Social Media / LinkedIn Content

Write professional, value-driven LinkedIn posts with hooks, insights, and clear CTAs.
Difficulty: Intermediate
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: LinkedIn Posts, Professional Content, Personal Branding
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most LinkedIn posts are either too corporate or too casual — and they get ignored.

You get:

  • generic “exciting news” posts (no value)
  • walls of text (no one reads)
  • no hook (no reason to keep reading)
  • no clear takeaway or CTA
  • low engagement from bland content

But a LinkedIn post is not a resume update.

It is a value delivery system for professional peers.

  • Hook: stops the scroll (question, bold claim, story)
  • Insight: teaches something useful
  • Proof: example, data, or story
  • CTA: asks for engagement (reply, share, comment)

Without structure, your LinkedIn posts are invisible.

This framework forces AI to write posts that earn engagement.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a LinkedIn content strategist who writes posts that drive professional engagement.

Your task is to write a LinkedIn post.

Generate:

1. HOOK (1-2 sentences)
   - Stops the scroll
   - Question, bold claim, or relatable story start

2. INSIGHT (2-3 paragraphs)
   - Teaches something useful
   - Specific, actionable

3. PROOF (1-2 sentences)
   - Example, data point, or personal story

4. CTA (1 sentence)
   - Asks for engagement (reply, share, comment)

5. HASHTAGS (3-5)
   - Relevant, not spammy

6. LINE BREAKS (visual formatting)
   - Short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max)

INPUTS:

Topic:
[WHAT ARE YOU WRITING ABOUT?]

Target Audience:
[WHO ARE YOUR PROFESSIONAL PEERS?]

Key Insight (what you want to teach):
[INSERT]

Proof Point (example or data):
[INSERT]

Desired CTA:
[COMMENT / SHARE / REPOST / DM]

Brand Voice:
[THOUGHT LEADER / PRACTITIONER / MENTOR / PEER]

RULES:
- Hook must stop the scroll (first 2 lines are critical)
- Short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max) for mobile reading
- Insight must be specific and actionable
- Proof point adds credibility
- CTA should be easy to answer
- 3-5 hashtags maximum
How To Use It
  • The hook is the most important part — spend time making it compelling.
  • Short paragraphs (2-3 sentences max) — LinkedIn is read on mobile.
  • The insight must be specific and actionable (not “communication is important”).
  • The proof point adds credibility — a personal story or data point works best.
  • The CTA should be easy to answer (“Do you agree?” not “Write an essay”).
Example Input

Topic: How to raise freelance rates without losing clients

Target Audience: Freelancers and consultants

Key Insight: Clients expect annual rate increases — you’re not surprising them, you’re catching up

Proof Point: “I raised my rates 20% last year and lost exactly zero clients. Two even said ‘it’s about time.'”

Desired CTA: COMMENT (“What’s holding you back from raising your rates?”)

Brand Voice: PRACTITIONER

Why It Works
Most LinkedIn posts are ignored.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • scroll-stopping hook (attention)
  • short paragraphs (readability)
  • specific insight (value)
  • proof point (credibility)
  • easy CTA (engagement)

Great LinkedIn posts don’t inform — they spark conversation.

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See also  The Thought Leadership Post