
Naïlé Titah
Ayesha Ameer brands herself "LinkedIn Signal-Led Growth Systems for B2B Founders and Execs," and the founder of Mentoria Digitals tells the story of how she got there more often than almost any creator we track. At MagicPost, we analyzed 629 of her LinkedIn posts from the last two years: what she writes, when, for whom, and what makes her style worth studying. This is who she is, according to the best possible source: her own posts, measured.

Her story, in her own posts
You do not need a biographer for Ameer. She retells her own origin constantly, and the data shows which version she favors.
The before/after. Her single most-repeated move is a two-line time jump. "4 years ago, I didn't even have a LinkedIn account. Today, I'm in the Top 10 for LinkedIn Growth Worldwide," one version opens. "3 years ago, I didn't have a LinkedIn account. Today, I'm in the UK's top 1%," says another. "2020: I didn't have LinkedIn. 2024: I'm the Top 3 LinkedIn UK Female Creator in Marketing & Sales," says a third. Not one post: a template, re-shipped with the newest ranking.
The lurker who was scared to post. Underneath the rankings is a more honest chapter. "In 2021, I was a LinkedIn lurker. The idea of posting made me cringe," she wrote, recalling elsewhere that "in my first month on LinkedIn, I was getting zero likes. But I stuck with it. Slowly, I started getting 5-10 likes. Then 50-100."
The hijab, defended twice. Two of her biggest posts ever are near-identical. "Last year, someone questioned my hijab," one begins, pivoting to "I started sharing my journey on LinkedIn because I saw something missing: Hijabi women weren't visible enough in professional spaces." Seven months earlier she had written the same beat: "Last week, I received a message questioning my choice to wear a headscarf in the 21st century... I started posting on LinkedIn to empower hijabi women." Same wound, same resolution, two of her top four posts.
The introvert who moved to slow down. Against the loud-networker stereotype she insists on the opposite ("I'm an introvert running a LinkedIn agency... I'm not your typical 'networking enthusiast'. Yet, I live on LinkedIn. Funny, right?", here), and her recent arc is about deliberately slowing down: "5 weeks ago I packed my bags, moved to Saudi Arabia, and started a new life," she wrote from a home near Masjid Nabawi, "A calm mind builds better than a busy one ever will."
The detail our data surfaces that a normal bio never would: her origin story is not a post, it is a franchise. At least eight near-duplicate "X years ago I didn't have LinkedIn, today I'm ranked #N" posts run across the corpus, each swapping in the latest ranking (UK top 1%, top 5 for personal branding, #7 worldwide). The lesson is very Ameer: when a story works, update the number and run it again.
What she actually talks about

She is, on paper, a marketer, but the feed is narrower: social-media and LinkedIn content is her largest pillar (210 posts, about 427 median likes), with content and general marketing filling most of the rest. Two details beat the ranking:
The smaller themes punch hardest. "LinkedIn" as a topic (about 437 median likes) and Entrepreneurship (about 408) out-engage her content-marketing (220) and marketing (225) posts by nearly two to one. When she zooms out to building a business, her audience leans in.
Categorized by register, roughly a third of her analyzed posts sell something through value, the next-largest buckets being punchy standalone advice and recaps of her own situation. She is a textbook case of an audience that tolerates constant promotion because the promotion is dressed as a lesson or a milestone.
Who she writes for
Her reader is explicit in her own words: the early creator who is scared to start, the woman who has been told she cannot, and the founder who wants growth without the grind. She writes to the person stuck at zero likes ("Most people give up on LinkedIn way too soon," her words), and to "every woman who's been told she can't" (here). The offers match: an agency, an accelerator and a newsletter, all aimed at founders and execs who want her to run the system for them.
Her best posts of 2026
Her three biggest posts of 2026 so far (click through to the originals):

1,417 likes. Forty-odd words, almost no information: "Sometimes you don't need many words. Just gratitude. Just quiet excitement." Her most-liked post of the year is also her shortest, and it pulled 775 comments. On her audience, warmth outperforms instruction.

770 likes. A birthday spent performing Umrah, framed as a list of things she stopped doing ("You stop measuring your life by metrics"). Faith and reflection, not tactics.

557 likes. A practical guide to supporting Muslim colleagues during Ramadan ("Give deadlines with breathing room, not pressure"). Her most-reposted banger of the set: it handed readers something to forward.
Notice the pattern: her three biggest posts of 2026 are about gratitude, faith and identity, not LinkedIn growth.
Is she still growing?

Here the data is honest, and it is worth being honest about. Her median post fell from 428 likes in 2024 to 346 in 2025 to 169 in 2026, even as her follower count climbed toward 78,000. This is the most common shape on LinkedIn right now: reach per post compresses while the audience keeps growing. One note on method: we measure engagement, not followers over time, so this chart tracks how hard each post lands, not audience size, which is still rising. The story her posts tell ("I hit 50K," "I reached 40K") is one of steady follower growth; the like counts are a separate, tougher curve.
Where do these charts come from? Everything on this page runs on MagicPost's LinkedIn analytics, and it works on your profile too: your best posts, your audience, your benchmark, even a side-by-side with creators like Ameer.
How she writes (the conversation engine)
Here is Ameer against the average creator, and the headline is not in the word count:

Metric (per post) | Ayesha Ameer | Average creator* |
Words | ~161 | 185 |
Words in the hook | 11 | 11 |
Words per paragraph | 8 | 13 |
Words per sentence | 7 | 10 |
Emojis | 1 | 2 |
Exclamation marks | 0 | 1 |
Hashtags | 0 | 0 |
Hooks built on numbers | 44% | 22% |
*Median across the 3,344 creators we analyzed with 20+ posts each.
Her length is unremarkable (161 words against a 185 average), so the style does not live there. It lives in two numbers. First, she opens 44% of her posts with a number, double the typical creator: "4 years ago," "On Monday 16 December," "October 2021: 200 LinkedIn connections." The numeric hook is her reflex. Second, her paragraphs run eight words and her sentences seven, well under the 13 and 10 of the average: the white-space, one-line-at-a-time rhythm that scrolls well on mobile.
But the most distinctive number is one no benchmark column can hold: her median post earns 364 likes and 348 comments, a near one-to-one ratio, where most creators see comments run a small fraction of likes. Her posts read like questions, and the audience answers: almost every post ends on a direct "P.S." prompt ("When did you join LinkedIn?"). She is not running a broadcast; she is running a conversation engine.
The "AI tells" in her style (read this the right way)
Run her writing through the patterns people now call "AI tells," and something familiar shows up:

Two in five of her posts use the "It's not X, it's Y" contrast formula, the single most flagged "AI" pattern on LinkedIn ("It's not just about numbers, it's about making an impact"). A third lean on a reveal bridge ("Here's what happened," "Here's the truth"), a third on a generic advice frame, and about a quarter open with a "Here's how" setup.
Do not read it backwards. Ameer does not write like an AI; AI writes like Ameer. These moves read as robotic today because the models trained on the best creators of this platform and then stacked all of them at once, in every post. Ameer uses them one at a time, where the story carries them, and the other half of her fingerprint is what AI cannot resist adding and she refuses to: she never hedges ("it's worth noting that..."), and she never opens a line with a throat-clearing "Moreover." The restraint is the signature. (Full story: how to spot AI writing on LinkedIn.)
When she posts
Ameer publishes about 6 times a week, favorite slot Tuesday 9 AM, with 59% of her posts in the morning and a modest 17% on weekends. That morning-heavy, weekday-led cadence lines up with what our best-time research finds about the early window, her volume sits inside the healthy range from our posting-frequency study, and Tuesday being her top day matches the best-day data too. Given that comments matter as much as likes for her, part of her playbook is showing up in other people's comments daily ("I've left thoughtful comments every day," her words): that is exactly what an engagement feed is for, the people she wants to reach, every day, without hunting the timeline.
What to steal from Ayesha Ameer
Build a before/after origin and re-run it. Her "X years ago I had no LinkedIn, today I'm ranked #N" template earned hundreds of likes again and again, refreshed with each new ranking. Your origin story is an asset, not a one-off.
End on a question, every time. Her near one-to-one comment-to-like ratio is no accident: almost every post closes on a direct "P.S." prompt. Comments are reach, and she engineers them.
Open with a number. 44% of her hooks are numeric, double the norm. A date or count in line one is her most reliable scroll-stopper.
Let the personal posts breathe. Her three biggest posts of 2026 were about gratitude, faith and identity, not tactics. Audiences built on advice still reward sincerity.
One AI move per post, never six. The contrast formula in two of five posts, used where it lands, is a signature. Stacked, they would be an AI tell.
Study her, then study yourself. With MagicPost you can dig into Ayesha Ameer's numbers the way we just did, analyze your own LinkedIn analytics with the same depth, and write in the spirit of her style, in your own voice.
Where this data comes from
Everything here is MagicPost's own research. We analyzed 629 of Ayesha Ameer's posts from the last two years: timing, engagement, topics, writing metrics, and the AI-pattern profile from a 30-post style sample. Every biographical claim is quoted from one of her own public LinkedIn posts and linked to it. Ameer is not affiliated with MagicPost; her style is one of those MagicPost tracks closely. (She has, in her own posts, named MagicPost among the tools she works with.)
SSS
Who is Ayesha Ameer?
A Pakistani-Norwegian founder, now based in Medina, Saudi Arabia, who runs Mentoria Digitals, a LinkedIn personal-branding agency for B2B founders and execs. She started on LinkedIn around 2021 as, in her words, a "lurker," and grew to roughly 78,000 followers, ranking among the top LinkedIn branding creators worldwide.
How does Ayesha Ameer make money?
By her own public account: a personal-branding agency (a team of 7 to 8) serving founders and CEOs, plus an accelerator, a newsletter and brand partnerships. She has said she has helped "150+ founders and CEOs" on LinkedIn.
How often does Ayesha Ameer post on LinkedIn?
About 6 posts a week in our data, most often around 9 AM, with Tuesday her top day and 59% of posts in the morning.
Does Ayesha Ameer write with AI?
Her style reads intensely human: a tight, one-line rhythm and a closing question on nearly every post. The twist is that AI tools learned from creators like her, which is why two in five of her posts contain the "It's not X, it's Y" pattern people now mislabel as an AI tell, while she avoids the filler AI adds.
Is Ayesha Ameer still growing on LinkedIn?
Her follower count is still climbing (toward 78,000), but her median likes per post have come down year over year (428 to 346 to 169), the reach-compression curve now common across LinkedIn.
Can I write like Ayesha Ameer?
You can learn the mechanics: MagicPost learns a creator's writing style (length, rhythm, hooks, signature moves like the numeric opener and the closing question) and helps you write in that spirit, in your own voice.
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