I hope this is not you! Many senior executives spend years building their careers, only to destroy their first impression within five seconds on LinkedIn.
I skip more senior LinkedIn profiles because of poor presentation than most candidates probably realize.
One of the biggest red flags on LinkedIn has nothing to do with experience, education, or job titles.
It is better not to be on LinkedIn at all than to be there with an incomplete and amateur profile.
Probably, the biggest mistake people make on LinkedIn is ignoring the banner image at the top of their profile. In my opinion, it is one of the most overlooked and misunderstood parts of the entire platform.
Many people leave it blank. Others upload a generic skyline, a mountain photo, or a random holiday picture that has absolutely nothing to do with their professional identity.
Time and time again, the banner space is wasted. Your Instagram-like photos may look attractive, but they tell the visitor nothing useful.
A strong LinkedIn banner is strategic
Think of your banner as a billboard on a busy highway. You have only a few seconds to communicate something meaningful before people move on.
A good banner immediately helps visitors understand who you are, what role you perform, and the industry in which you operate.
It supports your professional brand and creates a stronger first impression before anybody reads a single line of your experience.
Your LinkedIn banner is not decoration
Your banner is a valuable professional space. It is meant to support your personal brand and immediately communicate something meaningful about who you are, what you do, and which industry you work in.
Recruiters notice these things. Hiring managers notice these things. Clients notice these things.
That reality completely changes the importance of your LinkedIn profile. Your profile is no longer an optional online Resume or CV. It has become your professional shop window and storefront.
Introducing: LinkedIn Shop Window
As an executive recruitment professional, I often describe the very top section of a LinkedIn profile as the “LinkedIn Shop Window.”
The comparison is simple. When you walk through a shopping mall, some stores catch your attention immediately while others are ignored completely.
The difference is often the shop window itself. Good shops understand how to stop people, create curiosity, and encourage them to walk inside.
LinkedIn works exactly the same way.
When someone opens your profile, they first see your banner, profile photo, name, and headline. That is it.
Nobody initially studies your full career history or scrolls through every position you have held. Within seconds, people decide whether your profile looks relevant, professional, credible, or worth exploring further.
People form impressions quickly. Before anybody reads your work experience or qualifications, their eyes land on the visual presentation of your profile.
A strong banner creates consistency and professionalism. It signals that you pay attention to detail and that you take your professional presence seriously.
A weak LinkedIn banner makes me skip your profile
A good LinkedIn banner should help people understand your professional identity almost instantly. If you work in marketing, your banner might reference campaigns, branding, or creative work.
If you work in finance, operations, engineering, HR, or technology, the banner should still reinforce your expertise and industry focus in a clear and professional way.
The important point is clarity. Somebody landing on your profile should quickly understand what kind of professional they are looking at.
Ask yourself: If someone only saw my banner, would they understand what I do?
It does not mean your banner needs to become overly complicated. In fact, simple usually works better. The best banners are intentional, clean, and aligned with your industry and function.
There are also practical details people often forget
Your profile photo covers part of the lower left section of the banner space, so important text or visuals should not sit there.
The image should also work on both desktop and mobile because LinkedIn crops banners differently depending on the device.
Free tools such as Canva make it relatively easy today to create professional looking LinkedIn banners without advanced design skills.
Your banner should also evolve together with your career. If you move industries, launch a business, change direction, or reposition yourself professionally, your LinkedIn banner should reflect that change.
Too many professionals leave outdated profiles untouched for years while wondering why they attract little attention online.
The reality is straightforward. LinkedIn has become the modern business directory for professional reputation, networking, recruitment, and career opportunities.
The top of your profile functions as your shop window.
The question is simple. When people arrive at your profile, will they stop and look, or continue scrolling past?
When was the last time you looked at your own LinkedIn Shop Window?