Free playbook

    The Financial Adviser's
    LinkedIn Playbook

    What to post, how often, and how to stay compliant.

    A practical guide for UK financial advisers and advisory firms.

    Last updated: April 2026

    15-minute read
    7 chapters
    FCA compliance covered

    What's inside

    01

    Why LinkedIn Matters for Financial Advisers

    The business case for visibility

    02

    The 7 Content Categories That Work

    Market commentary, client questions, myth-busting & more

    03

    How Often to Post (And When)

    Frequency, timing, and the compound effect

    04

    The Weekly Framework: DIY vs Systemised

    Two approaches — one sustainable at scale

    05

    FCA Compliance: What You Need to Know

    Guardrails, not barriers

    06

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    Seven traps that kill consistency

    07

    Your First 4 Weeks

    A practical getting-started plan

    The Financial Adviser's LinkedIn Playbook

    Introduction

    37,136 authorised financial advisers in the UK. Fewer than 300 post consistently on LinkedIn.

    That's not because LinkedIn doesn't work for advisers. It's because nobody has shown advisers how to use it in a way that fits their world — their compliance requirements, their time constraints, their professional standards.

    This playbook fixes that.

    Inside, you'll find the 7 content categories that actually work for financial advisers, a simple weekly framework, FCA compliance guardrails, and practical frameworks you can use immediately.

    No growth hacks. No engagement bait. Just a structured approach to making the expertise you already have visible to the people who need it.

    Chapter 01

    Why LinkedIn Matters for Financial Advisers

    The research is clear

    • 96% of prospective clients research professionals online before making contact
    • LinkedIn is the dominant professional platform in the UK, with over 37 million members
    • Personal posts on LinkedIn generate 5-10x more reach and engagement than company page posts
    • Advisers who post consistently report improved referral conversations, inbound enquiries, and stronger client relationships

    The real business case

    LinkedIn isn't about becoming an influencer. It's about being findable and credible when prospective clients, referral partners, and COIs look you up — which they do.

    When a prospect is referred to your firm, the first thing they do is check LinkedIn. If they find a bare profile with no content, they have no evidence that the expertise your website claims actually exists. If they find an adviser who regularly shares market insight, client-relevant commentary, and professional perspective — trust starts building before the first meeting.

    The opportunity

    Fewer than 1% of UK financial advisers post consistently on LinkedIn. In a market with 37,136 authorised advisers, that's roughly 300 people.

    This means the bar is extraordinarily low. You don't need to be brilliant. You don't need to go viral. You just need to show up consistently with genuine expertise — and you'll stand out because almost nobody else is doing it.

    Chapter 02

    The 7 Content Categories That Work

    Not every type of content works for financial advisers. Motivational quotes, selfies, and engagement bait will damage your credibility more than silence.

    These 7 categories are specifically suited to professionals who sell trust and judgement.

    Category 1: Market Commentary

    Your perspective on market movements, economic data, or investment trends.

    Why it works: This is what clients pay you for — your interpretation of what's happening in markets.

    "Markets dropped 3% this week. Here's what I'm telling clients — and more importantly, here's what I'm not telling them."

    Compliance note: General market commentary is typically not classified as a financial promotion. Avoid specific investment recommendations.

    Category 2: Client Questions (Anonymised)

    Common questions you hear from clients, with your professional perspective.

    Why it works: If one client is asking, dozens of prospects are thinking it.

    "Three clients this month have asked me the same question about pension drawdown timing. Here's what I explained..."

    Compliance note: Always anonymise. Never reference specific client situations or identifiable details.

    Category 3: Myth-Busting

    Correcting common misconceptions about financial planning or investing.

    Why it works: Taking a clear position on a misconception demonstrates confidence and expertise.

    "The biggest myth in retirement planning isn't about the 4% rule. It's the assumption that your spending stays the same for 30 years."

    Compliance note: Frame as professional perspective. "In my experience..." rather than "You should..."

    Category 4: Industry Perspective

    Your take on trends, regulatory changes, or developments in the profession.

    Why it works: Positions you as someone who understands the profession deeply.

    "Consumer Duty is changing how we think about value. Here's what I think that means for how advisory firms communicate with clients."

    Compliance note: Industry commentary sits comfortably outside financial promotion territory.

    Category 5: Behind the Process

    Pulling back the curtain on how financial advice actually works.

    Why it works: Explaining your process builds trust because it demystifies the relationship.

    "Here's what actually happens in the first 90 days when a new client starts working with us."

    Compliance note: Describe processes in general terms. Avoid referencing specific products or performance.

    Category 6: Professional Lessons

    Insights from your career — what experience has taught you.

    Why it works: This is inherently authentic. Nobody else has your experience.

    "After 15 years in financial advice, the most valuable thing I've learned has nothing to do with investment returns."

    Compliance note: Personal reflection carries virtually no compliance risk. This is the safest category.

    Category 7: Contrarian Takes

    A well-reasoned opinion that challenges conventional thinking.

    Why it works: Contrarian content generates the most engagement because it provokes thought.

    "Unpopular opinion: the annual review meeting is the least valuable part of the adviser-client relationship."

    Compliance note: Frame as opinion clearly. "I believe...", "In my view..."

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    Chapter 03

    How Often to Post (And When)

    Frequency

    The baseline: Consistency. Some advisers post once a week. Others, once Calm Authority is up and running, post three to five times a week - in a fraction of the time. The number matters less than the rhythm. One post per week, every week, will build more authority than posting five times in one week and going silent for two months.

    Timing

    Best days: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

    Best times: 7:30–8:30am or 12:00–1:00pm (UK time)

    Consistency of schedule matters more than optimising the exact time. Pick a day and time. Stick to it.

    The Compound Effect

    One post is noise. Fifty-two posts is a reputation.

    Then somewhere around week 8–12, the compound effect kicks in. People start mentioning your posts in meetings. Prospects reference something you wrote. Professional connections begin to engage - not because you've chased them, but because your name has appeared in their feed consistently, and that familiarity builds credibility.

    This isn't instant gratification. It's compound interest applied to professional reputation.

    Chapter 04

    The Weekly Framework: DIY vs Systemised

    The single biggest reason advisers don't post on LinkedIn is the blank page. They sit down, stare at the cursor, and give up.

    There are two ways to solve this. You can do it yourself (this section shows you how), or you can use a system that eliminates the hardest parts. Both work. One is sustainable at scale.

    The DIY Approach (~45–60 minutes per week)

    If you're doing this yourself, here's the framework:

    Step 1 10–15 minutes

    Find Your Topic

    Choose one of the 7 content categories from Section 2. Then identify a specific angle: What came up in client meetings this week? What market development caught your attention? What question keeps coming up? What misconception did you encounter? What did you read that triggered a professional opinion? You're not looking for a perfect idea. You're looking for a starting point. This step is where most advisers stall.

    Step 2 25–35 minutes

    Write Your Post

    Use this simple structure. Line 1: The Hook — a single sentence that creates enough curiosity to keep reading. Lines 2–8: The Substance — your actual point, one idea clearly expressed, short paragraphs. Final Line: The Landing — end with a question, a takeaway, or a clear point of view. Length: 100–250 words is the sweet spot.

    Step 3 5 minutes

    Review and Post

    Read it once. Would I say this to a client? Does the first line make someone want to read the second line? Is there anything that could be misinterpreted? Then post it. Don't agonise. Don't wait for the "perfect" time. Don't save it as a draft and forget about it. Post it.

    Where the DIY Approach Breaks Down

    The framework above works. But it depends on two things that kill consistency:

    • 1.You have to find the topic yourself. Every week. On top of a full client load. The blank page returns.
    • 2.You have to write from scratch. Every week. Starting from nothing. In a voice that sounds like you, not like a rushed afterthought at 9pm on a Sunday.

    Most advisers who try the DIY approach maintain it for 3–4 weeks. Then a busy period hits - and because they haven't yet seen any results, there's nothing pulling them back to the page. The blank page wins, and LinkedIn goes quiet again.

    The Systemised Approach (Minutes, Not Hours)

    This is what Calm Authority was built to solve. The system handles the two hardest parts — finding the topic and writing the first draft — so the adviser's only job is the part they're best at: adding their professional judgement.

    Four ways to generate content:

    1

    Weekly Posts

    The system surfaces relevant, audience-aligned topics and generates batch drafts in the adviser's voice. The weekly rhythm that eliminates the blank page.

    2

    Generate from Article

    Read something interesting? Paste the URL. The system produces a draft with the adviser's own angle on it — not a summary, but their perspective on what the article means.

    3

    Generate from Idea

    Had a thought in a client meeting? A takeaway from a conference? Type the raw idea and the system turns it into a structured, publish-ready draft in the adviser's voice. With or without supporting web research.

    4

    Tone-of-Voice Mapping

    Underpins everything. Maps each adviser's actual writing style from real samples so every draft — however it's generated — sounds like them.

    StepWhat happensWho does itTime
    Topic & angleSystem surfaces it weekly, or adviser inputs an article/ideaCalm Authority + adviserDone for you
    First draftSystem generates a structured draft in the adviser's own voiceCalm AuthorityDone for you
    Review & editAdviser scans the draft, tweaks anything they want to sharpenThe adviserA few minutes
    PostAdviser publishes on LinkedInThe adviser1 minute

    Nothing is auto-published. The adviser is always in control. But the blank page is gone, the research is done, and the draft already sounds like them — because it's built from their actual writing voice.

    The system learns from every edit — what the adviser keeps, changes, and rejects — so drafts get sharper over time. Most advisers find that edits become lighter each week as the system calibrates.

    Which Approach Is Right?

    If you have one or two advisers who genuinely enjoy writing and can sustain a weekly habit independently — the DIY framework in this section will serve them well.

    If you want consistency across a team, if the blank page has already killed previous initiatives, or if writing from scratch every week isn't realistic — the systemised approach is what Calm Authority provides. Minutes per week instead of hours.

    Either way, the principles in this playbook (what to post, how to structure it, how to stay compliant) apply to both.

    The enemy of good LinkedIn content isn't bad writing. It's the unpublished draft.

    Chapter 05

    FCA Compliance: What Advisers Need to Know

    The Short Version

    Not everything you post on LinkedIn is a financial promotion.

    Advisers are allowed to share market commentary, professional observations and educational insights online. Thought leadership that explains trends, principles or experiences is usually outside financial promotion rules.

    The key test is simple:

    Does the post encourage someone to engage in a specific investment activity?

    If it does, it may be a financial promotion.

    If it doesn't, it is generally just commentary.

    What Counts as a Financial Promotion

    Under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000, a financial promotion is an invitation or inducement to engage in investment activity. For LinkedIn content to be a financial promotion, it would typically need to reference specific products, recommend particular actions, include performance data, or contain a direct call to action related to financial services.

    Practical Guardrails

    Always

    • • Frame opinions as opinions ("In my experience...")
    • • Anonymise any client references completely
    • • Focus on general principles, not specific products
    • • Include FCA registration in your LinkedIn profile

    ✗ Never

    • • Recommend specific investments or products
    • • Share client portfolio details or performance
    • • Make promises about returns or outcomes
    • • Post content that could be read as personalised advice

    The Bigger Risk

    Most advisers worry about the compliance risk of posting. Few consider the compliance risk of NOT posting. If your website claims your advisers are experts — but none have any visible evidence on LinkedIn — your marketing is making claims your digital presence can't support.

    Chapter 06

    Common Mistakes to Avoid

    1

    Writing Like a Brochure

    LinkedIn is not your website. Drop the corporate language. Write like you talk to clients — clear, direct, human.

    2

    Only Sharing Company Content

    Sharing your firm's blog posts is fine occasionally. But it's not thought leadership. The content that builds your personal authority is content written in your voice.

    3

    Overthinking Compliance

    The fear of saying something wrong stops most advisers from saying anything at all. Professional perspective and market commentary carry minimal compliance risk.

    4

    Posting Inconsistently

    Three posts in one week followed by six weeks of silence is worse than one post every week. Pick a rhythm you can sustain.

    5

    Asking for Business in Every Post

    LinkedIn is not a sales channel. It's a trust channel. Share insight. Build credibility. Let the business come to you.

    6

    Ignoring Engagement

    When someone comments on your post, respond. LinkedIn is a conversation platform, not a broadcast platform.

    7

    Waiting for the Perfect Post

    There is no perfect post. The post you publish today is infinitely more valuable than the brilliant idea you never write.

    Chapter 07

    Getting Started: Your First 4 Weeks

    Week 1

    Optimise Your Profile

    Headline: not just your job title — include what you do for clients. About section: 3–4 paragraphs in first person. Profile photo: professional and recent. Banner: your firm's branding. Contact info: make it easy.

    Week 2

    Your First Post

    Choose Category 6 (Professional Lessons) for your first post. Write about something you've learned in your career. This is the easiest category because it's entirely personal — no compliance concerns, no market analysis needed, just your experience. Use the DIY framework from Section 4. Draft it. Read it once. Post it.

    Week 3

    Build the Rhythm

    Post again. Try Category 1 (Market Commentary) or Category 2 (Client Questions). The goal isn't to write something brilliant. It's to prove you can do this twice in a row.

    Week 4

    Engage

    Post your third piece. Also spend 10 minutes engaging with others — advisers, referral partners, industry figures. Comment with genuine perspective, not "Great post!" This builds visibility beyond your own posts.

    After Week 4

    You now have a rhythm. One post per week. Rotate through the 7 categories.

    At this point, the question becomes: can you sustain this for 52 weeks?

    If you're doing it yourself, you'll need to find a new topic, write a new post from scratch, and carve out the best part of an hour every single week. Some advisers can maintain that. Most can't — not because they lack discipline, but because a full client load doesn't leave room for consistent content creation.

    That's why systems exist. Calm Authority reduces the weekly commitment to minutes — the draft arrives in your voice, you review it, sharpen it if needed, and post. The blank page never returns.

    This playbook gives you the framework.

    Calm Authority gives you the system that does it every week — in your voice, with compliance guardrails built in.

    Questions

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