Nika

Who are the LinkedIn top voices worth of following regarding LinkedIn topics? (tool oriented)

Hey guys, as I am building the tool dedicated to LinkedIn (that prevents getting banned and losing your audience), I would also like to enrich the list of people who are worth following on this platform.


They could be a good addition, for example, for:

– content inspiration

– interviews
– case studies
– also possible users of my prepared tool/influencers

Right now, I am looking for 2 categories:

  1. Marketers and LinkedIn experts who talk about LinkedIn (can also be employees at LI company)

  2. People who experienced the ban before or some kind of restrictions

On my list are e.g. Laura Lorenzetti, Jasmin Alić, Xavier degrauX... or something like Lara Acosta.

Can you refer to any profiles I should watch?

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Aleksandar Blazhev
I would recommend Nika Kotlarikova and Justin Welsh. Especially for memes Nika Kotlarikova.
Nika

@byalexai hahaha, thank you! :D but this time I would like to build some serious credibility over LinkedIn topics :D

Olivier Jury
Pour la catégorie 1, check Richard van der Blom - il sort le rapport annuel "LinkedIn Algorithm Insights" basé sur 10k+ posts. C’est la référence si tu veux comprendre ce qui déclenche les flags. Pour la catégorie 2, Justin Welsh a documenté publiquement sa restriction de 30j en 2023 et explique exactement quel post l’a déclenchée. Parfait pour tester ton outil.
Nika

@olivier_jury Thank you! :)

Lisa Steingold

Definitely Lara Acosta co-founder of Kleo

Nika

@lisa_steingold2 Thank you! I bookmarked this discussion, so will revise all of them later :)

Shir Ibgui

Molly Godfrey is a great follow!

Nika

@shirr I am gonna watch the profile! appreciate that!

Jim Jeffers

For the tool-oriented side, I would split the list by signal, not just follower count.

Richard van der Blom is worth watching for LinkedIn algorithm/reporting changes. For creator operators, Justin Welsh and Lara Acosta are useful because you can see repeatable content systems in the wild. For ban/restriction research, I would also track people who post about appeals, account warm-up, automation limits, and “what triggered this?” cases—even if they are smaller accounts.

Those smaller case-study accounts may be more useful for your product than top voices, because they give you the exact failure modes and language users have when LinkedIn blocks or throttles them.

Nika

@jim_jeffers That's an interesting view, I should change my strategy here. Thank you for the valuable tips! :)

Tina Chhabra

for the ban/restriction research I'd look beyond top voices and find smaller accounts who actually documented their restriction experiences in real time. those posts usually have the most useful detail about what triggered it. the big creators rarely get restricted so their advice is theoretical

Nika

@tina_chhabra But how can I find them? I think that ChatGPT or so cannot help me with this, because they do nothave any access to LinkedIn data within the platform.