| name | linkedin-post |
| version | 1.0.0 |
| description | AUTO-TRIGGER: Apply this skill when the user asks Claude to write, draft,
create, or improve a LinkedIn post, caption, or update. Also trigger when
the user asks for a post about a professional topic they plan to share on
LinkedIn.
Do NOT trigger for long-form articles, resumes, emails, or general writing
tasks. This skill is specifically for short-form LinkedIn post content only.
This skill structures and formats LinkedIn posts to match the user's
established content style: punchy, practitioner-level, engagement-focused,
with a strong ending that drives comments without resorting to "agree or
disagree?" cliches.
|
| allowed-tools | ["Read","Write","Edit"] |
LinkedIn Post Skill
This skill runs automatically when the user wants a LinkedIn post. Apply
all rules below before delivering output. Do not explain what you are
doing. Just deliver the post.
HOW TO SET UP THIS SKILL
Replace the [PLACEHOLDER] sections with your own profile before adding
this file to your Claude Project.
Your Profile
Name: [Your full name]
Role and background: [1-2 sentences. Your title, domain, years of
experience, and current focus. Example: "B2B SaaS marketing leader,
15 years in demand generation and RevOps. Currently consulting and
writing about pipeline strategy and AI-assisted marketing."]
Content focus areas: [List 4-6 topics you post about regularly.
Example:
- Original takes on B2B demand gen and pipeline strategy
- AI tools and productivity for marketers and operators
- Commentary on industry articles or trends
- Lessons from building GTM functions at B2B SaaS companies]
Audience: [Describe who reads your content. Example: "B2B marketers,
RevOps leaders, demand gen practitioners, founders, and recruiters in
the SaaS and tech space."]
Voice Rules (Non-Negotiable)
These apply to every post, no exceptions.
- Short and punchy. Most sentences under 12 words. Cut anything
that does not add meaning.
- Lead with the sharpest idea. Do not build up to the point. Start
with it.
- Active voice only. Never passive.
- No em dashes. Use a period or comma instead.
- No "agree or disagree?" endings. This is the most common LinkedIn
cliche. Never use it.
- No fluff openers. Never start with "In today's landscape," "As a
[title]," "I've been thinking a lot about," or any variation.
- No sycophantic language. No "excited to share," "humbled to
announce," "honored to."
- No AI vocabulary words. No: delve, foster, crucial, pivotal,
landscape, tapestry, underscore, showcase, testament, vibrant.
- Opinions are required. Neutral posts get ignored. Take a position.
- Outcome framing when relevant. Connect ideas to business results,
not just activities.
Post Structure by Content Type
Type 1: Original professional take
Use when sharing a direct opinion or observation about your domain.
Structure:
[Sharp opening statement: the opinion or observation, 1-2 lines]
[2-4 short supporting points or examples]
[Closing line: a provocative statement, a specific question that invites
a real answer, or a reframe that makes the reader think]
Rules:
- Keep total post under 150 words
- No bullet points unless the content is genuinely a list
- If using bullets, 3 max, no bold headers on each bullet
- Closing line should spark a reaction, not solicit agreement
Type 2: AI tools and productivity
Use when the post is about a tool, workflow, or productivity insight.
Structure:
[Specific tool or workflow named upfront -- no mystery]
[What it actually does, in plain terms]
[One concrete use case or result]
[Closing take: is this worth using, who it is for, what it changes]
Rules:
- Be specific. Name the tool. Name the workflow. Name the outcome.
- Do not hype. Be honest about limitations if relevant.
- Write for a non-technical audience. No jargon without explanation.
- Keep under 150 words.
Type 3: Article commentary
Use when sharing an article and adding your take.
Structure:
[Your take on the article -- lead with the opinion, not the summary]
[One or two specific points worth amplifying or pushing back on]
[Your conclusion or reframe]
[Optional: credit the original source naturally]
Rules:
- The post should be about your angle, not a recap of the article.
- Never start with "Great article by..." or "Interesting read from..."
- Your opinion should be in the first two lines.
- Keep under 120 words.
Type 4: Content series post
Use when the post is part of a recurring educational series.
Structure:
[Series context: one line that anchors where this fits]
[Core lesson or takeaway: the main thing the reader walks away knowing]
[2-3 supporting points, each as its own short line or paragraph]
[Closing line that teases the next post or lands the key insight]
Rules:
- Keep the series framing consistent across posts.
- Educational but not academic. Write like a practitioner.
- If numbered, include the number (e.g., "Part 4 of 6").
- Keep under 200 words.
Formatting Rules
- Line breaks matter on LinkedIn. Single-sentence lines hit harder
than dense paragraphs. Use white space deliberately.
- No hashtag dumps. If using hashtags, 2-3 max, only if relevant.
Place them at the end naturally.
- No emojis as bullet points. If emojis are used at all, 1-2 max
and only if they genuinely fit the tone.
- No "link in comments" unless the user specifically asks.
Output Format
Deliver:
- The post, ready to copy-paste
- One line explaining the content type and ending strategy used
Do not add a preamble. Do not explain what you are about to do.
Deliver the post, then the one-line note.
If the user provides a topic but no content type, pick the most fitting
type and apply it. Do not ask for clarification unless the topic is
genuinely ambiguous.