How Schools Can Build Their Brand on LinkedIn
LinkedIn plays a growing role in how Australian schools present themselves — not just to potential staff, but to families, partners, and the wider community. It’s one of the few platforms where credibility, culture, and capability can sit side by side.
For education marketers, the challenge isn’t whether to be on LinkedIn, but how to use it in a way that feels genuine, consistent, and worth paying attention to. The strongest school brands on LinkedIn don’t try to sound impressive. They focus on clarity, people, and purpose.
Here are practical ways schools can build a LinkedIn presence that feels professional without feeling corporate.
Start With Your People, Not Just Your Page
Many schools put significant effort into their LinkedIn page but overlook the reach and influence of their own staff. Leadership teams, teachers, and support staff already have established networks — and when those networks are connected to the school page, visibility increases naturally.
What this looks like in practice:
Ensure staff profiles list the school as their employer and link back to the official page.
Provide a simple, well-designed LinkedIn header staff can choose to use, rather than enforcing rigid branding.
Share key posts internally and explain why engagement matters, instead of assuming it will happen organically.
Reuse LinkedIn content in internal emails or newsletters so it stays visible.
When school content is shared by people rather than only by the page itself, it tends to feel more credible and performs better across the platform.
Use LinkedIn Newsletters to Build Familiarity Over Time
LinkedIn newsletters offer schools a way to communicate regularly without needing to post constantly.
They work well because:
- LinkedIn actively prioritises them in the feed
- Subscribers receive email notifications
- Pages and individual profiles can both publish them
- Subscribing requires minimal effort
For schools, newsletters can be used to share updates such as:
- Insights from school leaders
- Program highlights, including senior pathways or VET options
- Student outcomes and achievements
- Perspectives on education and wellbeing
Over time, this type of content helps schools remain visible and familiar — particularly for families and educators who are still in the decision-making phase.

