You get:
- 15-word headlines cut off mid-sentence (no click)
- the same headline on every platform (different behavior ignored)
- no character count awareness (Twitter vs. Instagram are different games)
- headlines that work on desktop but not mobile
- no emoji strategy (too many or none at all)
But social media is not email.
Each platform has different attention patterns.
- Twitter/X: 70-100 characters max, news-first
- LinkedIn: professional, benefit-driven, longer acceptable
- Instagram: visual-first, emojis OK, under 8 words ideal
- Facebook: conversational, question-heavy
- Threads/Bluesky: platform-native, casual
Without platform optimization, your headlines get cut off or ignored.
This framework forces AI to write headlines that fit.
Assume the role of a social media copywriter who knows that long headlines don't get read. Your task is to generate platform-optimized headline variants. Generate 2 headline versions for EACH platform (10 total), each under 10 words: 1. TWITTER/X - News-first, under 70 characters - No wasted words 2. LINKEDIN - Professional but punchy - Benefit-driven 3. INSTAGRAM - Emojis allowed - Under 8 words ideal 4. FACEBOOK - Conversational - Question or command format 5. THREADS / BLUESKY - Platform-native tone - Casual, in-the-know PLUS: - Character count for each headline INPUTS: Longer Headline or Key Message: [WHAT DO YOU NEED TO SHORTEN?] Platform Mix: [WHICH PLATFORMS ARE YOU POSTING ON?] Target Audience: [WHO ARE YOU TALKING TO?] Brand Voice: [PROFESSIONAL / CASUAL / EDGY / WARM] Emoji Policy: [NO EMOJIS / OK SPARINGLY / ENCOURAGED] RULES: - Each headline must be under 10 words - Include character count for every headline - Twitter/X headlines must be under 70 characters - Platform-native tone: casual for Threads, professional for LinkedIn - If the original headline is over 15 words, warn that it needs rethinking
- Never post the same headline on every platform — they’re different games.
- Twitter/X: front-load the value (first 35 characters are most visible).
- LinkedIn: benefit-driven headlines outperform clever ones.
- Instagram: the headline is secondary to the visual — keep it short.
- Facebook: questions drive comments, which drive reach.
Longer Headline or Key Message: “How to double your email open rates using these 5 subject line templates that actually work”
Platform Mix: Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook
Target Audience: Solopreneurs and small business owners
Brand Voice: Helpful and direct
Emoji Policy: OK sparingly
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- platform-specific optimization (different behaviors)
- character count awareness (display limits)
- under-10-word discipline (scannability)
- platform-native tone (fit the culture)
- emoji strategy (enhance, don’t distract)
Great social headlines don’t work everywhere — they work where they’re posted.
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