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How to Add Projects to Your LinkedIn Profile (Step-by-Step 2026)

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Your LinkedIn profile isn’t just a digital resume. It’s a portfolio stage. And if you’re not using the projects section, you’re leaving one of the most powerful ways to stand out on the platform completely empty. The projects section on LinkedIn does something your job history alone cannot do: it shows tangible proof of what you can actually build, design, write, or achieve. Not just the titles you held, but the real work you delivered. In 2026, recruiters and potential clients don’t just want to see that you worked at Company X for three years. They want to see what you created during those three years.

They want to click through, review your work, and understand your capabilities in seconds. This is where learning how to add projects in LinkedIn becomes essential. The projects section bridges the gap between what you claim in your headline and the evidence that backs those claims up. Unlike your job descriptions, which are filtered through corporate language and careful phrasing, projects tell a story through results.

Whether you’re a designer sharing your best UI work, a developer showcasing code repositories, a writer publishing your best articles, or a product manager displaying the products you’ve shipped, your projects section is your professional proof of concept. In this guide, we’ll walk through exactly how to add projects to your LinkedIn profile, why they matter for your visibility, and how to structure them to make the biggest impact.

Why LinkedIn Projects Matter More Than Ever in 2026

In 2026, LinkedIn Projects have become one of the most powerful ways to showcase real-world skills, practical experience, and industry expertise beyond a traditional resume. Recruiters and clients now look for proof of work, not just job titles, making project sections essential for professionals, freelancers, students, and job seekers. This blog explores how LinkedIn Projects help build credibility, improve profile visibility, attract career opportunities, and create a stronger personal brand in today’s competitive digital landscape.

The Strategic Importance of Project Visibility

LinkedIn’s algorithm has shifted. In 2026, your profile isn’t ranked just by job titles and company names anymore. Engagement signals matter. Profile completeness matters. And proof of work matters. When a recruiter or potential client lands on your profile, they spend an average of 6 to 12 seconds scanning. That’s it. In those seconds, they need to understand: What can you do? What have you actually done? What results did you create? Your job history answers the first two questions partially. But projects answer all three with visual, interactive proof.

The projects section serves a unique purpose in your profile ecosystem. Your work experience section explains your roles and responsibilities. Your skills section lists what you claim to know. But the projects section proves it. When someone can click directly from your profile to see your actual work—whether that’s a live website you built, a case study you wrote, a research study you conducted, or a design system you created—your credibility multiplies instantly. This is not theoretical. Research on LinkedIn profile completeness shows that profiles with complete details, including a projects section, receive significantly higher viewer engagement than bare-bones profiles.

From a purely tactical standpoint, adding projects to your LinkedIn profile also affects your search visibility within LinkedIn’s own platform. The algorithm prioritizes profiles that demonstrate diverse, substantive content. When your profile includes projects with descriptions, images, and links, the profile becomes richer and more likely to surface in recruiter searches, connection requests, and feed interactions. You’re not just optimizing for external viewers anymore. You’re optimizing for LinkedIn’s internal ranking system.

How Projects Differentiate You in Competitive Markets

In nearly every professional field, you’re competing against people with similar job titles, similar companies, and similar years of experience. What you’re not competing on, in most cases, is demonstrated ability. This is where projects create an instant moat. A product manager with five shipped products visible on their profile is immediately more credible than a product manager whose profile only lists job descriptions. A marketer who can link directly to case studies they wrote is more credible than one who describes their work in bullet points. A developer whose projects link to GitHub repositories is more credible than one who just says they know Python and JavaScript.

The projects section essentially gives you permission to side-step the credibility question altogether. You’re not asking the viewer to trust your claims about your abilities. You’re showing them. This is particularly powerful in competitive fields like design, development, writing, and product management, where the barrier to entry is low and the number of people claiming expertise is high. The market has become saturated with people who list impressive job titles but have little to show for them. Projects cut through that noise.

Additionally, projects help you own your personal brand across LinkedIn. Your job history is often written in corporate language, abbreviated, or focuses on metrics that matter less to outsiders. Projects give you the space to tell your story your way. You control the narrative. You choose what to highlight. You decide what the story of your work looks like to someone seeing you for the first time.

How to Add Projects in LinkedIn: The Complete Process

Adding projects to your LinkedIn profile is a smart way to highlight your skills, achievements, and hands-on experience in front of recruiters, clients, and professional connections. This blog provides a complete step-by-step guide on how to add projects on LinkedIn, optimize project descriptions, attach relevant media or links, and showcase your work professionally to strengthen your personal brand and career opportunities in 2026.

Step 1: Access Your LinkedIn Profile and Locate the Projects Section

The first step to add projects in LinkedIn starts with accessing your profile. Log into your LinkedIn account and click on your profile photo in the top right corner. From the dropdown menu, select “View profile” or “Edit public profile”. You’ll land on your profile page. Now, this is where many people get confused: the projects section is not always visible on every profile by default. If you don’t see a dedicated projects section on your current profile, you need to add it. This is a one-time setup.

To add the projects section to your profile, look for the “Add profile section” button. On most profiles, this appears as a plus icon or directly in the left sidebar of your profile edit view. Some profiles have the projects section in the featured section area, while others allow you to add it as a standalone section. The exact layout depends on your LinkedIn interface version, but the principle remains the same: you’re telling LinkedIn that you want to include projects on your profile.

Once you click “Add profile section” or find the projects section in your profile, LinkedIn will show you a list of available sections. Scroll through until you find “Projects” and select it. If you already have projects added and you’re editing existing ones, they’ll appear directly in your featured or main profile sections. For first-time setup, expect to click through one or two additional dialogs to confirm you want to add the projects section.

Step 2: Understand the Project Information Fields

Before you start filling in project details, understanding what LinkedIn asks for is critical. When you create or edit a project on LinkedIn, you’ll encounter several fields. Let’s break down each one so you know exactly what goes where. The fields typically include a project title, description, a link (usually required), a start date, an end date, and often a skills section. Some fields are mandatory, while others are optional. But optional does not mean unimportant. The difference between a bare-minimum project entry and a fully optimized project entry is the difference between getting clicked on and being scrolled past.

The project title is your headline. It should immediately communicate what the project is or what it achieved. Instead of something generic like “Marketing Campaign”, use specificity like “Increased SaaS Product Signup Rate by 34% Through Email Funnel Redesign”. The title is often the only thing people read on first glance, so it needs to be informative and interesting at the same time.

The description field is where you tell the story. This is not a job duty. This is a before-and-after narrative. What problem did you solve? What was your specific role? What was the outcome? LinkedIn allows for up to 2,000 characters in the project description, which is substantial. Use it. A good project description reads like the introduction to a case study, not like a bullet point from a resume.

The project link field is critical. This should point to something real: a live website, a case study, a GitHub repository, a published article, a portfolio link, or a video. The link is what converts a claim into evidence. Without a link, your project is just another thing you’re saying you did. With a link, it becomes verifiable.

The dates (start and end) provide context. If the project is ongoing, you can usually check a box that says “currently working on this project”. Dates help viewers understand the scope of work and whether your experience is recent or historical.

The skills section is optional but recommended. LinkedIn allows you to tag relevant skills to each project. This creates an association between the project and the skill in your profile’s skill-data graph, which can help with discoverability. More on this later.

Step 3: Gather Your Project Materials Before You Begin

Here’s where most people fail: they try to add projects without preparing first. This results in incomplete entries, weak descriptions, and missing links. Set yourself up for success by preparing all your project materials before you open LinkedIn to add them.

Create a simple document or spreadsheet where you list all the projects you want to add. For each project, note down: the project title, the description (the story and the outcomes), the link (URL where the work can be viewed), the start date, the end date, and the relevant skills. Don’t write these in your head. Write them down. This serves two purposes: it ensures you have all the information before you start, and it gives you a chance to edit and refine your descriptions before they go live on your profile.

For each project, brainstorm: What was the problem? What was my specific contribution? What was the measurable outcome? Even if the outcome isn’t perfectly quantified, including something is better than vague language. “Increased engagement” is weaker than “Increased user engagement from 12% to 28%”. “Improved performance” is weaker than “Improved page load time from 4.2 seconds to 1.8 seconds”. Numbers matter.

Next, gather the actual project links. If the project is a website, ensure the link still works and is still live. If it’s a GitHub repository, make sure it’s public (or at least accessible). If it’s a case study, get the full URL. If it’s a portfolio piece, ensure it’s published and accessible to LinkedIn users. If a project is no longer live, you have two choices: either find a replacement project, or link to a screenshot, a description, or a video walkthrough instead. Dead links are worse than no links.

If the project is a collaborative effort, prepare how you’ll describe your specific role. Did you lead it? Did you contribute to one part? Were you the designer while someone else coded it? Clarity on your specific contribution is essential. This isn’t dishonest if you’re accurate. It’s transparent.

Step 4: Create Your First Project Entry

Now, with your materials prepared, log back into LinkedIn and navigate to your projects section. Click “Add project” or the plus icon if you’re already in the projects section. LinkedIn will open a form with the fields we discussed. Start with the project title. Make it clear, specific, and if possible, outcome-focused. This is not the place for modesty. If you grew revenue, led a redesign, shipped a feature, or published research, say so directly.

Next, move to the description field. Write as if you’re explaining this project to someone who doesn’t know anything about your industry. Use plain language. Start with the problem or the goal, describe what you did, and finish with the outcome. Here’s a template structure that works:

“The Challenge: [One sentence on what needed to happen] My Role: [Your specific contribution] The Solution: [What you built, designed, or created] The Result: [Quantified outcome if possible, or qualitative impact if not]”

For example: “The Challenge: A SaaS product had a 45% drop-off rate on the pricing page, losing $200K annual revenue. My Role: Led the complete redesign of the pricing page and checkout flow. The Solution: Simplified the page layout, improved clarity on feature differentiation, and reduced form fields from 8 to 4. The Result: Improved conversion rate to 18%, recovering $140K in lost revenue within 90 days.”

This structure is easy to write, easy to read, and easy to understand. It also demonstrates that you think about outcomes, not just activities. People want to work with people who move metrics.

Once you’ve entered the description, add the project link. Paste the full URL. LinkedIn will often attempt to preview the link or pull metadata from it. Let it do so. If the preview looks good, you’re set. If not, double-check that the URL is correct and publicly accessible.

Step 5: Add Dates and Skills to Strengthen Profile Connectivity

After you’ve filled in the basic information, move to the dates. Enter the start and end dates for the project. If the project is ongoing (like a personal blog, a GitHub project you’re still maintaining, or an ongoing responsibility), check the box that says “currently working on this project” or “ongoing”. This signals to viewers that the work is not just historical but still relevant to what you do today.

Now, the skills section. LinkedIn allows you to tag relevant skills to each project. This is not just a nice-to-have feature. It’s a strategic element of your profile. When you tag a skill to a project, LinkedIn’s algorithm notes the association. If you later ask your network to endorse that skill, or if someone views the project and endorses you, that skill’s prominence on your profile increases. Over time, endorsed skills paired with projects are more credible than endorsed skills with no visible evidence.

Choose two to four skills per project. If your project is a website redesign, tag “UX Design”, “UI Design”, and “Figma”. If it’s a product launch, tag “Product Management”, “Go-to-Market Strategy”, and “Cross-functional Leadership”. Match the skills to the actual work done. This is not about gaming LinkedIn’s algorithm. It’s about providing clear associations between demonstrated work and claimed expertise.

Step 6: Format Your Project Description for Maximum Impact

The description field allows up to 2,000 characters, but also allows basic formatting. You can use line breaks, bullet points, and emphasis to make the description more readable. This matters more than you think. A dense paragraph of text is hard to skim. A description broken into sections with clear titles is easy to understand in seconds.

Here’s a formatting technique that works well: Use the first line as a headline. Then break the description into three sections: Challenge, Solution, Results. Use line breaks between each section. Keep each section to two to three sentences maximum. This creates visual breathing room.

Example:

“Redesigned mobile checkout experience for e-commerce platform

Challenge: Mobile checkout abandonment rate was 58%, costing $300K monthly in lost sales.

Solution: Led design audit, identified three key friction points, created low-fidelity wireframes, conducted A/B testing on two iterations, shipped optimized version.

Results: Abandonment rate dropped to 22%, recovering $220K monthly revenue. Shipped to 2M+ users over six months.”

This is easier to read than a long paragraph. It’s also easier for recruiters and potential clients to quickly extract the key information.

Advanced Project Management: Featuring and Optimizing for Maximum Visibility

Simply adding projects to LinkedIn is not enough in 2026 strategic project management and optimization play a major role in profile visibility and professional growth. This blog explores advanced techniques for featuring projects effectively, using keyword optimization, adding media assets, improving discoverability in LinkedIn search, and organizing projects to attract recruiters, clients, and industry professionals for maximum impact.

How the Featured Section Works and Why Project Placement Matters

LinkedIn’s “Featured” section is different from the projects section. The featured section appears at the top of your profile, right below your headline and above your work experience. It’s prime real estate. While the projects section lists all your projects, you can choose to feature your best two or three projects in the featured section for maximum visibility. Many people don’t realize this, so they end up burying their best work lower on the page, where fewer people see it.

To add a project to your featured section, navigate to your featured section on your profile. You’ll see options to add various types of content: articles, documents, posts, media, and projects. Click on the projects option. LinkedIn will show you a list of projects you’ve already added (in the projects section). Choose the two or three that best represent your capabilities. These should be your strongest, most impressive, or most recent projects. A recruiter or potential client should see your best work within the first view of your profile, before they have to scroll.

The featuring strategy matters. If you’re switching jobs or industries, feature the projects that are most relevant to where you’re going, not where you’ve been. If you’re positioning yourself as a design leader, feature your strongest design projects. If you’re positioning yourself as a growth marketer, feature your highest-impact growth case studies. The featured section is not a neutral list. It’s your curation of what matters most about you right now.

Photographing and Recording Projects for Visual Impact

Not all projects are visual, but the ones that are should include visual media. LinkedIn allows you to add images to your projects section. If your project is a website redesign, include a screenshot of the final design. If it’s a brand identity project, include the logo or brand guidelines. If it’s a physical product, include a photo of the finished product. If it’s a campaign, include the campaign creative. Visual media increases click-through rates and engagement substantially. A project with an image gets more profile views than the same project without an image.

Here’s the catch: LinkedIn does not allow you to upload images directly to the project description the way you might on other platforms. However, you can use images in the following ways. First, if the project link (your website, portfolio, case study) includes images, those images will be visible to anyone who clicks through. This is the primary method. Second, some portfolio platforms, case study platforms, or project management tools automatically generate previews with images when you paste the link. LinkedIn will display those previews. Make sure your linked content includes strong visual representation.

If your project is something you can record or demo, consider creating a short video walkthrough. Upload it to YouTube or another platform and link to it in your project description. A short video (60 to 90 seconds) of a tool you built or a design you created can be significantly more compelling than a still image or a written description. Many recruiters and clients will watch a 90-second video if it’s available, but won’t click through to a full website.

Updating Projects as Your Career Evolves

Your projects section is not a set-it-and-forget-it area of your profile. As you evolve, as you get promoted, as you take on new skills, as projects ship or conclude, your projects section should reflect that evolution. Every quarter or every half year, review your projects section. Ask yourself: Do these projects still represent where I am? Are there newer, better projects I’ve completed that I should add? Are there projects that are no longer relevant or that I’m no longer proud of?

This is not dishonest. It’s curation. A designer who is now a design director should feature their strongest directional and leadership projects, not the individual design work they did five years ago. A developer who moved into technical leadership should feature system designs and architectural projects, not junior-level feature work. Your projects section should tell the story of your current capabilities and ambitions, not your historical resume.

Additionally, when you update a project, consider refreshing its description with new information. If a project had a launch outcome and has since had months of performance data, update the results section. “Shipped and maintained by 10k users for two years” is stronger than “Shipped to 10k users”. Showing that the project had staying power and didn’t become technical debt is valuable.

Strategic Uses of LinkedIn Projects for Different Professions

LinkedIn Projects can be used strategically by professionals across different industries to showcase expertise, build authority, and stand out in competitive markets. This blog explains how marketers, developers, designers, freelancers, students, business owners, consultants, and corporate professionals can use LinkedIn Projects differently to highlight achievements, demonstrate practical skills, attract opportunities, and strengthen their professional presence in 2026.

Projects for Designers and Creative Professionals

For designers, the projects section is essentially your portfolio gateway. Unlike traditional portfolios, which require a potential client or recruiter to visit a separate website, LinkedIn projects embed your work directly into your profile. This means more people will see it. The strategy here is to choose your five to eight strongest projects and structure them as case studies. Each project should answer: What was the design challenge? What was the design direction I took? What were the design decisions I made? What was the impact on the user or the business?

A UX designer should include projects on website redesigns, app interfaces, user research findings, or design system creation. Each project should link to either the live product (if it’s still live), a Figma file (if it’s public), a case study, or a video walkthrough. A graphic designer should include branding projects, packaging designs, campaign work, or typography explorations. A motion designer should include reels, animated tutorials, or interactive projects. The principle is the same: show the work, explain the thinking, link to the proof.

The description structure for design projects should emphasize the before-and-after. “Redesigned mobile app checkout flow” is weaker than “Redesigned mobile app checkout flow, reducing taps required from 12 to 5 and increasing conversion rate by 42%”. If you have user metrics, testing results, or business impact, include them. Many designers downplay the business side of their work, but that’s where the credibility multiplies.

Projects for Software Developers and Engineers

For developers, the projects section is a bridge between your LinkedIn profile and your GitHub. Instead of expecting recruiters to go hunting through GitHub for your best work, the projects section puts your best repositories in front of them directly. The strategy here is to feature your five to eight most impressive projects. These should not be homework assignments or tutorials you completed. They should be projects that demonstrate real problem-solving, real systems thinking, or real architectural decisions.

Include projects like: a web application you built (with a live link), an open-source library you maintain (with a GitHub link), a full-stack system you architected, an optimization project where you improved performance or reduced costs, or a technical article or talk you gave. Each project should link to GitHub, a live deployment, or a video explanation. The description should focus on the technical decisions you made and the problems you solved, not just what technologies you used.

An example strong project description for a developer: “Built real-time collaborative document editor using WebSockets and Operational Transformation. Handled concurrent editing from 50+ users simultaneously without conflicts. Implemented custom conflict resolution algorithm to avoid race conditions. Reduced latency from 500ms to <100ms through connection pooling and caching strategy. Deployed on AWS with auto-scaling to handle 10,000 concurrent users.”

This description communicates scale, technical decision-making, and measurable outcomes. A hiring manager reading this immediately understands the engineer’s capabilities.

Projects for Product Managers and Strategy Leaders

Product managers often struggle with the projects section because product work is collaborative and attributing specific outcomes to specific people is complex. But you can frame projects in terms of your specific contributions. Your projects should focus on products you shipped, major feature launches you led, go-to-market strategies you owned, or market entries you managed. The description should answer: What was the strategic challenge? What was my role? What did I decide or build? What was the outcome?

An example: “Led market entry strategy for enterprise product into healthcare vertical. Conducted 20+ customer discovery interviews to identify pain points. Designed go-to-market motion targeting chief medical information officers. Built pricing model for healthcare compliance. Result: Closed 12 customers in first 90 days, generating $1.2M ARR, with a 3.5-year average customer lifetime.”

This shows strategic thinking, execution, and measurable impact. It also shows that you understand your customer and your market, which is what product leaders care about.

Projects for Writers and Content Creators

For writers, the projects section is a direct link to your published work. Include the five to eight pieces you’re most proud of. These could be long-form articles, research reports, case studies you wrote, published books, blog posts, white papers, or industry analyses. Each project should link directly to the published content. The description should explain what the piece was about, why you wrote it, and what impact it had. Did it get published in a major publication? Did it drive business outcomes? Did it shape industry conversation?

An example: “Wrote ‘The Hidden Costs of Technical Debt’ for TechCrunch. Analyzed codebase debt across 47 companies. Identified correlation between technical debt and product launch velocity. Article gained 200k+ views, cited by 20+ engineering leaders, led to consulting engagements worth $300K.”

This shows not just that you can write, but that your writing has reach and impact.

Mistakes to Avoid When Adding Projects to LinkedIn

Mistake 1: Adding Projects Without Functional Links

This is the most common mistake. A project with a dead link, a broken link, or a link that leads to a private page is worse than no project at all. It signals that you don’t take your profile seriously. When you add a project, test the link. Actually click it. Make sure it works. Make sure it’s accessible to someone who is not logged into your internal systems. If the project is no longer live, consider alternatives: create a case study document and link to that, create a video walkthrough and link to that, or remove the project and replace it with a newer one.

Mistake 2: Using Generic or Vague Project Titles

“Marketing Project”, “Design Work”, or “Development Task” tell the viewer nothing. Be specific. “Increased SaaS Customer Retention from 82% to 91% Through Email Re-engagement Campaign”, “Redesigned E-commerce Checkout Reducing Abandonment by 35%”, or “Built Real-time Analytics Dashboard Handling 100k Events Per Second” are titles that immediately communicate what the project is and what it achieved. Specificity signals confidence and clarity.

Mistake 3: Writing Descriptions That Focus on Tasks Instead of Outcomes

Many people write project descriptions the same way they write job bullet points: “Responsible for”, “Managed”, “Worked on”, “Helped with”. This is backward. The projects section is not a list of tasks. It’s a portfolio of outcomes. Reframe every description around what changed, what improved, or what was created as a result of your work. “Managed the redesign of three pages” becomes “Redesigned three critical pages, improving conversion rate by 18% and reducing bounce rate from 62% to 44%”.

Mistake 4: Neglecting the Featured Section

Many people add projects but never feature any of them. This is like printing a business card and leaving it in the printer. Feature your two to three best projects. These are the ones a recruiter or potential client will see first, and they should be your strongest work.

Mistake 5: Not Updating Projects Regularly

Your projects section will grow stale if you don’t refresh it. Every time you complete a new project, consider adding it. Every time a project reaches a new milestone (shipped, hit a user goal, got press coverage), consider updating the description. Your profile should feel current, not like a snapshot from two years ago.

Mistake 6: Including Too Many Weak Projects

There’s a quality-over-quantity principle in projects. Five strong projects that showcase real work and real outcomes is better than fifteen projects that are minimal, collaborative efforts, or outcomes that don’t matter. Curate. Choose the projects that represent your best thinking, strongest execution, or highest impact. A recruiter looking at your profile should see a consistent pattern of high-quality work, not a scattered list of minor contributions.

How Projects Affect Your LinkedIn Visibility and Profile Optimization

LinkedIn Projects play a major role in improving profile visibility, search rankings, and overall professional credibility in 2026. Well-optimized projects help LinkedIn’s algorithm better understand your expertise, making your profile more discoverable to recruiters, clients, and industry connections. This blog explains how projects influence LinkedIn SEO, profile strength, engagement, and networking opportunities while sharing practical optimization strategies to maximize your professional reach.

The Algorithm Impact of Adding Project Details

LinkedIn’s algorithm examines your profile and decides how visible it should be. The algorithm considers: profile completeness (do you have all sections filled out?), content engagement (do people interact with your content?), and profile freshness (are you regularly updating?). When you add projects, you’re directly improving your profile completeness score. A profile with a populated projects section ranks higher in recruiter searches and gets surfaced more often to people in your network than a profile without one.

Additionally, the richness of your project descriptions affects visibility. A project with a full description, relevant skills tagged, and a valid link generates more algorithmic signals than a sparse project. LinkedIn’s systems can see that you’ve put effort into curating quality information. This is rewarded in visibility.

Making Your Projects Discoverable in LinkedIn Search

When recruiters or potential clients search LinkedIn, they often search for specific skills combined with keywords. If you tag your projects with relevant skills and include keywords in your project titles and descriptions, your projects become discoverable in those searches. A project titled “Led team of five engineers to build microservices architecture handling 1M requests per day” includes keywords like “microservices”, “architecture”, “engineering leadership”, and “scalability”. If someone searches “microservices architect”, that project will be more likely to surface.

The strategy here is to think about how potential opportunities would search for people like you, then ensure your projects use that language. A product manager should ensure their projects include language like “go-to-market”, “product launch”, “customer research”, or “revenue growth”. A designer should include language like “user research”, “design systems”, “accessibility”, or “brand identity”. This is not keyword stuffing. It’s using the language that matters to your industry.

Using Projects to Build Authority and Thought Leadership

As you accumulate quality projects on your profile, a pattern emerges: you become visibly associated with certain types of work, certain industries, or certain skill levels. A designer who has ten projects all showing enterprise software design work becomes visibly positioned as an enterprise design expert. A developer who has eight projects on open-source infrastructure becomes visibly positioned as a systems engineer. This visibility is what drives opportunities.

This positioning also makes it easier to pivot. If you’re a generalist designer who wants to specialize in e-commerce, you could add two to three e-commerce projects prominently to your profile. Suddenly, you’re no longer a generalist in people’s eyes. You’re an e-commerce specialist. Projects allow you to guide how people perceive your expertise.

Leveraging Your Projects Across Other LinkedIn Features

LinkedIn Projects become even more powerful when integrated with other LinkedIn features such as Featured sections, posts, newsletters, recommendations, certifications, and LinkedIn articles. This blog explores how to strategically leverage your projects across multiple profile sections to increase engagement, strengthen personal branding, showcase expertise more effectively, and create a stronger professional presence that attracts recruiters, clients, and networking opportunities in 2026.

Connecting Projects to Your LinkedIn Articles and Posts

LinkedIn allows you to link your projects to other content on the platform. If you write an article on LinkedIn about a particular project, you can reference that project in the article. If you share a post about a project launch, you can link to the project in the post. This creates a content ecosystem where your project, your articles, and your posts all reinforce each other, creating multiple touchpoints for people to see your work and engage with it.

The strategy is to write one in-depth article or post for your most important projects. Use the article to tell the full story: what you were trying to achieve, what challenges you faced, what you learned, and what the outcome was. Then link to that article from your project description. This gives someone multiple ways to engage with and understand your work.

Encouraging Endorsements and Social Proof on Projects

When someone views your project and sees skills tagged to it, they have the option to endorse those skills. The more people endorse skills associated with a particular project, the more credible that project becomes. This is social proof. The principle is simple: a skill endorsed by ten people is more credible than a skill endorsed by one person.

To encourage endorsements, make sure the skills you tag to projects are visible and prominent. LinkedIn shows your top endorsed skills on your profile. If you have a project that demonstrates a particular skill well, tag that skill to the project. When people view the project, they’re more likely to endorse that skill. Over time, projects become evidence for your endorsed skills.

Sharing Project Updates and Milestones in Your Feed

Your projects are not static. As they evolve, hit milestones, or get press coverage, share those updates in your LinkedIn feed. “Two years after launch, our product has 50K active users and a 4.5-star rating” is an update worth sharing. “Our design system is now used by three teams and standardizes component design across 30+ products” is worth sharing. These updates keep your projects current, keep your profile active, and remind your network of your work.

Conclusion

Learning how to add projects in LinkedIn is not just a profile-building exercise. It’s a strategic move to make your professional capabilities visible, verifiable, and valuable to your network and potential opportunities. The projects section transforms your LinkedIn profile from a static resume into a dynamic portfolio. It allows you to tell the story of your work not just through job titles and descriptions, but through concrete examples that anyone can click through and review.

The investment you put into your projects section compounds over time. The first project you add might generate one or two profile views. But as you accumulate quality projects, as you feature your best work prominently, and as your projects get discovered and shared, the cumulative effect is significant. You’ll find yourself appearing in more recruiter searches. You’ll get more inbound opportunities. You’ll establish yourself as credible and capable in your field.

Start by picking your three strongest projects from the past two years. Gather the materials. Write clear, outcome-focused descriptions. Add relevant links. Tag the skills. Feature at least two of them prominently. Then, every quarter, add one new project or update an existing one. This consistency will keep your profile current and your opportunities flowing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: Can I add multiple links to a single LinkedIn project?

A: No, LinkedIn’s project structure allows for only one primary link per project. However, you can include multiple links within the link itself. For example, you could link to a case study page that contains links to multiple supporting resources, or you could link to a portfolio piece that includes multiple images, videos, or resources. The key is that the primary link should be the most important representation of the project.

Q2: How many projects should I add to my LinkedIn profile?

A: There is no hard limit, but quality matters more than quantity. Five to eight projects is an ideal range for most professionals. This gives enough variety to showcase different aspects of your work without overwhelming viewers. Choose projects that represent your strongest work, most recent achievements, or most relevant experience for your current or desired role. Curate ruthlessly. A profile with five excellent projects is better than one with twenty mediocre projects.

Q3: Can I add projects I worked on collaboratively, or should projects only be work I did solo?

A: Collaborative projects are not only acceptable, they’re expected. Most professional work is collaborative. What matters is that you clearly describe your specific role and contribution. Instead of vague language like “worked on”, be specific: “Led design direction and user research”, “Architected backend systems”, “Managed stakeholder communication and timeline”. Make it clear what you did, not just that you participated.

Q4: Should I include client projects and confidential work on LinkedIn?

A: Yes, you can include confidential projects. You don’t need to name the client or share sensitive details. Focus on describing your work, your approach, and the outcomes in general terms. For example: “Redesigned booking flow for marketplace platform, reducing checkout time by 40% and increasing conversion by 22%.” The specific company name is not important. Your demonstrated capability is.

Q5: How often should I update my projects section?

A: Add new projects as you complete significant work. For most professionals, this means adding a new project every three to six months. Update existing projects if they reach new milestones, get press coverage, or have new data on their impact. Refresh your featured projects at least once per year. A profile that feels current and active performs better than one that looks like it hasn’t been touched in years.

Q6: Can I remove projects from my profile after I’ve added them?

A: Yes, absolutely. LinkedIn allows you to remove, archive, or hide projects. If a project no longer represents your current capabilities or direction, remove it. You can always add it back later. Think of your projects section as a curated portfolio that should reflect where you are now and where you’re going, not necessarily where you’ve been.

Q7: Do projects help with LinkedIn’s algorithm and search visibility?

A: Yes. LinkedIn’s algorithm rewards profile completeness and content richness. Profiles with populated project sections rank higher in recruiter searches and are surfaced more often to network connections. Additionally, if you tag relevant skills to your projects, those skills become associated with concrete evidence of capability, which improves your visibility in skill-based searches.

Q8: What’s the best way to format a project description for readability?

A: Break your description into sections: Challenge, Solution, Results. Use line breaks between sections to create visual breathing room. Keep each section to two or three sentences. This makes the description easy to skim and understand in seconds. Avoid dense paragraphs of text. Use plain language. Focus on outcomes and impact, not just activities and tasks.

Q9: Should I feature projects on my LinkedIn profile, or is the projects section enough?

A: Feature your two or three strongest projects in the Featured section at the top of your profile. This ensures they’re seen immediately, before someone has to scroll. The full projects section is great for depth, but featuring ensures your best work is impossible to miss. Many recruiters spend only a few seconds on a profile. Featuring guarantees they see your strongest work.

Q10: Can I add projects from earlier in my career, or should I only include recent work?

A: You can add projects from any point in your career, but prioritize recent work. Projects from the past three years are most credible. Older projects are fine if they represent significant accomplishments or if they’re foundational to your expertise. However, if you have a choice between an older and a newer project of similar quality, feature the newer one. Recency signals that you’re still actively working and growing.

Q11: What if a project I’m proud of didn’t have a measurable business outcome?

A: You can still include it. Not all valuable work has a clean metric. Design projects, open-source contributions, research, or personal projects might not have revenue or conversion metrics attached. Focus on what was valuable about the work: did you solve a complex technical problem? Did you improve user experience? Did you establish a new pattern or best practice? Did you ship something that didn’t exist before? Those are all legitimate outcomes.

Q12: How do I handle projects where I led a team versus projects where I was an individual contributor?

A: Both are equally valuable. For team-led projects, emphasize your leadership and decision-making: “Led team of five to redesign checkout flow.” For individual contributor projects, emphasize the scope and impact: “Architected and deployed real-time analytics engine.” The type of project should match your current or desired role. If you’re positioning for leadership, feature projects where you led teams. If you’re positioning for technical depth, feature projects where you drove technical decisions.

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