagreement

Call-to-Action Frameworks

CTAs should encourage engagement while feeling natural, not forced.

High-Engagement CTAs

Genuine Questions:

  • "What's your experience with this?"
  • "Am I missing something here?"
  • "Is this just my organization, or are others seeing this?"

Invitations to Share:

  • "Tag someone who needs to see this."
  • "Share this if you've experienced this."
  • "Who else is dealing with this challenge?"

Specific Asks:

  • "What would you add to this list?"
  • "Which of these resonates most with you?"
  • "What's worked for you?"

Challenge to Status Quo:

  • "Change my mind."
  • "Prove me wrong."
  • "What am I not considering?"

Practical Extension:

  • "What questions should I answer in a follow-up?"
  • "Want me to write more about [specific aspect]?"
  • "Should I share the framework we use?"

CTA Rules

  1. Make it specific: "What do you think?" is weak. "Which strategy has worked for your team?" is strong.
  2. Keep it genuine: Don't ask questions you don't care about
  3. Create optionality: Give people multiple ways to engage (comment, share, connect)
  4. Match the tone: Serious post = serious CTA. Personal post = personal CTA.

Paragraph Structure Best Practices

Visual Readability

Use short paragraphs:

  • 1-3 sentences per paragraph
  • Lots of white space
  • Easy to scan on mobile

Strategic formatting:

  • Break before key points
  • Use line breaks for emphasis
  • Never write walls of text

Example of good structure:

[Hook paragraph - 1 sentence]

[Context paragraph - 2-3 sentences]

[Key insight paragraph - 1 sentence]

[Supporting detail - 2-3 sentences]

[Implication paragraph - 2 sentences]

[CTA - 1 sentence]

Sentence Length Variation

Mix short and long sentences:

  • Short sentences: impact and emphasis
  • Medium sentences: explanation and flow
  • Long sentences: detail and nuance

Example: "We failed. [SHORT - impact] Our €2M data platform took 18 months to build and six months to realize it solved the wrong problem. [LONG - detail] The lesson was expensive but clear. [MEDIUM - transition]"

Tone Guidelines

What Works on LinkedIn

Authoritative but accessible:

  • Share expertise without jargon
  • Explain, don't lecture
  • Confidence without arrogance

Authentic over polished:

  • Real stories beat corporate speak
  • Admit mistakes and uncertainties
  • Sound human, not like a press release

Helpful over promotional:

  • Lead with value, not credentials
  • Make readers smarter
  • Give away insights freely

What Doesn't Work

  • Humble brags disguised as insights
  • Excessive self-promotion
  • Corporate jargon without translation
  • Vague platitudes
  • Overly formal or academic tone

Engagement Timing Best Practices

Engagement Quality Hierarchy

Not all engagement is equal. The defensible spine is the order, not a fixed multiplier — LinkedIn publishes no coefficient table, so trust the order and test the number:

  1. Saves (top signal — content worth returning to; a save ≈ 5x a like in single-vendor data)
  2. Shares (high signal — amplification and endorsement)
  3. Comments 15+ words (substantive comments outweigh short ones; a quality comment ≈ 2x a like)
  4. Comments <15 words (moderate signal)
  5. Reactions (baseline engagement unit)

Key insight: One save or substantive comment is worth more than many reactions. Focus on content people want to save and share, and cultivate genuine substantive comments. See references/algorithm-signals-reference.md (cite, don't restate magnitudes).

First Hour Critical

  • Aim for 15+ engagements in first 60 minutes
  • Respond quickly to early comments (30-minute response = 64% more follow-up comments)
  • Seed engagement by notifying key connections

Comment Strategy

  • Reply to every comment in first 2-3 hours
  • Add value in replies, don't just say "thanks"
  • Tag relevant people in your responses
  • Use replies to extend the conversation

Post Timing

  • Optimal window: 8-9 AM Tuesday-Wednesday (peak engagement period)
  • Tuesday-Thursday typically perform best
  • Early morning (6-8 AM) or lunchtime (12-1 PM) in target timezone
  • Consistency matters more than "perfect" timing