
By Welton Hong, founder and CEO, Ring Ring Marketing
On a quiet Thursday morning, the owner of a multi-location funeral home sat down with her office manager to review their LinkedIn company page analytics.
“Good news,” the manager said. “We had 1,800 post impressions this week.”
The owner nodded, then hesitated. “Is that … meaningful?”
The question lingered longer than the numbers.
Like many funeral professionals, she wasn’t lacking data. LinkedIn offered a steady stream of it, including impressions, page visitors, search appearances and follower growth. But it was unclear to her if the firm’s activity on LinkedIn was establishing trust or real connections with potential customers.
The Metric Trap in Funeral Service
Funeral service, like so many areas of deathcare, is fundamentally about trust built over time. Families rarely make immediate decisions. They observe. They remember. They take note of how a firm shows up in the community.
That makes LinkedIn more relevant than many funeral professionals realize.
Clergy, hospice leaders, estate attorneys, community influencers — even future client families — are forming impressions long before they ever walk through your doors. In many cases, LinkedIn becomes a quiet staging ground for credibility.
But too many firms fall into the same trap: tracking every available metric without understanding what any of it truly signals.
Not all numbers are created equal. Some clarify performance. Others create the illusion of progress.
What Actually Matters
The goal isn’t to identify the biggest number — it’s to identify the most meaningful one.
Start with impressions, but don’t confuse visibility with effectiveness.
Impressions tell you whether your content is being distributed — whether your firm is even appearing in the professional conversation. For a funeral home trying to maintain community presence in a digital-first world, that baseline visibility matters.
But impressions without engagement are empty.
A post seen by 2,000 people that generates no reactions, comments or shares isn’t building trust — it’s being scrolled past.
What distinguishes high-performing funeral homes is their ability to interpret impressions alongside engagement. When a hospice director comments on a post about grief support, or a local clergy member shares your reflection on memorial traditions, that’s not just activity — it’s validation.
In practical terms:
- Impressions answer: Did we show up?
- Engagement answers: Did it resonate?
The Overlooked Signal: Search Appearances
If impressions reflect visibility, search appearances reflect intent.
This is one of the most underutilized — and most revealing — metrics available to funeral professionals on LinkedIn.
When your funeral home appears in search results, someone is actively looking: for services, for a trusted provider, for guidance, or for a community partner.
In a profession where timing is unpredictable and urgency is real, that signal matters.
An upward trend in search appearances suggests that your firm is aligning with how people seek information — whether that’s through clearer service descriptions, more consistent posting, or stronger positioning.
If your impressions are healthy but search appearances remain flat, your content may be reaching people … but not the right people.
Followers: A Long-Term Asset
Follower growth is often misunderstood.
It’s not a vanity metric, but it’s not an immediate performance indicator either. It’s a lagging signal of sustained relevance.
When someone follows your funeral home, they opt into your narrative. Over time, that audience becomes something incredibly valuable: an owned channel of distribution.
And in funeral service, that audience often includes exactly who you want, such as community leaders, referral partners and families who may need your services in the future.
The key is consistency. A steady increase in followers over time is far more meaningful than sporadic spikes.
The Least Useful Metric
Page visitors can look encouraging, but on their own, they’re the weakest signal.
A visit doesn’t necessarily indicate intent. It could stem from curiosity, confusion, or even an accidental click.
Unless that visit leads to something deeper — engagement, a message, a connection — it’s simply digital foot traffic.
In funeral service, where decisions are deeply emotional and rarely immediate, this metric only matters when it connects to meaningful behavior.
What High-Performing Funeral Homes Do Differently
The firms seeing traction on LinkedIn aren’t posting more — they’re posting with purpose.
They understand that content isn’t about promotion. It’s about perception.
They tell stories that reflect the heart of their work, such as:
- A funeral director guiding a family through a heartfelt memorial service at an interesting venue outside the funeral home.
- A moment of quiet dignity during a service.
- A community vigil that brought people together in remembrance – perhaps on Moher’s Day, Father’s Day or another difficult time for the grieving.
These aren’t marketing messages. They are examples of service that resonate.
Funeral homes that excel on LinkedIn also broaden their content to include:
- Educational insights about planning, grief, or memorial options.
- Thoughtful commentary on trends like cremation, personalization, or green burial.
- Behind-the-scenes glimpses that show the people behind the profession.
And importantly, they engage.
They respond to comments. They acknowledge shares. They participate in conversations.
Practical Moves That Drive Results
For funeral professionals looking to elevate their presence on LinkedIn, the path forward is disciplined, not complicated.
Start with clarity. Your company page should immediately communicate who you serve, where you serve, and what distinguishes your firm. If a hospice coordinator or community partner lands on your page, there should be no ambiguity.
Commit to consistency. One thoughtful, relevant post per week will outperform a flurry of unfocused content.
Focus on conversation. Ask questions about traditions. Invite perspectives on remembrance. Highlight partnerships within your community.
And most importantly, watch for patterns, asking questions such as:
- Which posts spark dialogue?
- Which ones get shared by community leaders?
- Which ones quietly fade?
Your analytics are telling a story. The key is learning how to read it.
From Metrics to Meaning
Back in that Thursday morning meeting, the funeral home owner eventually reframed the conversation.
“Which posts actually led to conversations?” she asked.
Her manager pulled up the data. One stood out: a simple reflection on a memorial service where a family incorporated handwritten notes into the ceremony.
It didn’t have the highest impressions. But it had comments. It had shares. And it prompted a direct message from a local hospice nurse.
“That one,” the owner said. “That’s what matters.”
And just like that, the metrics began to mean something.
Because in funeral service, success on LinkedIn isn’t about chasing numbers.
It’s about earning trust — quietly, consistently, and at scale — one story, one interaction and one meaningful impression at a time.
Welton Hong is the founder & CEO of Ring Ring Marketing, which has helped over 600 small businesses grow their revenue through online marketing strategies. He is also the author of “Making Your Phone Ring with Internet Marketing for Funeral Homes.” Visit ringringmarketing.com and follow us on Facebook, LinkedIn, Instagram and X