Why Your LinkedIn Posts Are Dying After 60 Seconds (and the Fix)
The one read
LinkedIn ranks posts by how long people read them. Posts read 60+ seconds average 15.6% engagement. Posts skimmed in 3 seconds average 1.2%. That gap is 13x.
The one read
LinkedIn ranks posts by how long people read them. Posts read 60+ seconds average 15.6% engagement. Posts skimmed in 3 seconds average 1.2%. That gap is 13x.
LinkedIn now ranks posts primarily by how long people actually read them. Posts held for 60 seconds or more average 15.6% engagement. Posts scrolled past in under three seconds average 1.2%. The gap is 13x. Fix the opening, structure for reading, and pick formats that slow the scroll.
Dwell time is the number of seconds a post occupies a user's screen while they scroll. LinkedIn's engineering team published details on using dwell time as a feed quality signal, tracking from the moment at least half of a post is visible on screen. What shifted in 2026 is the weight it carries: dwell time now outranks explicit reactions in the ranking model.
The mechanism is straightforward. A short scroll tells the algorithm the content was not worth reading. A 90-second read tells it the content was worth staying for. The algorithm rewards the latter with distribution beyond your immediate network.
LinkedIn evaluates early post performance in a short window after publish. Dwell time accumulates in that window, and posts that clear a quality threshold earn expanded reach to second- and third-degree connections.
Based on Socialinsider's Q1 2026 LinkedIn benchmark report, analyzing 5 million-plus business pages and 1.3 million posts, the engagement picture by dwell time looks like this:
| Dwell time | Typical engagement rate | Distribution outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 0-3 seconds | ~1.2% | Limited to immediate network |
| 4-30 seconds | ~2-4% | Moderate expansion |
| 31-60 seconds | ~4-8% | Above-average reach |
| 61+ seconds | ~15.6% | Maximum distribution |
Every post gets scored. The score is set early, based on the first few hundred impressions. If those readers bounce in two seconds, you are locked into the lowest distribution tier for that post.
If your opening sentence does not earn the second sentence, the post is already failing.
Format is one of the fastest levers you can pull. Socialinsider's Q1 2026 benchmarks rank format performance by median engagement rate across 5 million-plus LinkedIn pages:
Document carousels accumulate dwell time naturally: each swipe adds 2-5 seconds. A 10-slide carousel where each slide takes 3 seconds to read gives the algorithm 30+ seconds of dwell before the reader has finished the content. A single text post forces the reader to do all the work on one screen, with no built-in reason to stay.
Link posts deserve a specific note. LinkedIn's algorithm reduces reach on posts that include external URLs in the body. If your strategy is a blog link with a caption, you are choosing the lowest-reach format available. Put the link in the first comment instead.
The opening line is where almost all reach is won or lost. LinkedIn truncates posts with a "see more" break. If the first 1-2 lines do not create a reason to keep reading, the reader scrolls. Your actual point never gets seen.
Common patterns that produce near-zero dwell time:
Posts that hold attention open with the conclusion, then prove it. They treat the reader as someone already skeptical and already busy.
The feed is a filter, not a megaphone. Every post competes for the same three-second window.
A practical six-step framework for structuring LinkedIn posts for dwell time:
Each step earns the next. A 600-word post structured this way will regularly outperform a 100-word post making the same point, because it gives readers more reason to stay and accumulates more dwell time with each step completed.
Building a LinkedIn presence is a distribution problem. The algorithm decides how far your content travels. A single founder posting well can reach tens of thousands of the right buyers with no paid spend. That reach compounds, but only if you understand how the algorithm scores posts.
Dwell time is the algorithm doing exactly what it should: rewarding content people actually want to read. Building a product has never been easier. The durable advantage belongs to whoever can reliably reach the people who need it. LinkedIn is one of the few remaining channels where an individual with genuine expertise can out-distribute a company with a full marketing budget, one post at a time.
Ignore the hook, and you are trading your distribution advantage for a like from a colleague.
Questions, answered straight
Hashtags have a minor effect at most. LinkedIn's algorithm focuses on semantic relevance and dwell time, not hashtag matching. Including 3-5 relevant hashtags is fine practice, but it will not meaningfully move distribution. Time spent improving your opening line will have a larger impact than any hashtag selection.
There is no universal target, but posts in the 600-1,500 character range tend to perform well because they require 30-90 seconds to read, which pushes into the high-dwell tier. Very short posts rarely accumulate enough reading time to trigger wider distribution. Very long posts lose readers before the end. The right length is whatever earns the full read.
Posting every day does not increase reach per individual post. Posting too frequently can reduce it, as your audience starts filtering you as noise. Most practitioners find 3-5 posts per week to be a practical ceiling. Consistency matters more than volume: a reliable cadence builds audience expectation, which improves early engagement and, by extension, dwell scores.
Post from your personal profile. Company pages receive a fraction of the feed allocation that personal profiles do. If you are a founder, your personal account is your primary distribution asset on LinkedIn. Reserve the company page for paid campaigns and hiring content.
Keep external links out of the post body. LinkedIn's algorithm reduces distribution on posts with URLs in the main content. Add the link as a reply to your own post immediately after publishing, or reference it without a hyperlink in the body (for example: "I linked the full breakdown in the first comment").
Video accumulates dwell time passively: viewers log seconds simply by watching. But native document posts match or exceed video in the benchmark data and cost less to produce. Pick the format you can execute consistently at high quality, then optimize the structure for dwell time within that format. Format selection matters less than execution quality.