Subscribe to our newsletter

Updates tailored to you.

...
Back to all
05 Feb 2026
How marine founders actually build traction on LinkedIn

LinkedIn remains one of the most powerful – and misunderstood – growth channels available.

 

It’s often treated as either a vanity platform or a blunt distribution tool, when in reality it sits somewhere far more strategic: at the intersection of trust, visibility, and relationship-building.

 

In a recent Yachting Ventures masterclass, we unpacked how founders can use LinkedIn to build real traction — from early awareness to leads, partnerships, hiring, and investor relationships.

 

Why LinkedIn Still Matters for Startups

 

LinkedIn remains the most effective platform for founders. For many startups inside the Yachting Ventures ecosystem, LinkedIn continues to be the primary source of:

 

  • Decision-maker visibility
  • Warm inbound leads
  • Partner conversations
  • Talent discovery
  • Early investor awareness

 

The reason is simple: LinkedIn collapses distance. Founders can speak directly — and repeatedly — to customers, partners, and investors without intermediaries.

 

What has changed is how trust is built. Polished corporate messaging alone no longer converts. People follow people, not companies — especially at early stages.

 

Your Profile Is Your Landing Page

 

Founder profiles now function as de facto landing pages — and many still underperform.

 

Current best practice includes:

 

  • A clear, human headline (not just “Founder at X”) that explains who you help and why it matters
  • A professional but approachable profile photo (overly corporate imagery tends to underperform)
  • A banner image that reinforces your sector, mission, or product — not generic stock visuals
  • An “About” section written in plain language, clearly explaining what you’re building, who it’s for, and why

 

The Featured section remains underused but powerful. Highlight:

 

  • A strong post
  • A press mention
  • A product demo
  • A lead magnet or newsletter

 

Profiles that feel current and active convert far better than perfectly written but static ones.

 

Content: Consistency Beats Virality (Every Time)

 

The advice to post 3+ times per week is still valid — but the type of content that performs best has evolved.

 

What consistently works now:

 

  • First-person posts written in a natural, conversational voice
  • Short paragraphs with whitespace (readability still matters)
  • Clear hooks in the first 1–2 lines — not clickbait, but relevance
  • Content that documents thinking, learning, or decisions in real time

 

Founders who openly share more vulnerable content build trust faster than those who only share wins:

 

  • Trade-offs
  • Reality of the entrepreneurial journey
  • Lessons from failed experiments
  • Behind-the-scenes decisions
  • Customer conversations

 

Format-wise, text-first posts still perform strongly, especially when paired with thoughtful comments. Native video and simple carousels can work — but production value matters less than clarity.

 

AI-assisted writing is now widespread, but the algorithm increasingly favours posts that feel human. Over-polished, generic language is often deprioritised — even if it’s technically “well written.”

 

Engagement Should be Part of the Strategy

 

Posting without engaging is one of the biggest growth limiters on LinkedIn.

 

Current best practice:

 

  • Reply to comments quickly and thoughtfully (this still boosts reach)
  • Comment meaningfully on posts from people you want in your network
  • Treat comments as mini-posts — they’re increasingly visible in feeds

 

Founders who show up consistently in conversations, not just on their own posts, grow faster and attract higher-quality inbound.

 

LinkedIn as a Biz Dev Tool

 

LinkedIn remains one of the most effective tools for founder-led BD — when used intentionally.

 

Best practices today:

 

  • Personalised connection requests that reference context
  • Moving conversations off-platform quickly (email, calls)
  • Using LinkedIn as a warm-up layer, not the full sales cycle
  • Asking for introductions only after some relationship context exists

 

Premium features (like profile view insights) can help — but they don’t replace good judgement or follow-through.

 

Practical Next Steps for Founders

 

For founders looking to use LinkedIn more effectively:

 

  • Treat your profile as a live asset, not a CV
  • Commit to a realistic posting rhythm you can sustain
  • Share thinking, not just announcements
  • Engage deliberately with the ecosystem you want to be part of
  • Use tools and AI to support consistency — not replace your voice

LinkedIn isn’t about hype. It’s about credibility built in public, over time.

 

And for founders willing to show up consistently, with clarity and intent, it remains one of the most powerful unfair advantages available.

 

Want access to conversations like this?


These sessions come from inside the Yachting Ventures community — where founders get direct access to operator-led masterclasses, fireside chats with industry insiders, and practical education you won’t find in public webinars.

 

👉 Apply to join the community here to access our full programme of educational events, recordings, and founder-only discussions.

Related articles