If you’re considering stepping away from corporate life to start consulting, even if you aren’t ready to take the full leap, LinkedIn can be your best low-risk testing ground.
Forget about designing a website, doing email campaigns or paid ads, or getting business cards printed (which no one uses anyway).
You can use LinkedIn to land your first clients and all it takes is the tiniest investment of your time.
Here’s exactly how to use LinkedIn to see if there’s demand for your skills and land your first client—before you even leave your day job.
Optimize Your LinkedIn Profile (Especially Your Headline)
Before you start posting or reaching out, make sure your profile is doing the heavy lifting.
Many people still have a headline like: “VP of Operations at XYZ Corp.”
That might be fine for recruiters—but if you’re testing the waters as a consultant, you want to signal your expertise without waving a red flag to alert your employer.
Here’s how:
✅ Rewrite your headline to focus on the problem you solve, not just your job title.
For example: COO | Streamline operations so SaaS companies can scale faster | Ops Strategy | Process Optimization
You don’t need to explicitly say “consultant” yet. But the focus shifts from you to the value you offer.
✅ Update your About section: Briefly mention your background, but spend more time on:
- Who you help
- What specific challenges you solve
- How you approach solutions
Think of it as your unofficial pitch, without feeling salesy.
Post About the Problems You Solve & Share Practical Advice
If people don’t know what kind of problems you’re an expert at solving, they won’t think about hiring or referring you.
Start sharing short, insightful posts that:
- Address common pain points in your industry
- Offer lessons or advice drawn from your experience
- Share quick frameworks or mistakes to avoid
For example:
- 3 reasons operations bottlenecks kill SaaS growth
- What most leaders miss when restructuring teams
- Trying to reduce churn? Start by looking at [X process]…
The goal isn’t to pitch. The goal is to stay top-of-mind as a go-to person when people encounter those problems.
Send Private Messages to People Most Likely to Refer You
One of the fastest ways to test demand is simple: Reach out to people who already trust you:
- Former colleagues
- Past clients
- Industry peers
- Vendors or partners you’ve worked with
You can send something like:
Hey [Name], I’ve done a couple projects recently helping [types of organizations] with [your area of expertise]. If you know anyone looking for assistance with [specific problem], feel free to connect us. I’d be happy to see if I can help.
It’s casual, non-pushy, and reminds them of what you can offer. Often, people don’t realize you’re available until you tell them.
Engage on Posts from Industry Thought Leaders to Raise Visibility
Here’s a lesser-known move: Regularly comment on posts from well-known thought leaders, influencers, and peers in your industry.
But not generic “Great post!” comments. Instead:
- Add a personal insight
- Share an example or some data from your experience
- Ask a thoughtful follow-up question
This does two things:
- Gets your name in front of their audience (who might also need your expertise)
- Builds relationships with leaders who may refer or collaborate with you down the line
Visibility on LinkedIn isn’t just about what you post. It’s about showing up consistently in conversations with people who already have your target clients’ attention.
Simple Steps
You don’t need to overhaul your life or business overnight.
A few strategic moves on LinkedIn—tweaking your profile, sharing your expertise, starting conversations—can quietly open doors and show you whether people are willing to pay for your skills.
And when that first client lands? You’ll know you’ve got something real to build on.
If you want help, let’s talk. We can design a strategy for you, draft messages, and lightly update your profile.