LinkedIn for Academics

0.1 Why This Book Exists
I consider myself lucky to have experienced academic Twitter of the 2010s - I have long-standing research collaborations with people I met on Twitter, I owe my job at Glasgow to Twitter, and I even made a new best friend from Twitter. And then it collapsed into a hateful cesspit and academic social media fractured. Some academics migrated to Bluesky, Mastodon and Threads, but to everyone’s genuine surprise, many, including myself, have settled on LinkedIn.
In 2020, Daniel Quintana wrote Twitter for Scientists, a practical guide to using Twitter for academic networking and research dissemination. This book is a sequel of sorts, adapted for LinkedIn and updated for where we are now. It is not a replacement and if you want comprehensive guidance on why academics should engage with social media at all, you should still read Dan’s original. This book assumes you have already decided that being on social media professionally might be useful, and focuses on making LinkedIn work for you.
0.2 Why LinkedIn?
LinkedIn is not Twitter and it never will be. The culture is different, the conventions are different, and the kinds of interactions you have there are different. But it offers a relatively stable, professionally-oriented platform where academics can share their work and build networks beyond their immediate institution.
This book covers LinkedIn basics, what to post, and how to use the platform without making yourself miserable. It also includes material that Dan’s original did not cover, in particular, using LinkedIn to share teaching practice and open educational resources. Not because Twitter was bad for this, but because nobody has written a social media guide aimed at teaching-focused academics and because I am a ride-or-die education-focused academic.
0.3 About me
I am a Professor of Evidence-Informed Education and Associate Dean for Learning and Teaching at the University of Glasgow. My research focuses on how students learn in blended and digital environments, particularly lecture capture and inclusive education. I live in Glasgow with my wife and like to climb mountains and read books.
You can find me on LinkedIn here.
0.4 Citation
Nordmann, E. (2026). LinkedIn for Academics [ebook edition]. Retrieved from https://emilynordmann.github.io/linkedin-for-academics. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18445332
0.5 Licence
This book is licensed under a Creative Commons 4.0 International License.
0.6 Acknowledgements
This book builds directly on Dan Quintana’s Twitter for Scientists (2020), which remains available at t4scientists.com. The structure and much of the thinking comes from that work and I am grateful for the Creative Commons licence allowing reuse.
Claude Opus 4.6 (Anthropic) was used heavily in the making of this book but I take full responsibility for the adaptation, errors, and any opinions expressed in it.