Linkedin Tips & Strategies

How to See All Posts on LinkedIn

By Spencer Lanoue
October 31, 2025

Trying to find a specific post you saw on LinkedIn last week can feel like searching for a needle in a haystack. The platform's algorithm is designed to show you what's new and relevant now, not what you saw yesterday. This guide cuts through the noise and shows you exactly how to see all posts from a specific person, company, or even find your own activity history.

Finding Your Own Posts & Activity on LinkedIn

Ever publish a post and then immediately struggle to find it again? You’re not alone. Your LinkedIn profile is your personal content library, and thankfully, the platform makes it straightforward to review everything you’ve shared, commented on, or liked. This is invaluable for repurposing content, tracking engagement, or simply revisiting old ideas.

Here’s the step-by-step process:

  1. Navigate to Your Profile: Click on your profile picture (or the "Me" icon) in the top navigation bar and select "View Profile."
  2. Find the "Activity" Section: Below your main profile summary (your headline, location, etc.), you'll see a section labeled "Activity." By default, it might show a few recent actions.
  3. Click "Show All Activity": To see the full picture, click "Show All Activity." This will take you to your dedicated activity feed.

Once you’re on the activity page, you’ll see several tabs at the top that allow you to filter your history:

  • Posts: This tab shows only the content you’ve created and published yourself. It includes text posts, images, videos, and shared articles. This is the best place to go if you want to find something you specifically published.
  • Comments: Here you can see a complete history of every comment you’ve left on other people’s posts. It's a great way to re-engage in conversations or remember what you said on a popular topic.
  • Reactions: This shows all the posts you've reacted to with a like, celebrate, support, etc.
  • Articles: If you use LinkedIn's publishing platform for long-form content, all of your articles will be housed here.
  • Documents: Shows all the documents (like PDFs or slide decks) you've shared.

Knowing how to navigate your own activity feed is a fundamental skill for any active LinkedIn user. It helps you maintain a consistent brand voice, track your engagement patterns, and easily find past content to reshare or reference.

How to Find and See All Posts from Another Person

Whether you're researching a potential client, following an industry influencer, or just trying to catch up on a connection's content, knowing how to find all their posts is extremely useful. You don't have to rely on the main feed algorithm to show you their content, you can go straight to the source.

The process is nearly identical to finding your own posts:

  1. Go to Their Profile: Use the search bar at the top of LinkedIn to find the person you're looking for and click on their name to visit their profile page.
  2. Locate Their "Activity" Section: Just like with your own profile, scroll down past their professional summary until you see the "Activity" section. It's usually found just below their "Featured" section, if they have one.
  3. Click "Show All Activity": This link takes you to their public activity feed.

Here, you'll have access to similar filter tabs as you do for your own profile: All, Posts, Articles, and Documents. Their comments and reactions are typically private, so you won't see tabs for those types of activities.

Three Scenarios Where This is Incredibly Helpful:

  • Sales & Networking: Before a meeting with a new prospect, quickly review their recent posts and comments. You can learn what topics they care about, find common ground, and reference their recent content to show you've done your homework.
  • Learning from an Expert: Are you following a thought leader in your field? Instead of waiting for their posts to appear in your feed, go directly to their profile to binge-read their content and catch up on everything you might have missed.
  • Competitor Analysis: You can learn a lot about a competitor's strategy by looking at what their leaders or key employees are posting about. It provides insight into their company culture, marketing focus, and areas of expertise.

Finding Posts from a LinkedIn Company Page

Looking for content from a specific company is just as easy. Whether you're researching a company for a job interview or tracking a competitor, this gives you a direct line to their official communications.

To see all posts from a Company Page:

  1. Search for the Company: Use the top search bar to find the business.
  2. Go to their Page: Click on their name in the search results to navigate to their official LinkedIn Page.
  3. Filter for "Posts" on the Page: Right on the main page view, you'll find tabs such as Home, About, Posts, Jobs, etc. Click on the Posts tab.

This will show you a reverse chronological feed of everything that business has published. Unlike personal profiles, company pages don’t bundle their content inside an “Activity” section, making it more direct. You can filter their posts by content type like videos, images, or documents, giving you an unfiltered look at their content strategy.

Why You Can't "See All Posts" in Your Main Feed

Many users wonder, "How can I see every single post from all my connections in chronological order?" The short answer is: you can't. LinkedIn's main feed is not a chronological list of everything happening in your network. It's a highly curated experience driven by an algorithm designed to keep you engaged.

The algorithm prioritizes content based on factors like:

  • Relevance: Posts related to topics, companies, and people you interact with most often.
  • Engagement: Posts with lots of likes, comments, and reshares get shown to more people.
  • Timeliness: Fresher content is often prioritized, but popular older posts can resurface.
  • Your Relationship: You're more likely to see posts from people you frequently engage with.

How to "Train" the Algorithm to See More of What You Want

While you can't revert to a simple chronological feed, you can influence what the algorithm shows you. Here’s how to tell LinkedIn who you want to hear from most:

  1. Engage with Their Content: The simplest signal you can send is engagement. When you like, comment on, and reshare posts from a specific person or company, LinkedIn learns you value their content and will show you more of it.
  2. "Hit the Bell": This is the most direct way to get notified. Go to a person's profile, and you'll see a little bell icon near their name in the banner area. Clicking this bell means you'll receive a notification every time they publish a new post. It's the LinkedIn equivalent of subscribing to a creator.
  3. Follow Relevant Hashtags: Following hashtags related to your industry (e.g., #socialmediamarketing or #brandstrategy) helps the algorithm understand your interests and show you more posts on those topics.

By actively managing who and what you engage with, you can shape your feed to be a much more valuable and relevant source of information, even if it's not a complete, unfiltered list of all posts.

Using Advanced Search to Find Specific Posts

Sometimes, you're not looking for all posts from one person, but all posts about a specific topic. This is where LinkedIn's search filters become your best friend. They allow you to sift through the millions of posts on the platform to find exactly what you need.

Here’s how to use the search filters effectively:

  1. Start a Broad Search: Type a keyword or phrase into the main search bar at the top of the page (e.g., "organic social media growth") and hit Enter.
  2. Filter by "Posts": On the search results page, you’ll see filter buttons like People, Companies, Posts, Jobs, etc., right below the search bar. Click the Posts button to narrow the results to only user-generated content.
  3. Access "All Filters" and refine in: Now for the real power: click on the "All Filters" button at the far end of the filters bar. This opens up a panel with powerful options:
    • Author: Find content from a first- or second-degree connection, or find a post from a specific employee at a company.
    • Date Posted: Looking for a post you saw a month ago? You can search within the past 24 hours, week, month, etc.
    • Sort by: The default is "Best Match," but for news and trending topics, change it to "Recent" to see a chronological feed for your query.

Mastering these search filters elevates you from a casual browser to a power user. You can find key conversations, track brand mentions with precision, and uncover valuable content that the main feed's algorithm would never show you.

Final Thoughts

Finding all the posts on LinkedIn from a specific individual or company isn't about some hidden trick, it's just about knowing where to look. By going directly to the "Activity" or "Posts" section on a profile, you bypass the main feed algorithm and get a complete, unfiltered view of their content history, giving you control over the information you consume.

While navigating LinkedIn’s feed shows you what others are doing, managing your own content is where professional strategy comes in. To bring that same sense of clarity and organization to our own publishing efforts at Postbase, we built features like the visual content calendar. It allows us to see our entire content schedule across every platform at a glance, making it simple to plan ahead and build a consistent brand presence without getting lost in spreadsheets. With Postbase, you can replace the chaos of reactive posting with a calm, organized workflow for your own brand.

Spencer's spent a decade building products at companies like Buffer, UserTesting, and Bump Health. He's spent years in the weeds of social media management—scheduling posts, analyzing performance, coordinating teams. At Postbase, he's building tools to automate the busywork so you can focus on creating great content.

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