Attention Grabbers

How Do I Write a LinkedIn Headline That Attracts B2B Clients and Improves Search Visibility?

Quick Answer: Write a LinkedIn headline that names who you help, the outcome you deliver, and how — using the keywords your buyers actually search. A simple formula is: “I help [target client] achieve [result] through [method].” This both attracts the right clients when they read it and improves your visibility in LinkedIn search, because the headline is heavily weighted when the platform decides who appears for a query.

Your LinkedIn headline is the most-seen line you have. It appears next to your name in the feed, in search results, in comments, and in connection requests. Yet most B2B founders waste it on a job title like “CEO at Company X.” That tells a prospect nothing about whether you can help them. A great headline does double duty: it pulls in your ideal client and it helps you get found in search. Here is how to write one.

Why is the LinkedIn headline so important?

The headline is your most visible piece of copy and one of the most heavily weighted fields for LinkedIn search. When someone searches for a service or skill, the words in your headline strongly influence whether you appear. It is also the line that determines whether someone clicks your profile at all. Because it shows up everywhere you are active on the platform, an optimized headline compounds across every interaction. And with four out of five LinkedIn members driving business decisions, according to Sprout Social, being found by the right ones is well worth the effort.

What is wrong with using just my job title?

A job title describes your position, not your value. “Founder & CEO” tells a prospect what you are called, not who you help or what changes for them if they work with you. It also wastes prime keyword space, hurting your searchability. Worse, it makes you look like everyone else. The headline’s job is to answer the visitor’s silent question — “is this person relevant to me?” — and a bare title fails that test.

What should a great B2B headline include?

The strongest headlines combine clarity with keywords. Include:

  • Who you help — your specific target client.
  • The outcome — the result they care about.
  • The method — how you deliver it, ideally with a searchable keyword.

A reliable formula is: “I help [target client] achieve [result] through [method].” For example, “I help B2B founders book qualified sales calls through LinkedIn lead generation.” It is instantly clear and rich with the terms buyers search.

How do I make my headline keyword-friendly for search?

Identify the words your buyers would type to find someone like you — service names, problems, and outcomes — and work the most important ones into your headline naturally. If you do LinkedIn management, the phrase “LinkedIn lead generation” or “LinkedIn management” should appear. Do not keyword-stuff; the headline must still read like a clear human sentence. The aim is to be both findable and compelling, never robotic.

Should I show personality in my headline?

A touch can help you stand out, as long as clarity comes first. Some founders add a short, distinctive phrase or proof point after the core promise. That is fine — but never sacrifice the essentials of who, what, and how for cleverness. A witty headline that leaves a prospect unsure what you do has failed. Lead with clarity, then add character if there is room.

How does the headline work with the rest of my profile?

The headline makes a promise that your About section, Featured section, and content must deliver on. If your headline says you help SaaS founders generate leads, your profile and posts should reinforce exactly that. Consistency across these elements turns a curious clicker into a confident prospect. A strong headline opens the door; the rest of your profile has to walk them through it.

What is the difference between my headline and my job-title field?

Many people assume their headline simply mirrors their current job title, but they are separate fields that do different work. Your headline is the customizable line directly under your name; by default LinkedIn fills it with your latest position, but you can and should rewrite it. Your experience section holds the actual job titles and companies. The headline is marketing copy — your chance to state who you help and the outcome you deliver — while the experience entries are your record of roles. Keeping them distinct lets your experience stay factual and complete for credibility, while your headline does the persuasive job of attracting the right client and capturing search keywords. If you leave the headline as a bare title, you are using a prime marketing asset as a filing label. Edit it deliberately, and let your experience section carry the formal history.

How can an agency help me get this right?

Profile optimization is foundational to everything else on LinkedIn, and the headline is the highest-leverage line on it. Attention Grabbers rewrites profiles to attract ideal clients and rank in search as part of LinkedIn management, then drives the right people to see them. For a headline and profile built to convert, book a call with our team.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long can a LinkedIn headline be?

You have a few hundred characters, but the most important words should come first since headlines are truncated in many places they appear.

Should I include keywords in my headline?

Yes. The headline is weighted in LinkedIn search, so include the terms your buyers search — naturally, not stuffed.

Can I use the same headline as my job title?

You can, but you shouldn’t. A value-focused headline outperforms a plain title for both attraction and search.

Will changing my headline notify my network?

Updating your headline alone generally does not blast a notification, so you can refine it freely without spamming connections.

How often should I update my headline?

Revisit it whenever your offer or target client shifts. Otherwise, a strong, clear headline can serve you for a long time.

Key takeaways

  • Your headline is your most-seen copy and is heavily weighted in LinkedIn search.
  • Replace your job title with who you help, the outcome, and the method.
  • Use the formula “I help [client] achieve [result] through [method]” with real keywords.
  • Keep the headline consistent with your About, Featured, and content.