logo
The 5-Move LinkedIn Strategy That Attracts High-Paying Clients

The 5-Move LinkedIn Strategy That Attracts High-Paying Clients

Forbes24-06-2025
The 5-move LinkedIn strategy that attracts high-paying clients
Premium clients aren't going to find you by accident. To attract the customers you'd love to be involved with, either your work and reputation have to precede you, or you have to be standing out online. But where to do it? Enter LinkedIn.
You can turn your LinkedIn into a client-generating machine while most people are trying to figure out Facebook ads. The platform that generates 277% higher visitor-to-lead conversions than Facebook sits right there, waiting for you to use it properly. LinkedIn has an average engagement rate of 3.85%, yet 99% of users don't post weekly. They leave billions of impressions to the 1% who show up consistently.
Not everyone on LinkedIn is your client, and you shouldn't expect them to be. Rather than figuring out how to give discounts and help everyone, top founders on LinkedIn focus only on the people who will be their dream clients. And that means high ticket clients who go for their most expensive offer. They're happy to ignore everyone else.
The difference between begging for business and attracting premium clients comes down to five specific moves that actually work.
Simple LinkedIn moves to win high ticket clients
Before someone will buy from you, they have to have a problem they believe you can solve and a reason they haven't been able to solve it before. Until you have this information established, don't pitch. Sell too soon and you'll lose the chance. Premium prospects get unsolicited, middle-of-the-road pitches all the time. Your first few messages with them should be fact-finding only.
Ask about their current situation. Understand what they've already tried. Find out why those solutions failed. When you get a connection request, check their profile first. Look for signs they match your ideal client profile. If they don't, politely decline or accept without engaging further.
Every conversation costs time. So treat your DMs like a qualification funnel. Ask specific questions about business challenges, current solutions, and desired outcomes. Listen for pain points that match their expertise. When someone messages you about your services, resist the urge to send your calendar link. Instead, ask qualifying questions that reveal whether they're ready to invest at your level.
Don't get on a call to find out information. It's a waste of everyone's time. Average founders book back to back meetings with no plan. Their strategy shifts depending on who they last talked to. But you're better than that. Use the DMs to gather everything you need. Find out their budget range, timeline, and decision-making process before suggesting a call. When they push for a meeting, explain that you want to ensure you can help them first. This positions you as selective.
The most successful founders I know have strict call criteria. They only book calls with qualified prospects who've answered key questions, shown genuine interest in their specific solution, and indicated they have both budget and authority to move forward. They treat their calendar like premium territory. The right clients will appreciate this selectivity too.
The average LinkedIn user spends 14 minutes and 20 seconds per session, but your response rate in DMs can be high when you qualify properly. Turn those LinkedIn notifications from time-wasters into revenue opportunities by being ruthlessly selective about who gets your attention.
Every piece of your content should have a great answer to the question, "So what?" No filler posts. Your dream customers need to see with absolute clarity how you could help them. Every post counts. Share the exact problem you solved yesterday. Break down the three-step framework you use with every client. Reveal the mistake that cost you thousands before you figured out the solution.
Your audience doesn't need another "Monday motivation" post. They need to see themselves in your content. Write about the client who doubled their revenue using your method. Explain the mindset shift that changed everything for your business. Detail the process you use to diagnose problems before prescribing solutions.
When you write about situations that happened, people pay attention. Premium clients scroll LinkedIn looking for evidence that you understand their world better than they do. Don't let them down.
Get famous on the success of your clients. You don't need to sell. The stories do it for you. Testimonials, transformation pictures, actual quotes about the mess they were in before you came along. When you share your serious client wins, you're providing social proof that your methods work.
Don't say "helped a client increase sales." Say "helped Sarah transform her consulting business from $5k to $25k months in 90 days by implementing our three-tier pricing strategy." To attract premium clients at premium prices, you need to share successes on a scale that resonates.
Every success story should follow a simple structure. Start with where they were struggling. Share the specific intervention you provided. Detail the measurable results they achieved. Include the unexpected benefits they discovered. Tag the client so they can add their own commentary. Build trust through transformation stories, and the right people lean in.
No one is scrolling LinkedIn to pick up extra work. Especially not top-tier prospects who have better things to do. They're scrolling LinkedIn to have a break or find inspiration. Show them how easy results can be with you. As simple as one, two, three. How much of the work you take off their plate. How you've done the research so they don't have to. Make it easy, make sales. Simple.
Break down your process into digestible steps. Show them exactly what happens when they work with you. Remove the mystery and reduce the perceived effort. They'll pay for ease of implementation and peace of mind.
The founders winning on LinkedIn create content that demonstrates that ease. They share their onboarding process. They show behind-the-scenes glimpses of client work. They explain how they handle the heavy lifting while clients focus on their zone of genius. Position working with you as easier than their current struggle. Show you'll make their job easier. Create case studies that highlight how little time clients invested for maximum results.
Transform your LinkedIn presence into a client magnet
Your ideal clients are already on LinkedIn, scrolling past generic content and wondering who actually gets their challenges. So become impossible to ignore. Attract people who value expertise over discounts, who understand that transformation requires investment, who are ready to pay premium prices for premium results.
Make content that positions you as the only logical choice for your dream clients. Share evidence that your methods deliver results. Make the path to working with you crystal clear. Your next premium client is one DM away from discovering you're exactly who they've been searching for.
Create a LinkedIn profile that wins you high ticket coaching clients.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Walmart Deals of the Day: Affordable On-Ear Sony Headphones for Just $40
Walmart Deals of the Day: Affordable On-Ear Sony Headphones for Just $40

CNET

timea minute ago

  • CNET

Walmart Deals of the Day: Affordable On-Ear Sony Headphones for Just $40

Labor Day sales are heating up, and while Walmart hasn't announced any official event as of yet, it's still offering some serious bargains right now. The tech and home retailer offers deals year-round, and CNET's dedicated deals writers are bringing you the best of the best every single day. For today, Aug. 18, that includes a chance to grab a top-rated pair of on-ear Sony WH-CH520 headphones for just $40, save $30 on a rugged Garmin Forerunner 55 fitness tracker and score $60 off a second-gen Google Nest video doorbell with a sneaky in-cart discount. If you prefer on-ear headphones to bulky over-ear pairs, this is one of our favorite affordable pairs on the market right now. These come with relatively no frills and lack noise-cancelling capabilities, but still have a lot to love, according to our reviewer. Our CNET audio expert found that they "feature good sound for their price, are lightweight and pretty comfortable for on-ear headphones, and also have excellent battery life" (up to 50 hours). They also support multipoint Bluetooth pairing, a customizable EQ and voice assistant compatibility. Only the black pair is on sale at the moment. Garmin makes rugged fitness trackers for serious athletes and adventurers, and this is your chance to pick one up for less. The Forerunner 55 has multiple sport modes to track your time, distance, speed, pace and heart rate during workouts, and monitors your steps, calories, sleep patterns and more throughout the entire day. It will even track your training history over time and recommend different workouts of varying intensities. Plus, it boasts an impressive two-week battery life. Though this deal is for the wired version, the second-gen Google Nest is one of our favorite video doorbells of 2025. Our reviewer praised its simple design and suite of convenient features, particularly its free cloud storage for up to three hours of footage. It boasts HD video resolution, a 145-degree field of view, night vision and 24/7 live streaming so you can check in any time. Plus, it can even differentiate between people, vehicles, animals and packages for detailed alerts sent right to your phone. And it supports two-way audio so you can easily chat with visitors. Though keep in mind that the wired model will require existing doorbell wiring to be installed. Only the snow color variant is on sale right now, and you'll need to add it to your cart to see the discount.

MSNBC is becoming MS NOW: My Source for News, Opinion, and the World
MSNBC is becoming MS NOW: My Source for News, Opinion, and the World

Washington Post

timea minute ago

  • Washington Post

MSNBC is becoming MS NOW: My Source for News, Opinion, and the World

The progressive cable news network MSNBC will formally change its name later this year to MS NOW, standing for My Source for News, Opinion, and the World. The change is part of a corporate transformation as the network breaks off from other parts of the NBCUniversal family, including a split with its longtime sibling NBC News. MSNBC will be part of a group of networks — including Oxygen, the Golf Channel and others — called Versant.

NASCAR's Newest Series Sponsor Will Be Music To Your Ears (Or Not)
NASCAR's Newest Series Sponsor Will Be Music To Your Ears (Or Not)

Forbes

timea minute ago

  • Forbes

NASCAR's Newest Series Sponsor Will Be Music To Your Ears (Or Not)

If you're a fan of the catchy jingle from O'Reilly Auto Parts, good news: you'll be hearing a lot more of it. If not, well—sorry about that. NASCAR announced Monday that the automotive replacement parts company will be the new title sponsor of the second-tier touring series currently known as the NASCAR Xfinity Series. 'Like the great sport of NASCAR, O'Reilly Auto Parts was born in America and built on the hard work and drive of passionate people,' said NASCAR President Steve O'Donnell in a press release. 'This new partnership allows us to continue to fuel that passion for the next generation of NASCAR's stars and fans while celebrating the journey we've been on together for decades.' The company, founded in 1957, is already a familiar name to NASCAR fans. O'Reilly first appeared in the sport in 1999 as a race entitlement sponsor for a Truck Series event at Texas Motor Speedway. In 2008, it became the 'Official Auto Parts Retailer of NASCAR,' and since then has had its logo plastered across races in all three national series as well as several contingency awards. And of course, O'Reilly has been a longtime radio sponsor across NASCAR and Speedway Motorsports channels, armed with that jingle that's either a stroke of marketing genius—or the soundtrack to your nightmares. Now, starting in 2026, the company will step onto a bigger NASCAR stage than ever before. 'Our company is rooted in the same values that define NASCAR—teamwork, enthusiasm, and dedication,' said O'Reilly Auto Parts President Brent Kirby. 'You'll see those in action when our customers walk through our doors. We know they need fast service, and Team O'Reilly will get them the parts they need quickly, with excellent customer service. We welcome all fans to stop by our stores and see how our team can help keep them running.' NASCAR's version of Triple-A baseball dates back to 1982, when the sanctioning body cobbled together a collection of regional series and quickly landed a sponsor in Busch beer. That pairing of beer with a Cup Series fueled by Winston cigarettes was a perfect for the time, and the Busch Grand National Series soon became simply 'the Busch Series.' Over the decades, the series evolved into both a ladder for aspiring stars and a playground for established Cup drivers looking for extra track time—or a safety net for those needing to take a step back. Its sponsorship history has mirrored NASCAR's shifting eras: from beer to insurance to broadband, as the sport moved from blue-collar roots toward corporate polish and eventually into the digital age. Now it will bring its sponsorship back to the garage as NASCAR looks to appeal to a mechanical, DIY-minded fan base. Early last year, Comcast said that while Xfinity would remain a 'premier partner,' its run as title sponsor would end after this season. That opened the door for O'Reilly, which will gain a major spotlight thanks to NASCAR's relatively new broadcast partnership with The CW Network. The network is currently in its first full season carrying the series and will showcase the O'Reilly name from coast to coast. 'The success of NASCAR on The CW has shown that millions of fans will consistently tune in for these adrenaline-fueled races every week,' said Brad Schwartz, President, The CW Network. 'This exciting new partnership with O'Reilly Auto Parts gives us the opportunity to expand that reach even further by tapping into our mutually strong presence in local communities nationwide and continuing to grow our passionate audience in the years to come.' And while the NASCAR O'Reilly Auto Parts Series might not roll off the tongue quite as smoothly as Busch, Nationwide, or Xfinity, at least nobody will ever forget the soundtrack. The jingle department already has that covered. Who knows, perhaps next season the drivers won't be saying their car was 'as fast as Xfinity Wi-Fi' and instead will just start signing. 'Oh, oh, oh, O'Reilly…' well, you already know the rest.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store