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Lots of executives agree that personal brand matters on LinkedIn.…

LinkedIn post

Lots of executives agree that personal brand matters on LinkedIn. Most of them aren't posting. The usual reason given is time. But I've watched a COO at a $100M company produce ready-to-post LinkedIn content between conference sessions using a 30-second voice note. The barrier isn't time. It never really was. So here's the actual debate I keep coming back to: should executives be producing their own thought leadership content, or should that sit with the comms team? The conventional answer is that content is a communications function. Executives set strategy. That split made sense when creating content took real effort. It doesn't hold up the same way now. The counter-argument is that nobody in your comms team has your credibility, your stories, or your hard-won perspective. They can polish. They can schedule. But the real stuff where you add value — the insight that only comes from being in the room — that's yours. And if it doesn't come from you, it doesn't exist. I've seen what happens when the exec voice goes missing. Every post starts to look like an advert. Follower counts sit in the tens. Engagement is zero. The manufacturing company we worked with had handed everything to an agency and had basically nothing to show for it. The tools have changed the equation. Recording a thought takes less than a minute. The friction is gone. So the question is a real one: is executive content creation now part of the job description, or is it still optional for people who happen to enjoy it? Where do you come down on that?

Mark HadfieldJun 2, 2026Published to Linkedin - Mark HadfieldView original ↗

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