Content Strategist & Ghostwriting Partner for Founders/CEOs and Global Brands | 6+ years engineering Desire, Trust, and Revenue for forward-thinking brands | Ex-biomedical engineer
"Personal storytelling on LinkedIn is pretentious."
That's what a founder said to me yesterday.
I asked him one question:
“If you were on a hiring call, what’s the first thing you’d ask a candidate?”
His eyes went wide. Like, cartoonishly wide. In the best way possible.
"I'd ask them to tell me about themselves."
Exactly.
So I said: “If you expect people to share their story, why wouldn’t your ICP want to hear yours?”
Silence.
Here's the thing about personal storytelling:
It humanizes you.
If all you post is tips, frameworks, and tactical breakdowns, two things happen:
One - you're going to burn out.
Because you're always in "thinking mode."
Always trying to sound smart. Always performing.
Two - people respect you, but they don't feel like they know you.
And people work with people they feel like they know.
Personal storytelling does what authoritative content can't:
it makes you relatable.
It shows you're not just a brain on the internet.
You're a person. With experiences. With perspectives. With a personality.
And that matters more than most people think.
Because when someone's choosing between you and three other people who all say smart things, they're not picking the smartest one.
They're picking the one they feel connected to.
Personal storytelling builds that connection.
And guess what? It's easier to create than the "smart" content.
You don't have to be in expert mode.
You don't have to have all the answers.
You just have to share what you're seeing, thinking, or experiencing.
The pressure comes off. The content flows.
And ironically, it's often the posts people remember most.
Now, I'm not saying every post should be personal.
Balance matters.
But if you never sprinkle in bits of who you are, you'll never create those memorable moments.
Another thing... this also applies to how you show up in comments too.
I see so many AI-generated comments that are polite, agreeable, and mostly forgettable.
They don't make me curious enough to check your profile.
But when I see a comment that's funny, sharp, or interesting...
I'm clicking through.
I'm curious who wrote it.
That's because personality is magnetic.
Even in a comment.
So yeah. Personal storytelling isn't pretentious.
It's the thing that makes people remember you're not just a content machine.
You're a person. And people do business with people.
I’d love your take. Is storytelling on LinkedIn pretentious… or exactly why someone decided to work with you?
This is me trying to be funny without cracking a joke, so that you can check my profile. 🤧
But truth be told, before you can trust anyone with anything, your time, your money , your resources, your business, or even your life, you really need to know them, their backgrounds and see if they align with your goals and values before entrusting them with any of those. So No, It is not pretentious to share your story on LinkedIn, that way your audience, prospective clients and every other person can know that you're also human like them.
Emmanuella Ugochukwu Thanks for sharing this!
Content Strategist & Ghostwriting Partner for Founders/CEOs and Global Brands | 6+ years engineering Desire, Trust, and Revenue for forward-thinking brands | Ex-biomedical engineer