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LinkedIn Content

How Would You Get 10,000 LinkedIn Followers in 60 Days in the AI and Business Niche?

EXEED Team-Content Team-
How Would You Get 10,000 LinkedIn Followers in 60 Days in the AI and Business Niche?

If you’re starting from scratch on LinkedIn and your goal is to reach 10,000 followers in 60 days, the honest answer is this: it’s possible, but it usually doesn’t happen by accident.

Especially in a space like AI and business, there is real opportunity because people are actively looking for insights, tools, case studies, and practical advice. But there is also a lot of noise. So the question is not just how often should you post? It’s also: what makes people stop, read, follow, and come back?

If I were in your position, I would not chase followers directly. I would build a system that makes following feel like the natural next step.

First, is 10,000 followers in 60 days realistic?

Yes, but it depends on a few things:

  • How strong your positioning is
  • How consistently you post
  • Whether your content is actually useful
  • How well you engage with other people in your niche
  • Whether one or two posts take off and bring compounding visibility

For some people, 10,000 in 60 days is aggressive. For others, one strong content engine plus smart networking can get them there. So I’d treat 10,000 as a stretch goal, but a very useful one, because it forces clarity and consistency.

Step 1: Pick a very clear angle inside AI and business

“AI and business” is broad. Too broad, honestly. If you want fast growth, you need a sharper angle so people understand your value immediately.

Ask yourself:

  • Are you helping founders use AI to save time?
  • Are you breaking down AI news for business leaders?
  • Are you teaching marketers how to use AI tools?
  • Are you showing real workflows, prompts, and results?
  • Are you focused on AI strategy, adoption, productivity, or revenue?

A good LinkedIn profile makes people think, “I know exactly why I should follow this person.”

So your headline, banner, featured section, and about section should all reinforce one simple promise.

Step 2: Optimize your profile before posting heavily

If a post gets attention and people click your profile, your profile needs to convert that attention into follows.

Make sure you have:

  • A professional, approachable profile photo
  • A headline that speaks to outcomes, not just job titles
  • A banner that clearly states your niche
  • A featured section with your best post, lead magnet, or resource
  • An “About” section that is readable and human

LinkedIn has its own best practices for profile strength, and their official guidance is worth reviewing here: LinkedIn profile help center.

Step 3: Post every day, but don’t post randomly

If I had 60 days, I would probably post 1 to 2 times per day. Not because volume alone wins, but because you need enough data to learn what your audience responds to.

Your content mix could look like this:

  • 40% practical how-to posts
  • 20% opinion posts on AI trends and business implications
  • 20% personal lessons and real stories
  • 10% document or carousel-style breakdowns
  • 10% curated reactions to news, reports, or tool updates

Good topics might include:

  • “3 AI workflows every small business should test this week”
  • “What most companies get wrong about AI adoption”
  • “I used 5 AI tools for business research. Here’s what actually helped”
  • “If I were a founder using AI with no team, this is where I’d start”
  • “A simple prompt framework for busy executives”

The key is simple: teach, simplify, and stay relevant.

Step 4: Write for saves and shares, not just likes

A lot of new creators make the mistake of writing posts that sound smart but are not actually useful. On LinkedIn, useful usually wins.

Before publishing, ask:

  • Would someone save this for later?
  • Would a manager or founder share this with their team?
  • Did I give a clear takeaway?
  • Did I make this easy to skim?

Use short paragraphs. Use a strong opening line. Give breakdown points. End with a question that invites thoughtful comments.

If you want help understanding what kinds of content perform well in B2B social environments, HubSpot has useful content strategy resources here: HubSpot’s LinkedIn marketing guide.

Step 5: Comment like it’s part of your content strategy

This matters more than most people think.

If I wanted to grow fast in the AI and business niche, I would identify 20 to 30 creators whose audiences overlap with mine. Then I’d leave thoughtful comments on their posts every single day.

Not generic stuff like “great post.” I mean real comments that:

  • Add a perspective
  • Share an example
  • Respectfully disagree when relevant
  • Expand on the topic in a useful way

Comments are discovery channels. People read sharp comments and click profiles. That’s one of the fastest ways to get early visibility when your own account is still growing.

Step 6: Build recurring content themes

People are more likely to follow when they know what they’ll keep getting from you.

So instead of posting completely different things every day, create recurring themes like:

  • Monday: AI tool of the week
  • Tuesday: business use case breakdown
  • Wednesday: myth vs reality in AI
  • Thursday: workflow or prompt tutorial
  • Friday: founder lesson or personal reflection

This makes your content easier to produce and easier to remember.

Step 7: Use formats LinkedIn already rewards

Different formats work for different goals. In a 60-day sprint, I’d test:

  • Text posts for reach and speed
  • Carousels/documents for saves and shares
  • Short videos for trust and personality
  • Polls occasionally, if they lead to real insight

If you want to improve your video presence too, LinkedIn has published tips on native video and platform engagement, and you can also study creator breakdowns on YouTube such as: LinkedIn content strategy videos on YouTube.

Step 8: Talk to a real person, not an algorithm

This is probably the biggest thing. A lot of AI niche content ends up sounding cold, robotic, or over-produced. People can feel that.

Write like you’re texting a smart colleague:

  • Keep your ideas clear
  • Use examples
  • Avoid jargon unless needed
  • Say what matters and why it matters

You don’t need to sound like a “guru.” You need to sound credible, helpful, and consistent.

Step 9: Track what is actually working

By week two, patterns will start showing up.

Track things like:

  • Follower growth by post
  • Profile views
  • Comments from your target audience
  • Saves and shares
  • Topics that create inbound messages or connection requests

Then ask:

  • Which posts brought the most qualified followers?
  • What hooks got people to stop scrolling?
  • Did practical content outperform opinion content?
  • Which format gave the best retention?

Don’t just repeat your best post. Repeat the reason it worked.

A simple 60-day growth plan

  • Days 1–7: optimize profile, define positioning, publish daily, begin targeted commenting
  • Days 8–21: test multiple hooks, double down on top-performing topics
  • Days 22–40: launch recurring content series, increase collaborations and conversations
  • Days 41–60: scale what works, repost ideas in new formats, improve calls to follow

You can also review broader LinkedIn marketing research from sources like Hootsuite for practical benchmarks and planning ideas: Hootsuite LinkedIn marketing strategy guide.

So, what would I do in your position?

I’d narrow the niche, optimize the profile, post daily, comment aggressively but thoughtfully, and publish content that makes AI useful for business people who are busy.

I would not try to look big. I would try to be consistently valuable.

That’s usually what creates momentum on LinkedIn.

Final thought

If you want 10,000 followers in 60 days, think less about chasing vanity metrics and more about building trust at speed. The audience you want is already on LinkedIn. They just need a reason to remember you.

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