LinkedIn Post Generator
Drop an idea or insight. Get a hook-driven LinkedIn post optimized for reach.
On LinkedIn, the first two lines decide everything. People see a preview, and if the hook doesn't pull them in, they never tap "see more." This tool turns a raw idea or insight into a hook-driven post structured for the way the feed actually works.
How to use it
- In Your idea / insight, write the takeaway you want to share — a lesson, a contrarian opinion, a result, or a story. You don't need polish; a rough sentence is enough for the tool to build around.
- Pick a Format: a short punchy take, a story, a list-style breakdown, or a how-to. The format controls the structure and rhythm of the post.
- Generate, then read only the first two lines. That's your hook — if it wouldn't make you stop scrolling, regenerate or sharpen the idea.
- Add line breaks generously when you paste it in. White space makes long posts readable on mobile.
What makes a LinkedIn post work
Three things: a hook that creates curiosity or tension, short scannable lines instead of paragraphs, and one clear idea rather than five. Posts that try to say everything say nothing. The generator leans into a single point and a conversational tone, because LinkedIn rewards replies — and people reply to opinions, not announcements. The platform also favors posts that keep people on the page, so a format that's easy to read all the way through quietly outperforms a denser, smarter-sounding one.
When to use it
Use it to build a personal brand, share a win without bragging, comment on industry news, or document something you learned. It's especially handy for job seekers who want visibility — a thoughtful post can do what a cold application can't.
Tips for better results
- End with a question. Posts that invite a reply get more comments, and comments drive reach more than likes.
- Be specific with numbers and names (where appropriate). "Cut our onboarding from 3 weeks to 4 days" beats "improved our process."
- Repurpose what works. A strong post can become a Tweet thread or a talking point in outreach via the Cold Email Writer.
- Post the idea, not the essay. If the draft runs long, cut the weakest third.
Common mistakes to avoid
Don't open with "I'm humbled and excited to announce" — it's the fastest way to lose attention. Avoid hashtag stuffing; two or three relevant tags are plenty on LinkedIn. And don't let the post read as obviously machine-written — pass it through the AI Humanizer to keep your natural voice, then edit one or two lines by hand so it sounds unmistakably like you. The goal isn't a viral post; it's a post that the right 50 people in your industry actually read and respond to. Consistency beats one big hit — posting a clear idea every week trains the feed to show your content and trains your network to expect it.
Frequently asked questions
Will the post sound like me or generic?⌄
It's built around the idea you provide, so the more specific and personal your input, the more it sounds like you. Editing a line or two by hand makes it unmistakably your voice.
What's the difference between the formats?⌄
Each format — short take, story, list, or how-to — changes the structure and pacing. Pick the one that fits your idea; a lesson works well as a story, while tips work as a list.
How long should a LinkedIn post be?⌄
Long enough to make one point well, but broken into short lines with white space. The hook in the first two lines matters most since that's all readers see before tapping 'see more.'
Is it free to use?⌄
Yes, generating LinkedIn posts is free and doesn't require an account.
Should I add hashtags?⌄
A couple of relevant hashtags are enough on LinkedIn. Stuffing many of them looks spammy and doesn't help reach the way ending with a question does.