Libreoffice works on windows and Mac too.
So if any windows users in your audience have libreoffice installed on their PCs, then they should be able to open your documents directly. Libreoffice uses the opendocument format, which is an open standard. So you can open a document created in Libre on Linux, in libre on a windows machine. or vice versa.
Libreoffice can also export/save as M$ Word format, but I think it’s only in an older version of the word format. I haven’t used libre in a while. I can’t remember if it’s the 2003, or 2007 word format. Something like that. And there are certain things in the word format that libre doesn’t support (because M$ word docs are a proprietary document format). Which could mean that certain things in the exported document might be formatted slightly differently to the original libre document.
I think most of the recent M$ office versions can open libreoffice documents, but I think they only support an early version of the opendocument file format. V1, I think.
So another option could be to save your libreoffice docs as opendocument version 1, rather than the latest version of the format. That should allow M$ Office users to open/import libreoffice docs in Office. But doing that could also mean that some of your original formatting may be lost in the exported document.
To avoid potential formatting problems in exported documents, another alternative would be to export your libreoffice documents to .pdf and distribute them as .pdf files.
If you’re dealing purely with text documents, another alternative could be to provide the documents in .rtf (rich text format).
Personally, I’d just distribute the original libreoffice documents (in the latest format). And maybe .rtf and .pdf?!