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Home Marketing Automation

Replying to Your Comments on LinkedIn Boosts Engagement by 30%

Josh by Josh
December 4, 2025
in Marketing Automation
0
Replying to Your Comments on LinkedIn Boosts Engagement by 30%

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Ever noticed how, if you’re really on top of replying to your LinkedIn comments, your posts seem to perform better?

I certainly have — and now I have some seriously impressive data to back my anecdotal evidence. Replying to comments on your LinkedIn posts can boost engagement by around 30%, according to a massive analysis by Buffer’s data scientist, Julian Winternheimer.

Julian analyzed 72,000 LinkedIn posts from nearly 25,000 accounts, and the pattern was clear: When creators engage back in their comments, their posts perform significantly better relative to their own baseline.

This is one of my favorite data analyses we’ve done at Buffer, because it’s hard evidence that giving back goes a long way. The simple act of responding to people who took the time to engage with you correlates with better performance.

Kind of lovely, isn’t it?

Let’s dig into how Julian analyzed the data and what it means for your LinkedIn strategy.

🚀

Need help staying on top of all your LinkedIn comments? Buffer’s new Community feature pulls all your comments across platforms into a single dashboard. Get it free →

The analysis

Julian used what’s called a fixed-effects regression model to analyze the data. (Stay with me — I promise this is the most technical this article gets.)

Instead of comparing one account’s engagement to another’s (which would be unfair, since larger accounts naturally get more engagement), he compared each account to itself over time. The model also controlled for factors like account size, location, and niche.

Basically, Julian asked: “When this same account replies to comments, how does its engagement change compared to when it doesn’t?”

He also used Z-score analyses as a second check to measure how each post performed relative to the account’s typical engagement. The consistency across both methods makes the finding pretty hard to ignore.

A few caveats before we get into the numbers:

  • We can’t perfectly measure cause and effect. It’s possible that high-performing posts attract more replies (and therefore more engagement) rather than the other way around.
  • The direction of effect is consistent with what Julian found across other platforms — replying to comments boosts engagement by 5-42% across six major social networks.
  • These results show directional evidence, not definitive truths. But the consistency is striking.

Posts where creators replied to comments saw about 30% higher engagement on average — even after controlling for whether the post had comments at all.

Infographic showing that replying to comments boosts LinkedIn engagement, with a bar chart comparing unanswered comments to replied comments showing a 30% increase.

Julian’s fixed-effects model compared more than 72,000 LinkedIn posts across nearly 25,000 profiles and found this pattern held consistently: When creators reply to comments on their posts, those posts perform better.

The Z-score analysis backed this up. Posts with replied-to comments tended to score above an account’s usual engagement level, while those without replies sat slightly below. Around 83% of profiles showed positive effects when they replied. That’s a pretty significant majority.

Source: LinkedIn: Engagement and Replies — Julian Winternheimer, Buffer Data Blog, October 2025

Why this works on LinkedIn specifically

LinkedIn is a professional network, but it’s still fundamentally about connection. The LinkedIn algorithm prioritizes posts that spark genuine conversation, rather than just passive likes.

When you reply to comments, you’re doing a few things algorithmically:

  1. Extending the conversation: More comments signal to LinkedIn that your post is engaging, which can push it to more feeds. Even your own replies can help here.
  2. Building relationships: People who take the time to comment are often your most engaged audience. Responding builds trust with them.
  3. Encouraging more engagement: A thoughtful reply goes a long way. When you take the time to reply, the original commenter will likely respond again. Plus, when people see you actively responding to others, they’re more likely to join the conversation themselves.

The professional context matters here, too. Unlike more casual platforms, LinkedIn users often comment with thoughtful takes or questions. Responding shows that you value discussion, debate, and learning.

Makes sense, for a platform built around professional networking!

This advice sounds great in practice, I know. Replying to all your comments as you grow can be really time-consuming — particularly if you’re actively creating across multiple platforms (same!).

A few strategies that have helped me:

Set aside dedicated time: Rather than checking LinkedIn sporadically throughout the day, block out 10-15 minutes once or twice daily specifically for responding to comments. I like to add this task to my daily planner when I have a LinkedIn post scheduled.

Prioritize thoughtful replies: A meaningful response goes a long way! You don’t need to write essays in reply to every comment you receive; it’s really worthwhile to connect with what the commenter has taken the time to share. Acknowledge their effort!

Use Buffer’s Community feature: OK, I’m definitely biased here, but genuinely — Community pulls all your comments across platforms into a single dashboard, so you can reply directly from there. It’s free for up to 3 social platforms, and it’s saved me so much tab-switching (and even more getting lost in the scroll).

Interface view of a community dashboard showing message threads under The Dog Guy channel with a highlighted Reply button for improving LinkedIn engagement.

The feature also includes a Comment Score, which tracks your consistency and speed over time. It’s basically a habit-building tool to help you make engagement a ritual rather than an afterthought.

Putting the ‘social’ back in social

Across Julian’s analysis of nearly 2 million posts on six platforms, the signal is pretty darn clear: Replying to your comments is strongly associated with higher engagement.

LinkedIn showed one of the strongest effects at 30%, second only to Threads at 42%.

This isn’t about gaming the algorithm. It’s less about optimization and more about being… social? The simple act of responding to those who took the time to engage with you matters — and the data backs that up.

✨ Get access to Community, along with all of Buffer’s planning and scheduling features, for free for up to 3 social platforms. Get started in under 1 min →

Kirsti Lang

Senior Content Writer @ Buffer

Kirsti is a journalist-turned-marketer and creator who’s built an audience on TikTok, Instagram, and LinkedIn. She writes for Buffer and hosts YouTube videos, sharing what actually works on social — backed by data and real-world experience.

Read more posts by Kirsti Lang



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