Office managers and founders post about IT headaches, security scares, and hybrid chaos every week. Linqin comments there in your voice, so your MSP is the one they remember when something breaks.
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Companies shop for IT the week something breaks, and they call whoever they can name. If they cannot name you, the incumbent keeps the contract.
Businesses tolerate mediocre IT for years because switching feels risky. Familiarity is what lowers that perceived risk, and comments build familiarity.
Your team can rebuild a network overnight and cannot write a LinkedIn post. Fair enough. Now the writing part is handled.
Tell the agent the topics your buyers post about and connect LinkedIn. Three minutes, once.
Real comments in your voice on the posts your buyers are already reading, on a safe schedule. Review each one first, or let it run.
Everyone who replies, likes, or visits your profile lands in your warm leads list, scored by heat and ready for a DM.
Phishing email got one of our team today. Nothing lost, but it was way too close. What are small companies actually doing about this?
IT pain gets posted by the people who feel it, weeks before procurement hears about it.
Comments start the conversations. Posts like these turn profile visitors into believers. The Posts agent drafts them in your voice.
The five-minute security checklist for companies under 50 people.
What an IT outage really costs, hour by hour, for a 30-person company.
The signs a business has outgrown its current IT setup.
Three minutes to set up. Linqin comments in your voice every day and hands you the warm leads.
Glad it was a near miss. The three that stop most of it: enforced MFA everywhere, a report-phish button in the mail client, and a five-minute training loop whenever someone clicks. None of them need enterprise budget. The report button matters most, it turns your whole team into the alarm system.