👥 Real people, never bots • ⚡ Starts instantly • 🔒 No password needed • ♾️ Lifetime refill • 🔁 Reaches networks you don’t have
🔁 The post was good, and it still went nowhere
You put real thought into it. A sharp opening line, a point worth making, maybe a story from the job that took an hour to phrase right. You hit publish, and for a day it does the usual: a handful of reactions from people who already follow you, one or two comments, then it slides off the feed and is gone. Nobody outside your own circle ever saw it, because nobody carried it anywhere. The post was not weak. It just never left the room it was posted in, dying inside a follower count too small to matter on its own.
A share is the one action that moves your post into someone else’s world
Reactions and comments happen in place, seen mostly by people already in your corner. A share is different. When someone reposts your post, it lands inside their feed too, in front of their entire network, professionals who have never heard of you and were never going to scroll past your name on their own. LinkedIn’s feed also treats shares as one of its strongest signals a post is worth pushing further, so a post picking up reposts keeps surfacing to new people well after the day it went out. A share does not just add a number under your post. It is the mechanism that gets your work in front of an audience your own following could never reach by itself.
Why professionals actually go after shares
The reasons trace back to that one wall: a message that deserves a bigger room than the one it is stuck in. Founders and marketers want a launch post or a company update to travel into industries and job titles their own page never touches, because that is where the next client or hire is actually reading. Thought leaders want an idea to circulate on its own reputation, since a post carried by other people’s reposts reads as something the industry is genuinely talking about, not just something one account is pushing. Anyone with a launch, a webinar, or research riding on one post wants it seen past the same small circle that sees everything they write. None of it is vanity. It is wanting good work to travel as far as it deserves to.
🛡️ The doubt that shows up after you order, answered straight
Two questions surface once someone is ready to buy. The first is whether these shares are real people. They are genuine LinkedIn profiles reposting your content the same way anyone naturally reposts a post worth passing on, not automated accounts running a script. The second is whether it actually works the way it sounds. Reposts do put your content in front of networks it could never reach unassisted, and LinkedIn’s feed logic rewards a post that keeps getting reshared. The honest limit sits right beside that: reposts open the door, they do not write the post. A weak update will not travel far no matter how many times it gets carried, and a strong one earns every room it reaches.
Real profiles, never bots, and nothing that risks your account
Nearly every worry about bought shares traces back to bot activity, hollow accounts that get purged and take your numbers down with them the moment a platform sweeps them out. We leave that out entirely. Every repost comes from a genuine, active LinkedIn profile choosing to carry your post, so nothing about it reads as staged. No password or login is ever asked for, since a share only needs your public post link. A lifetime refill backs every order too, so the share count you paid for stays yours as long as the post is live, replaced free if it ever naturally slips.
Frequently Asked Questions
It reposts your content into the sharer’s own feed, so everyone in their network sees it too, including professionals who have never seen your profile or followed your page. Reactions and comments stay attached to your original post; a share is the one action that physically moves your content into a different network.
Yes. Each repost is made by an active professional account that carries your post into its own feed, exactly what anyone does when they find something worth passing on. No bot accounts or automated scripts are involved at any point.
A like registers approval on your post and stays there, visible only to people already looking at it. A share physically reposts your content into the sharer’s own network, so it reaches an entirely new set of feeds your post could not access on its own.
No. LinkedIn does not break out view counts by how a viewer arrived, so there is no separate stat showing traffic from reposts specifically. What you can see is the repost count itself, plus any lift in overall reactions and comments once a post starts circulating past your own network.
No login or password of yours is ever needed, since a repost only requires your public post link. Growing reach this way sits in the same terms-of-service territory as other growth tactics, not a security violation, and the process never touches your account settings or login.
Yes. LinkedIn’s feed logic treats reposts as one of the stronger signals that a post is worth continuing to surface, so a post gathering shares tends to keep appearing to new viewers well past its first day, instead of dropping off after the usual short window.
Not quite. A LinkedIn repost carries the post into the sharer’s network the same basic way a retweet does, but LinkedIn’s feed surfaces reposts differently and the platform does not display share-driven view data the way some other networks show retweet analytics.
Yes. A plain repost still places your content directly in the sharer’s feed and their full network, which is the reach benefit. A comment added on top can draw more attention to that specific repost, but it is not required for the post to land in front of a new audience.
The repost count you order is locked to your post for as long as it stays live, with no expiry and no renewal fee. If any share ever naturally falls off, we add it back at no charge. It is a one-time purchase we back for life, never a recurring subscription that bills again.
There is no official threshold, but a handful of reposts rarely carries a post far past the original network. Posts tied to a launch, a piece of research, or a company update usually aim for enough reposts that the content keeps resurfacing to new viewers over several days rather than fading after the first.

Reviews
There are no reviews yet.