Why Your LinkedIn Profile Matters More Than Your Resume
For most job seekers, a LinkedIn profile reaches more recruiters than a CV. Recruiters and headhunters use LinkedIn search every day to find candidates for live roles — searching by job title, skills, location, seniority, and company. If your profile isn't optimised, you're invisible to a significant portion of the candidate-finding activity that could bring roles directly to you.
A LinkedIn profile also functions as a public reference: after a recruiter or hiring manager sees your application (however submitted), they almost always look you up on LinkedIn. A strong, consistent profile reinforces your candidacy; an incomplete or inconsistent one creates doubt.
Optimising your LinkedIn profile is one of the highest-return activities in a job search — it works for you passively, without additional effort, for the entire duration of your search.
The Headline: Your Most Valuable Real Estate
Your LinkedIn headline appears in every search result, in every connection notification, in every comment you leave. It's the first thing recruiter eyes land on.
What not to do: "Looking for new opportunities" or "Open to work" as your headline. This signals availability but tells the recruiter nothing about what you do or whether you're relevant to their search.
What to do: use your headline to describe what you do and who you serve, with keywords a recruiter would search for.
Formula: [Role / Expertise] | [Industry or function] | [Optional: What you're great at]
Examples:
*"Senior Product Manager | B2B SaaS | Driving growth through data-led product decisions"*
*"Marketing Director | E-commerce & D2C | Scaling customer acquisition from 6- to 8-figure revenue"*
*"Data Engineer | AWS & Snowflake | Building scalable analytics infrastructure for Series B+ companies"*
Keyword rule: if a recruiter would search for "data engineer" to find you, that exact term should be in your headline. LinkedIn search is a keyword search.
While you're here
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Generate my LinkedIn summary — freeThe About Section: Your Professional Narrative
The About section is a 2,600-character opportunity to tell your professional story in your own voice. Most people leave it blank or write 2–3 generic sentences. A strong About section distinguishes you from every candidate with similar experience.
What a strong About section includes:
1. An opening hook — what you do and what makes you distinctive (2–3 sentences)
2. Your core expertise and the types of problems you solve (2–3 sentences)
3. Key achievements — 2–3 quantified accomplishments
4. What you're looking for or what you're open to (if job searching)
5. A call to action ("feel free to reach out" or "connect with me if...")
Tone: professional but personal. LinkedIn allows more voice than a CV. The About section should sound like you — not like a corporate bio.
The LoopCV LinkedIn Summary Generator produces three versions of your About section (narrative, achievement-led, and short & punchy) from your details. Free, no sign-up.
Experience, Skills, and Open to Work Settings
Experience section: mirror your resume in substance but LinkedIn allows for more narrative. Include bullet points with achievements (not just responsibilities), and use the role description to include keywords relevant to your expertise. Make sure your most recent role is complete and current.
Skills section: add up to 50 skills — prioritise the 15–20 most relevant and searchable. Get endorsements from colleagues for your most important skills — these add credibility and support LinkedIn's search algorithm.
Open to Work settings:
- "Open to Work" visible only to recruiters: applies a badge invisible to your current employer's recruiters (LinkedIn attempts to screen them). Safe for confidential searches.
- "Open to Work" visible to your full network: the green frame on your profile photo signals availability to everyone. Higher reach but also visible to your current employer if they're active on LinkedIn.
For active job seekers who are not employed: turn on Open to Work publicly. For confidential searches: use the recruiter-only setting.
Recommendations: two or three recent, substantive recommendations significantly strengthen your profile. Ask former managers or senior colleagues who can speak to specific achievements.
LinkedIn Profile Settings That Affect Recruiter Visibility
Profile completeness: LinkedIn ranks profiles in search results partly based on completeness. An "All-Star" profile (LinkedIn's highest completeness rating — achieved by completing all major sections) appears higher in recruiter searches.
Profile photo: profiles with professional photos receive significantly more recruiter engagement. A clear, professional headshot — the same standard as a resume photo in photo-expected markets — is important.
Location: set your location to where you want to work, not necessarily where you currently live. If you're willing to relocate, consider temporarily setting your location to the target market during your search.
Connections: your connection count affects how you appear in searches — LinkedIn prioritises 1st and 2nd connections in results. Building your connection count to 500+ (and connecting actively in your industry) improves your visibility.
Activity: profiles that are active (posting, commenting, engaging) have higher visibility in LinkedIn's algorithm. Even one post or comment per week maintains algorithmic engagement.