LinkedIn Post Generator
One idea in, a post with an actual hook out. No “I'm humbled to announce”.
LinkedIn shows only the first two lines before “…see more” — the post lives or dies there. The rest is rhythm: short lines, one idea per line, a concrete detail where a platitude would go, and an ending that invites a real reply. This generator writes hook-first and keeps your specifics intact, because a post with a number in it beats a post with an adjective in it, every single time it runs.
What separates posts that travel from posts that die
- The first line is the whole advertisement for the rest. Under eight words, no hashtags, no wind-up — “We deleted half our pricing page” beats any sentence that begins with “I've been reflecting lately”.
- One idea per line, whitespace between lines. LinkedIn is read on phones between meetings; dense paragraphs get skipped, stacked short lines get finished.
- Keep the specifics that make it yours. Numbers, names, timeframes, the exact objection a customer raised — generic wisdom is invisible because everyone's feed is already full of it.
- End with a question a stranger could genuinely answer. “What would you have done?” gets comments; “Thoughts?” gets nothing; comments are what the algorithm feeds on.
- Never put a link in the post body — reach drops measurably. Put it in the first comment and say so, or skip it entirely and let your profile do the converting.
Example output
The idea or story: We doubled demo bookings by deleting half our pricing page. Tone: straight-talking operator.
We doubled demo bookings by deleting things. Our pricing page had three tiers, a comparison table with 31 rows, and an FAQ nobody asked for. Prospects didn't convert. They researched. Then they left to “think about it” and never came back. So we cut it to one question: how many seats do you need? One slider. One price. One button. Demo bookings went from 9 a week to 19 in a month. Same traffic. Turns out the page wasn't underselling. It was over-explaining. What's the last thing you deleted that made a number go up?
Frequently asked questions
- What makes a LinkedIn post perform?
- The first line (it's the whole ad for the rest), specificity (numbers, names, moments), and comments — so end with something people can genuinely answer, not “Thoughts?”. Links in the post body suppress reach; put them in a comment.
- How do I make AI posts not sound like AI?
- Feed it a real story with real details — the tool keeps your specifics rather than generating generic wisdom. Then edit one sentence to sound exactly like you before posting. AI drafts, you send: the same rule our whole product is built on.
- How often should I post on LinkedIn?
- Two to four times a week beats daily filler. One post with a real story outperforms five recycled platitudes, and the algorithm rewards the comments good posts earn — not raw posting frequency.
- Why is this free — what's the catch?
- No catch and no signup. This tool is funded by EaseClaw, an AI agent that finds people publicly asking for what you sell and drafts your replies. If the free tool is useful, some people try the $9 trial. That's the whole business model.
More free tools
LinkedIn Headline GeneratorYour headline follows you into every comment, DM and search result. Make those 220 characters work.LinkedIn Summary GeneratorAn About section that sounds like you on a good day — not a résumé read aloud.Follow-Up Email GeneratorThree follow-ups that don't start with “Just checking in”.