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LinkedIn Post Generator

LinkedIn posts that perform are specific, honest, and lead with something worth reading. Describe what you want to share and get a post that earns the engagement.

Tell us about your post

AI-generated output

Describe your topic above and click Generate to get your LinkedIn post.

How it works

Describe the topic, insight, or story you want to share. The more specific and personal your input, the more authentic the output — generic inputs produce generic posts.

Select the goal and tone that match what you want to achieve. A thought leadership post and a product announcement need different structures and different opening hooks.

You get a complete LinkedIn post with an opening hook designed to stop the scroll, a well-structured body, and an optional call to action — plus a note on the best time to post for your goal.

Practical example

For example, a founder wanting to share a lesson learned from a failed product launch might get an opening like: "We spent 4 months building a feature that exactly 3 people used. Here is what we got wrong — and what we do differently now." — leading with the outcome and the tension before explaining the story.

The post avoids the most common LinkedIn pitfalls: the motivational-quote opener, the vague "thoughts?" close, and the humble-brag framed as vulnerability. It is direct, specific, and gives the reader something real.

Frequently asked questions

What makes a LinkedIn post perform well?

The opening line is everything. LinkedIn truncates posts after two or three lines, so the first sentence must earn the "see more" click. Specificity outperforms generality — "I made one small change that increased my response rate by 40%" outperforms "here are some tips for better email". Posts that share a genuine failure or counterintuitive insight consistently outperform promotional content. And shorter posts with clear structure (short paragraphs, occasional line breaks) perform better than walls of text.

How often should I post on LinkedIn?

Consistency matters more than frequency. Three well-crafted posts per week will outperform seven mediocre ones. Most data suggests 3–5 posts per week is the range where volume starts to compound — but only if quality is maintained. If your options are daily mediocre posts or twice-weekly great ones, choose quality. Your audience will remember the great ones; they will only resent the mediocre ones.

Should I use hashtags on LinkedIn?

LinkedIn hashtags have limited reach value compared to other platforms. Using 3–5 relevant hashtags at the end of a post is common practice and does not hurt. Using 20+ hashtags looks spammy and suggests you are optimising for visibility over quality. Focus your energy on the content itself — algorithmic reach on LinkedIn is primarily driven by engagement (comments especially) rather than hashtag relevance.

Is it appropriate to use AI to write LinkedIn posts?

AI works best as a drafting tool — it can produce the structure, hook, and flow, which you then personalise with your specific details, voice, and examples. A post that reads like a generic LinkedIn template (whether AI-written or not) will underperform. The best AI-assisted posts start with very specific, personal inputs — the AI gives them form and structure; you give them authenticity. Edit ruthlessly and make it sound like you.

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