On LinkedIn, the difference between a profile that sleeps and one that attracts recruiters comes down to simple optimization. Rarely exploited, it is nevertheless destined to explode the number of views.
LinkedIn is not just an online CV. The platform works with an algorithm that analyzes each element of your profile to decide if it deserves to appear at the top of the results when a recruiter or client types a keyword. This mechanism is based on precise criteria: relevance of content, recent activity, interactions with your network… and a lever that many underestimate.
Professionals who activate it correctly find themselves much more visible. According to the network’s internal data, some see their number of views multiplied by 17. A gain that is not marginal: the more a profile is viewed, the more opportunities for interviews, missions or partnerships increase. And if this difference is possible, it is also because LinkedIn organizes its search results based on trust signals. These signals, visible on the page, allow the person viewing your profile to get a quick idea of your skills. When there are enough of them, they serve as a mental shortcut: whoever reads them tells themselves that you are credible in your field.
This mechanism acts from the first impression and affects both the ranking in the algorithm and the decision of a human to click on your name or not. Indeed, recruitment specialists know that most LinkedIn users are satisfied with the first page of results; appearing on it is therefore decisive. And to achieve this, it is not enough to fill in every box on the profile or to publish regularly. The platform gives a clear advantage to those who fully utilize a functionality that is built-in, but not always understood in its scope.
This functionality is the endorsements — or “validated skills”. These are mentions that your direct contacts can attribute to your know-how in one click. They appear in the “Skills and Validations” section of your profile and their number affects the order in which your skills are displayed. The more a skill is validated by others, the more weight it gains in the eyes of LinkedIn.
The platform limits the number of skills that can be displayed to 50, but emphasizes that at least five are necessary for the effect to be significant: with this threshold reached, profiles record on average 17 times more views than those who have no validated skills.
It is one of the rare levers that combines three effects: improved search ranking, immediate credibility with visitors and rapid evaluation for those who have to sort through dozens of applications. If it has not yet been done, it is time to update your profile, especially with the start of the school year already looming in companies.


