Overview
LinkedIn, owned by Microsoft, has over 1 billion members in 2026 and is the clear market leader for professional networking. Integration with Microsoft 365 and Copilot has deepened its workplace relevance, while AI-powered job matching and content tools have updated a platform that was showing its age.
Job Search
This remains LinkedIn’s core value proposition. The AI matching now surfaces roles based on your full career trajectory, not just keywords. Easy Apply has streamlined applications. For active job seekers, LinkedIn Premium’s InSights (see how you rank against other applicants) is genuinely useful.
Networking
LinkedIn’s professional graph is irreplaceable. Connection requests, introduction paths, and alumni networks give you access to professional relationships you couldn’t build any other way. AI suggestions for who to connect with have improved dramatically in 2026.
The Feed Problem
LinkedIn’s feed is, frankly, often terrible. Humble-bragging posts, motivational platitudes, and engagement-bait content from semi-professional “thought leaders” dominate. The algorithm rewards engagement over quality. You can curate your feed by being selective with connections and follows, but it takes effort.
Premium
Starting at $39.99/month for Career, LinkedIn Premium is expensive. It unlocks InMail credits, who viewed your profile, and learning courses. For active job seekers or sales professionals, it pays for itself. For passive users, the free tier is sufficient.
Verdict
LinkedIn in 2026 is essential for professionals despite its feed problems. Treat it as a professional tool and database rather than a social feed, and the value is clear.