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The best LinkedIn Posts

Explore the top viral LinkedIn post examples, trends and ideas from the best LinkedIn influencers.

LinkedIn Posts that went viral yesterday

I gave a company 8 years of my life.

They gave me a 30-minute exit interview.

I'd spent my entire 20s climbing that ladder. Staying late. Working weekends. Answering emails at 11pm like it made me a hero.

I thought loyalty meant something. I thought if I gave them everything, they'd protect me.

They didn't.

When the restructure came, I was just a line item on a spreadsheet. A cost to be cut. A decade of dedication reduced to a number some executive needed to hit for their quarterly report.

I remember sitting in my car after that final meeting. Looking at the building I'd walked into thousands of times. Realizing I'd traded the best years of my life for something that could disappear in an afternoon.

The company moved on immediately. They had my replacement lined up before I'd even cleaned out my desk.

Meanwhile my wife was at home. My family was waiting. The people who actually needed me had been getting my leftovers for years. The tired version. The stressed version. The version that was always thinking about work even when I wasn't there.

I had it completely backwards.

I was giving my best energy to people who saw me as replaceable. And giving my scraps to the people who saw me as irreplaceable.

Most people learn this lesson too late. They sacrifice their health, their relationships, their presence with their kids. All for a company that will post their job listing before the funeral flowers wilt.

I'm not saying don't work hard. Work hard. Do excellent work. Take pride in what you do.

But when the clock hits your finish time, leave. Go home. Be present with the people who will actually remember your name in 50 years.

Your company will survive without you answering that email tonight. Your kids won't get that evening back.

I work with people now who are still mentally chained to their corporate jobs even after they've left. The conditioning runs deep. They feel guilty taking breaks. They feel lazy if they're not constantly producing.

It took me years to deprogram that mindset.

Your employer is not your family. Your colleagues are not your friends. The mission statement on the wall is not your purpose.

Do your job. Do it well. Then go live the life that actually matters.

Who taught you that overworking was something to be proud of?
Post image by Tim Denning
A little morning wisdom to the youth … I realllllly hope this helps someone this morning ☀️

Parents send this to your kids - especially the ones graduating or under 25
Google has been telling SEOs 𝘄𝗵𝗮𝘁 𝗻𝗼𝘁 𝘁𝗼 𝗱𝗼 since 1997.

Some notable "don'ts":

- Don't build links
- Don't create pages for SEO
- Don't guest post
- Don't use exact-match anchor text
- Don't optimize for featured snippets
- "Just write good content"
- And now: don't actively seed mentions
- Don't optimize for LLMs differently

Here's the reality:

- Every time Google said "don't," the cutting-edge SEOs tested it and won the channel
- Brand mentions correlate with AI Overview visibility at 0.664, over 3x stronger than backlinks (per Ahrefs' 75K brand study)
- Clients are looking at LLMs as a distinct channel, with different priorities. They're saying things like, "I don't like how ChatGPT describes our product, help us change that"
- "Optimizing" for LLMs goes way beyond visibility for non-branded keywords. It's about perception, narrative, and how your company is recommended
- And Google shouldn't speak for ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity, though this guidance reads like it does

Sure, the "it's just SEO" camp will show prospects their LLM citations and call it a win. Fair, you can get 100% cited by doing solid SEO.

But you'll get dramatically better results by prioritizing generative AI in the work you do... without sacrificing SEO (which is another de-posititioning tactic from the "it's just SEO" camp.

Remember: Google's job is to protect Google.

Your job is to test.

#seonotebook #ainotebook
Post image by Steve Toth
Insane: OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger spent $1.3 million in tokens in just 30 days 😳
$1,3,00,000 in tokens from just ONE person coding & shipping with AI…

To put that into perspective, for $1.3 million, you could:

→ Hire 6-7 senior software engineers in the US. For a full year.
→ 14-16 Sr. SWEs in Lithuania. For a full year.
→ 24-26 Sr. SWEs in India. For a full year 🤯

Now we know why he really joined OpenAI…

Tokenmaxing is getting out of hand.

P.S. check out The System for Never Hitting Claude's Limits 🤖: https://lnkd.in/gNbWTuyN
Post image by Linas Beliūnas
The job will take everything you give it.
It will never tell you when to stop.

You'll stay late and no one will say "that's enough."
You'll skip lunch and no one will stop you.
You'll cancel the workout, answer emails at 10pm, push through the headache, reschedule the doctor's appointment.

And the job will let you. Every single time.

Because the job doesn't care about your health.
It cares about output.

The moment you stop producing, you're replaceable. Doesn't matter how many nights you stayed late. Doesn't matter how many vacations you skipped.

Two weeks after you're gone, someone else is sitting in your chair.

This isn't cynical. It's just true. And once you accept it, you can finally set boundaries without guilt.

The job won't set limits. So you have to:
↳ Leave on time even when there's more to do
↳ Take the lunch break away from your desk
↳ Stop checking email after a certain hour
↳ Keep the doctor's appointment
↳ Protect the workout like it's a meeting with your CEO

Give your best work during work hours.
Then protect everything else like your life depends on it.

Because it does.

📌 Save this as a reminder
♻️ Repost if you found this insightful
Post image by Ford Coleman
Saturday thought:

We all have that voice in our head.
The one who always tells us to work harder.

No matter how many late nights we put in,
there is always more work we should be doing.

But here's the thing.

Rest is not something to be "earned."

Instead of wondering if you've worked hard enough
to deserve rest today, try asking a different question:

Have you rested enough this weekend
to do your most meaningful work next week?

Rest isn't a reward for productivity.
It's the foundation that makes it possible.

When we prioritize recovery,
we show up with more creativity and focus.

"The best work ethic requires a good rest ethic." — Kevin Kelly

☕ Share this to help someone truly enjoy their Saturday.
➕ Follow me (Jade Bonacolta) for daily posts for a quietly rich life.
Post image by Jade Bonacolta
My mum gave up everything for me.

As a single mum, she:

• Worked full-time
• Studied in the evenings
• Never missed my sports games
• Protected my relationship with my dad

She gave up everything so I could have everything.

Today, we live 5,000 miles apart.

Me in San Francisco. Her in the UK.
That distance is painful.

But if I still worked in corporate this would just be so much harder.

• Treading on egg shells asking for days off
• "Sorry, year-end is coming up"
• "The team needs you here"
• 2 weeks annual leave max

I used to constantly worry about this… Juggling family and work. Caring about both.

I know I'm not alone in this struggle -

So many of us live far from family, missing important moments because of work.

But building my own business completely changed this.

Yes, I work more hours.
Yes, some days are chaos.
Yes, it's a lot more responsibility.

But I choose when and where I work:

• 2 weeks with mum? Done.
• Friends wedding? I can always show up.
• Emergency at home? I can get on the next flight.

That's the real wealth of doing your own thing.

The freedom to create a life on your terms.

Want to break free from the corporate calendar?

Start here: https://saywhat.ai/course/

♻️ Repost to help others break free
Post image by Will McTighe
We just helped our client Jeremy drop 60% of his visceral fat in 80 days. Here is the protocol that we used:

Here's the caption:

We just helped our client Jeremy drop 60% of his visceral fat in 80 days.
Here is the protocol we used:

Step 1: Eliminated alcohol completely.

Alcohol is inflammatory, increases appetite, and your body prioritizes burning it off before touching stored fat. We call these "negative calories." Every drink was pushing Jeremy's visceral fat loss backwards. Removing it was the single fastest lever we pulled.

Step 2: Optimized Mediterranean diet with high polyphenol intake.

Polyphenols reduce the inflammation that visceral fat feeds on. They improve gut health, lower oxidative stress, and help regulate the hormones that tell your body where to store fat. We loaded Jeremy's meals with olive oil, berries, leafy greens, and green tea. Real food, not supplements.

Step 3: Lifted 3x per week, hitting each muscle group twice.

Muscle is your best defense against visceral fat. The more you carry, the more metabolically active your body becomes at rest. We kept the sessions short and focused on compound lifts.

Step 4: Walked at least 7,500 steps per day.

Walking keeps cortisol low and burns fat without spiking the stress hormones that tell your body to hold onto visceral fat. Jeremy did most of his steps on calls and after meals.

Step 5: Fixed his sleep using the ERT protocol. ERT stands for Environment, Routine, and Timing.

Day 80 results: visceral fat down 60%. Blood markers normalized. Energy stable from morning to night.

No hours of cardio. Just five basics done consistently for 80 days.

The fat you can't see is the fat that will kill you and the great thing is you can drop it fast when you follow the right protocol.

♻️ Share this with someone carrying weight around their midsection.

- Dan

PS. I put together a free visceral fat protocol that breaks down exactly how to target it. Grab it here: https://lnkd.in/gsBKHiBS
Post image by Dan Go