Starting in October, we began sharing our company journey here on LinkedIn. We did not document every single day, and we did not try to. We focused on a few specific things: sharing interesting conversations, filming our meetings and events, and building connections with other ecommerce brands. Two months later, the most useful change was not the one most people chase.

Why We Document Instead of Broadcast
There is a difference between documenting and broadcasting. Broadcasting is sitting down to invent something clever to say. Documenting is showing what is already happening: the conversation with a merchant, the meeting in a room, the event we attended. It is far easier to sustain, because the raw material is just the work we were doing anyway.
That is the part that makes it last. A broadcasting habit burns out, because inventing fresh insight every day is exhausting. A documenting habit compounds, because every week of real work is a week of material. We pointed a camera at the meetings and conversations that already mattered, and the content took care of itself.
What Two Months Actually Changed
Over those two months, I noticed a real boost. Not just in the number of followers, but in the quality of the content appearing in my own feed. That second part is the one worth paying attention to. When you start showing up with genuine work, the feed starts showing you more of the people doing genuine work. The network sorts itself toward substance.
Follower count is the metric everyone watches and the one that matters least. I would rather have a feed full of operators building real businesses than a large number next to my name. The quality of the room you are standing in beats the size of it, every time. This is the same reason I have written about twenty years on LinkedIn being mostly wasted until I changed how I used it.
Why the UK Room Is Worth Being In
There are so many smart people here in the UK who have taken their businesses from zero to a profitable ten, twenty, even fifty million pounds, creating jobs for many people along the way. Most of them are not loud about it. You only meet them if you are in the room, online or in person, and you are there to learn rather than to sell.
That is the whole point of documenting in public. It is an open invitation to those people. The same instinct sits behind why we started visiting our customers in person and how we won our first UK customers after relocating. Show the real work, be in the real rooms, and the right connections follow.
MageCloud Operating Note
What Documenting the Journey Produced
THE HABIT
Filming the work we already do
Conversations, meetings, and events, not invented daily insight.
THE PAYOFF
Better feed quality, not just more followers
The network sorted toward operators doing real work.
Paul Ryazanov · MageCloud · documenting beats broadcasting
Be kind, community, and keep creating and sharing quality content. If you are an ecommerce founder who wants to compare notes rather than pitch each other, come and find me at the next Ecommerce Camp UK. The room is full of the people I described above.