LinkedIn Post Writer
This prompt helps you write LinkedIn posts that feel credible, readable, and specific to your experience. It is designed for everyday professional posting, whether you are sharing a lesson learned, a career update, a project takeaway, or a thoughtful industry point.
GPT / Claude / Gemini6 variables
Prompt
Write a LinkedIn post.
TOPIC: {TOPIC}
WHO I AM OR MY CONTEXT: {CONTEXT}
WHO I WANT TO REACH: {AUDIENCE}
WHAT I WANT THE POST TO DO: {GOAL}
TONE: {TONE}
OPTIONAL CTA OR QUESTION: {CTA}
Rules:
- Make it useful and credible
- Avoid empty motivation language
- Do not sound fake-humble or overly braggy
- Keep the structure easy to scan
Output format:
1) Best LinkedIn post
2) Shorter version
3) Alternative opening lines
4) Optional closing questionQuick brief
Purpose
Turn an idea, lesson, win, or opinion into a LinkedIn post that sounds useful instead of performative.
Expected output
You will get a polished LinkedIn post, a shorter version, and a stronger opening-line option, plus an optional closing question if engagement matters.
Customize before copying
Replace these placeholders with your own context before you run the prompt.
{TOPIC}{CONTEXT}{AUDIENCE}{GOAL}{TONE}{CTA}
Works well with
GPT
Claude
Gemini
Variations
Make it more founder-style and direct.
Make it stronger for job-seeking visibility.
Make it more educational and less personal.
Keep it concise and easy to skim on mobile.
What this prompt helps you do
This prompt helps you write LinkedIn posts that feel credible, readable, and specific to your experience. It is designed for everyday professional posting, whether you are sharing a lesson learned, a career update, a project takeaway, or a thoughtful industry point.
When to use it
Use this when you want to post on LinkedIn but your draft sounds too stiff, too braggy, or too vague. It is especially helpful when you know the point you want to make but not the structure or tone.
How it works
The prompt takes your topic, audience, professional context, and the action or reflection you want readers to leave with. It then produces a post with a stronger opening, a useful middle, and a closing that fits LinkedIn without sounding forced.
Best practices
Use a real experience, concrete lesson, or specific opinion. Mention the reader you want to reach such as hiring managers, peers, founders, marketers, or people in your field. If you want comments, make the closing prompt relevant instead of generic.
Common mistakes
Writing in vague self-help language. Turning every post into self-promotion. Hiding the useful part of the post under too much setup or storytelling.
What you should expect back
You will get a polished LinkedIn post, a shorter version, and a stronger opening-line option, plus an optional closing question if engagement matters.
Limitations
The prompt cannot supply credibility you do not have, and it should not be used to fake experience or expertise. The final result still works best when grounded in something real.
Model notes
Works well with all major models. Best results come when you provide the topic, your real perspective, the audience, and whether the post should educate, reflect, or announce something.
Real-world applications
Professionals use this for career updates, project lessons, launch posts, hiring posts, thought leadership, and reflections that help them stay visible without sounding overly polished.
How to tell if it worked
A strong post reads like a real person in your field wrote it, gets to the point quickly, and creates a believable reason for someone to keep reading or respond.
Where to go next
Use Follow-Up Message Writer for connection follow-ups after people engage. Pair with Product Launch Social Post Pack when the LinkedIn post is part of a broader announcement.
Appears in collections
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