Long-form text content for global personal brand — DIFFERENT from skill 05 (ad copy for sales). 3 structures: PAS-Insight (founder), Story-Lesson-CTA (coach), Hook-List-Reveal (creator). 6 hook formulas. Platforms: LinkedIn, Twitter/X, Substack, Medium. 1:5 repurpose. QA Score 100. Trigger: 'LinkedIn post', 'thought leadership', 'long-form content', 'newsletter post', 'Twitter thread', 'Substack'.
Installation
Mit Codex oder Claude installieren Kopieren Sie diesen Prompt, fügen Sie ihn in Codex, Claude oder einen anderen Assistant ein und lassen Sie die Skill-Seite prüfen und installieren.
Thought Leadership Content — Long-form Personal Brand (Global)
Long-form text to earn trust and build authority — DIFFERENT from sales ad copy (skill 05). This skill doesn't sell directly; it builds your position as an expert through valuable content.
1. Newbie section
What is long-form?
Long-form = posts >500 words (LinkedIn, Twitter/X threads, Substack, Medium) with structure that walks the reader through your thinking from A to Z. Different from short-form (caption <100 words) and ad copy (125-character hook + CTA).
Difference vs the other two formats
Criterion
Short-form (caption)
Ad copy (skill 05)
Long-form (skill 26)
Goal
Quick engagement
Direct conversion, low CPM
Build authority, earn trust
Length
<100 words
125-500 chars
500-3,000 words
CTA
Comment / Like
DM / Buy now
Soft CTA or none
Frequency
5-7/week
Per ad budget
2-3/week
Audience
Cold + warm
Targeted ads
Organic followers
Success metric
Reach, likes
ROAS, CPA
Saves, shares, DMs, in-depth comments
When to write long-form
After awareness phase — once you have 500-1,000 quality followers
To position as expert — not just a seller, but a teacher
Have real experience — failures, large projects, team management
Have time — 30-60 min per post, careful editing
Clear audience persona — know exactly who reads it (founder? coach? creator?)
Time investment
30-60 min/post for experienced writers
2-3 posts/week is sustainable — don't push 5/week from day one
Batch writing — block one session (3-4 hours) to write 4-5 posts for the week
5 common mistakes
Long without structure — sprawling text, 10-line paragraphs, no rhythm
No story — just a list of dry insights, no proof from real life
Selling too soon — paragraph 2 already pitches "my $999 course" -> readers leave
Guru-copying — Google-translated voice, doesn't fit native readers
No hook — "Today I'd like to share..." -> scrolled past
2. Information collection
Ask up to 4 questions before writing:
Which platform? LinkedIn (B2B, formal), Twitter/X (thread, hot takes), Substack (deep, owned audience), Medium (SEO + curation)
Which pillar? One of the 4 content pillars from skill 23 (Authority / Story / Lesson / Personal). If no context -> run skills 22-23 first.
Goal? Awareness (new reach), Trust (warm followers), Authority (positioning as industry expert)
Formula: Problem -> Agitate -> Solve + Industry Insight
Different from standard PAS (skill 05): adds an Insight layer at the end — elevates from personal anecdote to industry-level wisdom. Founders use this to share operating lessons without selling directly.
When to use: strategic thinking, lessons from running the company, industry forecasts.
Full example (200 words):
I just let go of an employee after 6 months. Not for low performance.
She did the work. Hit deadlines. Clients praised her. But she never asked "why".
6 months. 4 large projects I assigned. 4 outputs that met "requirements" but missed the "objective". When I explained, she fixed it. Next project, same mistake.
I realized: hiring people who are great at DOING isn't enough. Hire people who are great at ASKING.
3 questions I now ask in every interview:
"When was the last time you asked 'why' on a project?"
"When did you last push back on your manager? What happened?"
"What did you learn from your most recent mistake?"
Insight: Marketing in 2026 doesn't lack copy writers. It lacks people who ask "why isn't this copy converting?". Writers get replaced by AI. Askers get paid 3x.
3.2. Story-Lesson-CTA (Coach pattern)
Formula: Personal Story -> Lesson Learned -> Soft CTA (no hard sell)
Coaches use this pattern: tell a personal story -> derive a lesson others can apply -> close with a soft CTA ("Have you been in a similar situation? Comment to share").
When to use: sharing your own journey, transformation, methodology.
Full example (200 words):
In 2022, a client asked for a refund after one coaching session.
I was furious. I'd prepped 4 hours. Beautiful slides. Sharp framework. The client even nodded along.
Their feedback: "I felt like you talked too much. I needed someone to listen, not someone to teach me."
I sat with it for 3 days. Re-read 12 pages of notes. Made one adjustment.
In the next 60-minute session, I talked for 12 minutes. Asked questions for 48. Silent moments don't count.
That client didn't ask for a refund. They booked 8 more sessions. Referred 3 friends.
Lesson: A bad coach talks. A great coach asks. Clients already have the answer — they need someone to help them SEE it.
Have you ever been told "you're talking too much"? Comment with your experience.
3.3. Hook-List-Reveal (Creator pattern)
Formula: Strong Hook -> Numbered List (3-5 items) -> Final Reveal/Twist
Creators use this because it scans well on mobile, easy to save/share. The final item must have a twist — surprises the reader and triggers a share.
When to use: listicles, "X ways to Y", "X signs of Z" — the highest-reach pattern on LinkedIn 2026.
Full example (200 words):
After auditing 47 LinkedIn profiles of founders in 90 days, I found 5 signs that kill personal brands:
1. Banner text reads "Founder | CEO | Visionary"
No one searches for those 3 words. The banner is SEO real estate, not a business card.
2. No numbers in the headline
"Helping companies grow" is empty. "Helped 200+ SMBs scale 3x in 18 months" is concrete.
3. Empty Featured section
Visitor scrolls down -> sees no proof -> bounces. 90 seconds decides trust.
4. Posts only sharing news links
LinkedIn 2026 algorithm penalizes link posts 70%. Quote the article + write 200 words of opinion -> 5x reach.
5. No specific audience in the bio
"I help everyone" = "I help no one". The bio must NAME the audience: "I help B2B SaaS founders..."
Final reveal: I thought #1 was the most dangerous. Wrong. #5 — no defined audience — is the root cause of the other 4. Fix #5 first, the rest fall into place.
4. 6 Long-form Hook Formulas
DIFFERENT from short-form hooks (see references/hook-formulas-global.md for ad/video). Long-form hooks must build deeper curiosity to pull a reader through 800-3,000 words.
Hook 1: Controversial Question
Formula: a question that challenges a widely held belief.
"Why are 99% of founders wrong when they hire their first CMO?"
Why it works: a question -> forces reflection. "99%" -> specific. "Wrong" -> creates tension. Readers want to know am I in the 1%?
Hook 2: Contrarian Opinion
Formula: a statement that flips the trend + "Here's why."
"I think LinkedIn is dying. Here's why."
Why it works: pushes back against consensus -> curiosity. "I think" -> opinion-led, doesn't claim absolute confidence. "Here's why" -> promises an explanation.
Hook 3: Mini-Confession
Formula: a hard-to-share action/decision + the lesson.
"I had to fire 5 people last week. Here's what it taught me."
Why it works: vulnerability -> trust. "Fire" -> high stakes. "5 people" -> specific. "Last week" -> freshness, not an old story.
Hook 4: Framework Drop
Formula: framework name + result + audience size.
"I used the 3-7-21 framework to help 200 companies double pricing."
Why it works: framework = systematic = expert. "3-7-21" -> memorable. "200 companies" -> social proof. Readers want the framework.
Hook 5: Data Drop
Formula: after [analyzing/auditing/doing] X, here are Y findings.
"After analyzing 500 startups, here are 3 signs that kill a business."
Why it works: research-led -> authority. "500" -> not personal opinion. "3 signs" -> promises a scannable list. "Kill business" -> high stakes.
"A college student started selling bubble tea on the street. 18 months later, she has 3 stores."
Why it works: specific character -> story brain activated. "Started on the street" -> quirky. "3 stores" -> curiosity about how. Reader wants the playbook.
Pick a hook by platform
Hook
LinkedIn
Twitter/X
Substack
Medium
Controversial question
GREAT
GREAT
GREAT
GOOD
Contrarian opinion
GREAT
GREAT
GREAT
GREAT
Mini-confession
GOOD
GREAT
GREAT
GOOD
Framework drop
GREAT
GOOD
GREAT
GREAT
Data drop
GREAT
GREAT
GREAT
GREAT
Character-driven
GOOD
GOOD
GREAT
GREAT
5. Sentence Rhythm Engineering
Long-form differs from short-form in sentence rhythm — must rise and fall, never monotone.
The 1-2-3 rule
Short and long sentences alternating in a pattern:
Sentence 1: 5-8 words (impact)
Sentence 2: 10-15 words (explanation)
Sentence 3: 15-25 words (detail, expansion)
Repeat the pattern every 3-5 sentences
White-space rules
One line break between paragraphs — no 10-line text blocks
Paragraphs of 2-3 sentences — never 8-sentence paragraphs
List/bullet every 200-300 words to break up density
Bold 3-5 keyword phrases per 500 words — never bold full sentences
Before / After
Before (bad — no rhythm):
Building a personal brand requires careful attention to many factors particularly the identification of a target audience and core values which then enables you to communicate your message effectively and build sustainable trust with your followers over time and across platforms.
After (good — has rhythm):
Building a personal brand is hard.
Everyone thinks you must know your "audience" and your "values" upfront. Wrong.
It took me 18 months and 200 posts to figure out who my audience is. You can't think your way into it — you have to write, fail, fix, repeat.
Your real audience = the people who comment 3+ times in 90 days.
Comparison: 70 words version one is monotone, no rhythm. 75 words version two has a 3-word punch, a 15-word detail, a 30-word expansion — rises and falls, easy to read.
Rhythm check
Read it out loud. If you feel out of breath mid-paragraph -> sentence too long. If it sounds choppy and clipped -> sentences too short. The target is a wave rising and falling.
6. Format by Platform
Platform
Char/Word count
Para length
Hashtags
Image
Best post time
LinkedIn
1,300-3,000 chars
2-3 lines
3-5
Optional carousel 8 slides
Tue-Thu 8-10 AM (target TZ)
Twitter/X
Thread of 8-15 tweets
1-2 lines/tweet
0-2
1-2 images per thread
7-9 AM and 5-7 PM
Substack
800-2,000 words
3-5 lines
N/A
1-2 inline images
Tue / Thu 9 AM
Medium
1,200-2,500 words
3-5 lines
5 tags
Hero + 1-2 inline
Mon / Wed 7-9 AM
Algorithm preferences
LinkedIn 2026:
Optimizes for dwell time > likes — write long enough to read 30s+
5+ word comments in the first hour -> 3-5x reach boost
External links -> 70% reach penalty. Solution: drop the link in the first comment
Carousel slides as PDF document upload -> 3x reach vs plain text
Twitter/X 2026:
Long-form posts (Premium) get prioritized over threads in some niches
First 2 lines must hook — preview shows ~280 chars
Reply-replies to your own tweet get less reach than threading from the start
Bookmarks weight more than likes for the algorithm
Substack / Medium:
Open rate matters more than click rate early on (build trust)
Subject line <50 chars, with specificity (number or question)
Tuesday/Thursday 9-11 AM open rates are best in US/EU
1-2 inline images, no more than 5 — avoids slow loads
7. Repurpose Matrix 1:5
1 long-form post -> 5 derivative content pieces in the next 7 days:
Workflow
Day 0: Write 1 LinkedIn long-form (1500 chars)
Day 1: Cut into Twitter/X thread (10 tweets)
Day 2: Build a Carousel deck (8-10 Canva slides)
Day 3: Record short video script 60s (TikTok/Reels)
Day 4: Convert into Substack/email newsletter
Day 7: Summarize as podcast talking points (5 bullets)
Conversion guide
Long-form -> Twitter/X thread:
Hook line of LinkedIn = tweet 1
Each numbered point = 1 tweet
Final reveal = closing tweet + RT CTA
10 tweets ideal, 12 max
Long-form -> Carousel:
Slide 1: Hook + your name
Slides 2-7: 1 point per slide (max 50 words/slide)
Slides 8-9: Final insight
Slide 10: CTA "Follow for more posts like this"
Long-form -> Short video script (60s):
0-3s: hook spoken fast (8-10 words)
3-10s: setup the problem
10-45s: 2-3 main points (15s/point)
45-55s: reveal + lesson
55-60s: soft CTA ("Comment 'GUIDE' for the full version")