| name | linkedin-posts |
| description | Write high-performing LinkedIn posts with platform-native formatting, hook patterns, and algorithm-aligned structure. |
LinkedIn Posts
Overview
Use this skill when creating LinkedIn text posts, carousels, or document posts. It covers the current algorithm signals, character limits, formatting rules, and proven hook patterns that drive impressions and engagement on LinkedIn as of 2026.
Platform Specifications (2026)
- Post character limit: 3,000 characters (text posts)
- Article character limit: 125,000 characters
- "See more" fold: ~210 characters on mobile, ~250 characters on desktop (approximately 2-3 lines)
- Comment character limit: 1,250 characters
- Headline character limit: 220 characters
- Hashtag limit: No hard cap, but 3–5 hashtags is the optimal range
- Image posts: Up to 9 images per post
- Document/carousel posts: Up to 300 pages, PDF format, 100MB max
- Video posts: Up to 10 minutes (native), 15 minutes for some accounts
Algorithm Signals (2026)
LinkedIn's algorithm in 2026 prioritizes dwell time and meaningful engagement over vanity metrics:
- Dwell time — How long someone spends reading your post. Longer, well-structured posts (1,300–2,000 characters) earn more distribution.
- Conversation quality — Comments with 15+ words are weighted significantly more than "Great post!" reactions. Posts that spark substantive replies get 2–4x more reach.
- Relevance to network — Content shown first to close connections, then to topic-relevant audiences. Niche expertise posts outperform generic inspiration.
- Content originality — LinkedIn actively deprioritizes recycled content, engagement bait, and "broetry" (one-sentence-per-line filler). Original insights and personal experience win.
- Early engagement velocity — The first 60–90 minutes after posting are critical. Posts that get quick, meaningful engagement get pushed to wider audiences.
- Format signals — Text-only posts still perform well for thought leadership. Carousels/documents get high dwell time. External links are deprioritized (put links in comments).
Hook Patterns (First 2 Lines)
The hook is everything above the "See more" fold. You have ~210 characters (mobile) to stop the scroll. Every hook must accomplish two things: create curiosity and signal value.
Proven Hook Frameworks:
1. The Contrarian Open
Most people think [common belief].
They're wrong. Here's why:
2. The Specific Result
I [specific action] and [specific measurable result].
Here's the exact playbook:
3. The Pattern Interrupt
Stop scrolling if you [specific role/situation].
This will save you [specific outcome]:
4. The Confession
I made a $[X] mistake last [time period].
Here's what I wish someone had told me:
5. The List Promise
[Number] [things] I learned from [specific experience].
(Number [X] changed everything):
6. The Hot Take
Unpopular opinion: [specific contrarian stance].
Before you disagree, hear me out:
7. The "I Studied" Frame
I analyzed [X number] of [specific thing].
Here's what the top [percentage]% do differently:
Hook Rules:
- First line should be under 80 characters for maximum visual impact
- Use a line break after the hook line — white space draws the eye
- Never waste the hook on a greeting ("Hi everyone!") or throat-clearing ("I've been thinking about...")
- The second line should amplify curiosity or state the payoff
- Avoid clickbait that doesn't deliver — LinkedIn's algorithm tracks bounce-backs
Optimal Post Structure
The 1-3-1 Framework (Best for engagement)
[1 line hook]
[3 lines of context/story/insight]
[1 line takeaway or CTA]
The Listicle Framework (Best for saves/shares)
[Hook: "X things I learned..."]
1. [Point] — [1-2 sentence explanation]
2. [Point] — [1-2 sentence explanation]
...
[Takeaway or question]
The Story Framework (Best for connection)
[Hook: specific moment or result]
[Setup: 2-3 lines of context]
[Tension: what went wrong or was unexpected]
[Resolution: the insight or lesson]
[Universal takeaway: why this matters to the reader]
Line Break Strategy
LinkedIn renders line breaks literally. Strategic spacing is critical for readability:
- Use single line breaks between related thoughts (same paragraph feel)
- Use double line breaks to create visual sections (paragraph separation)
- Short paragraphs — 1–3 sentences max per block. Wall-of-text posts get scrolled past.
- One-line emphasis — A single sentence on its own line draws attention. Use sparingly (1–2 per post, not every line).
- Avoid "broetry" — The algorithm now penalizes the one-word-per-line style. Use it only for genuine emphasis, not as a formatting crutch.
Post Length Guidelines
| Goal | Length | Characters |
|---|
| Quick engagement / hot take | Short | 300–600 |
| Standard thought leadership | Medium | 1,300–1,900 |
| Deep-dive / framework | Long | 2,000–2,800 |
| Story-driven posts | Medium-Long | 1,500–2,200 |
Sweet spot for most posts: 1,300–1,900 characters. This range consistently earns the highest engagement rate per impression in 2026 data.
Hashtag Strategy
- Quantity: Use exactly 3–5 hashtags. Fewer underutilizes discovery; more feels spammy and can reduce distribution.
- Placement: Place hashtags at the very end of your post, below your CTA. Never inline hashtags mid-sentence.
- Mix strategy: Use 1 broad hashtag (#Leadership, #Marketing), 1–2 medium hashtags (#ContentStrategy, #B2BSaaS), and 1–2 niche hashtags (#FounderJourney, #PLGStrategy).
- Avoid: Trending hashtags unrelated to your content. LinkedIn's algorithm matches hashtag relevance to post content.
- Note: LinkedIn no longer emphasizes "follow hashtags" — they now function primarily as semantic categorization signals for the algorithm.
CTA Patterns
Strong CTAs increase comment rates, which drive distribution:
- The Opinion Ask: "What's your take — is [X] or [Y] the better approach?"
- The Experience Ask: "Has anyone else experienced this? Drop your story below."
- The Tag Prompt: "Tag someone who needs to hear this."
- The Save Prompt: "Bookmark this for your next [specific situation]."
- The Agree/Disagree: "Agree or disagree? I want to hear your perspective."
- The Fill-in-the-Blank: "The best advice I ever got about [topic] was ___."
CTA Rules:
- Place the CTA as the last line, separated by a line break
- Ask only ONE question — multiple questions reduce response rates
- Make it easy to answer (binary choice or short response)
- Avoid generic "Thoughts?" — be specific about what you want the reader to share
Format-Specific Guidance
Text-Only Posts
- Best for thought leadership and personal stories
- Highest comment-to-impression ratio
- No algorithm penalty for lack of media
- Let strong writing carry the post
Carousel / Document Posts
- Best for frameworks, processes, step-by-step guides
- High dwell time = high algorithm reward
- Design rules: 1 key idea per slide, large readable text, consistent branding
- First slide IS your hook — treat it like a thumbnail
- 8–12 slides is the sweet spot. Under 5 feels thin; over 15 loses attention.
- End slide should have a CTA (follow, comment, share)
Image Posts
- Use original images (screenshots, whiteboard photos, charts) over stock images
- Selfies and personal photos drive 2x engagement on personal stories
- Alt text helps accessibility AND gives the algorithm more content signals
Link Posts
- External links are deprioritized in the feed. LinkedIn wants users to stay on platform.
- Best practice: Post as text-only with context, then add the link as the first comment.
- If you must include a link in the post, add substantial commentary (300+ characters) above it.
Posting Timing
- Best days: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday
- Best times: 7:30–8:30 AM, 12:00–1:00 PM, 5:00–6:00 PM (reader's local timezone)
- Worst times: Weekends, late evenings
- Frequency: 3–5 posts per week for growth. Daily posting is fine if quality is maintained. Under 2x/week makes it hard to build momentum.
- Engagement window: Respond to every comment within the first 60 minutes. This signals to the algorithm that the post is generating conversation.
Quality Checklist
Before publishing any LinkedIn post, verify: