How to train LinkedIn’s algorithm to work for you (instead of against you)

5 min read

On this page

Introduction

LinkedIn’s algorithm decides what appears in your feed based on your past interactions. If your feed feels cluttered with irrelevant posts, viral content, or low-value updates, it’s because LinkedIn thinks that’s what you want.

The good news? You can train LinkedIn’s algorithm to show you only the content that matters to you. Just like teaching a recommendation system what you enjoy, you can reshape your LinkedIn experience to be more valuable and less distracting.

Here’s how to take control and make LinkedIn’s algorithm work in your favor.

How LinkedIn’s algorithm works

Before training the algorithm, understand what influences it:

  • Engagement signals – LinkedIn prioritizes posts you like, comment on, and share.
  • Time spent on content – Posts you linger on get ranked higher.
  • Connections & follows – Your interactions with specific people shape your feed.
  • Groups & hashtags – Engaging in certain communities signals LinkedIn to show similar content.

With this in mind, let’s train the algorithm to prioritize what you actually want to see.

Step 1: Audit your current LinkedIn feed

Before making changes, analyze what’s currently dominating your feed:

  • Are you seeing too many irrelevant posts?
  • Is your feed filled with viral, low-value content?
  • Do you rarely see updates from key connections or industry leaders?

Identifying these patterns will help you take targeted actions to fix your feed.

Step 2: Engage intentionally with the right content

LinkedIn learns from your engagement. If you interact with random posts, you’ll keep seeing them. Instead:

  • Like and comment on valuable posts – Engage only with high-quality content.
  • Follow industry experts – Prioritize people whose content aligns with your goals.
  • Save posts that matter – LinkedIn recognizes saved posts as high-priority content.

🔹 Tip: The more you interact with relevant content, the more LinkedIn will surface similar posts.

Step 3: Remove distractions from your feed

If LinkedIn keeps showing irrelevant content, signal the algorithm to stop:

  • Unfollow connections whose posts don’t provide value.
  • Hide posts you don’t want to see (Click the three dots → “I don’t want to see this”).
  • Report spammy or engagement-bait posts to improve your feed quality.

By actively removing unwanted content, you force LinkedIn to refine what it shows you.

Step 4: Optimize your LinkedIn network

Your network influences what appears in your feed. Clean it up by:

  • Following thought leaders – Identify and follow people sharing high-quality insights.
  • Engaging with niche hashtags – Use LinkedIn search to find and follow relevant topics.
  • Leaving groups with poor content – If a group isn’t adding value, it’s time to go.

🔹 Tip: The stronger your network, the better your LinkedIn experience.

Step 5: Use LinkedIn’s tools to refine your experience

Take advantage of LinkedIn’s built-in features to fine-tune your feed:

  • Use the “See fewer posts like this” option to filter out irrelevant content.
  • Set notifications for key connections to ensure you never miss important updates.
  • Join and participate in industry-specific groups to shape your content exposure.

Step 6: Supercharge your LinkedIn experience with MyFeedIn

For even more control, use MyFeedIn, a tool designed to block distractions and personalize your LinkedIn feed:

  • Filter out viral, low-value content
  • Create custom engagement lists to prioritize key people

With MyFeedIn, you can actively shape your LinkedIn feed, ensuring every minute spent on the platform is productive.

Conclusion

LinkedIn’s algorithm works for or against you, depending on how you engage with it. By interacting strategically, removing distractions, optimizing your network, and using tools like MyFeedIn, you can transform your LinkedIn experience into a focused, high-value resource.

Take control today—train LinkedIn’s algorithm to serve you, not distract you.

Ready to improve your LinkedIn experience?

Get MyFeedIn and start seeing content that actually matters to you.

Try MyFeedIn Now →