I think many people still look at LinkedIn like it’s just another social media app.
But honestly, LinkedIn is very different from platforms like Instagram, TikTok, or X. And one of the biggest reasons for that is the fact that LinkedIn is owned by Microsoft.
Because once you understand that connection, you also start understanding why LinkedIn feels much more integrated into the professional world than most other social media platforms.
It’s not just a place to post content.
It’s part of a much bigger professional ecosystem.
Microsoft quietly connects LinkedIn with work tools
One thing I personally find very interesting is how often LinkedIn already appears inside other Microsoft products without people even noticing it consciously.
For example, when I write somebody an email through Outlook, I can immediately see recommendations connected to that person’s LinkedIn profile. Their background, profile photo, position, company, and professional information become visible almost instantly.
And this changes the dynamic completely.
Because suddenly your LinkedIn profile is not living separately from your work life. It becomes integrated into professional communication itself.
That’s a huge difference compared to most social platforms.

LinkedIn benefits from Microsoft’s professional trust
This is also why LinkedIn feels much more trust based than many other platforms.
Microsoft is deeply connected to the corporate world.
Big companies use Outlook.
They use Microsoft Teams.
They use Copilot.
They use Microsoft Office products every single day.
And because LinkedIn sits inside that ecosystem, it naturally inherits part of that professional credibility.
That’s something platforms focused mainly on entertainment simply do not have in the same way.
Why this matters for founders and business owners
In my experience, this matters a lot for founders, consultants, and B2B businesses specifically.
Because if your target audience includes professionals, executives, corporations, investors, or decision makers, LinkedIn places you directly inside the environment where these people already work daily.
That’s powerful.
You are not interrupting people with random entertainment content. You are appearing inside a professional context where trust and business conversations already exist naturally.
And that changes how people perceive your content.
Corporates are where a lot of the money is
This is something I say very openly.
Depending on your business model, corporates are often where the money is.
Founders.
Executives.
Decision makers.
Enterprise companies.
These are the people controlling large budgets and large opportunities. And these are also the people deeply integrated into the Microsoft ecosystem already.
Which means LinkedIn is strategically positioned exactly where professional attention already exists.
LinkedIn feels different because the intention is different
I think this is why LinkedIn content behaves differently compared to many other platforms.
On TikTok or Instagram, people often enter the platform mainly to escape, relax, or consume entertainment.
But on LinkedIn, people arrive with a professional mindset already activated.
They are thinking about careers.
Business.
Growth.
Opportunities.
Industry insights.
And because Microsoft’s ecosystem is built around work and productivity, LinkedIn naturally reinforces that professional environment even further.

The Microsoft connection will probably become even more important with AI
I also think the Microsoft ownership will become even more important in the AI era.
Because Microsoft is investing massively into AI tools like Copilot and integrating AI across its ecosystem. And when you combine AI, work tools, communication systems, and LinkedIn data together, the professional ecosystem becomes extremely powerful.
We are already starting to see these integrations happening quietly.
And I honestly think this is only the beginning.
LinkedIn is becoming infrastructure, not just social media
This is why I personally don’t really see LinkedIn as “just another platform” anymore.
I see it more as professional infrastructure.
Your profile becomes part of your online reputation. Your content becomes part of your credibility. Your visibility becomes part of your business positioning.
And because LinkedIn is connected to one of the biggest professional technology ecosystems in the world through Microsoft, that positioning becomes even more valuable over time.
And if you want to learn how to actually use LinkedIn strategically, build trust online, position yourself professionally, and create a personal brand that supports long term business growth, that’s exactly what we focus on inside Digital Business College ELITE, my self-paced system for founders and professionals building authority in the modern digital world.
