LinkedIn Post Engine

v1.0.3

Write high-performing, persuasive, and authentic LinkedIn posts across any professional niche. Uses research-backed hooks, proven post structures, and Linked...

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byBo Seerden@bdseerden
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Purpose & Capability
Name and description match the SKILL.md: the skill only contains guidance and templates for writing LinkedIn posts and does not request unrelated binaries, credentials, or system access.
Instruction Scope
The SKILL.md stays within the scope of crafting social posts and templates. It does ask the agent to request/insert proof points (e.g., numerical placeholders like [X%]) and to prompt the user for Audience/Proof/Tone; users should avoid supplying sensitive or client-confidential data. There are no instructions to read system files, environment variables, or send data to unexpected endpoints.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — instruction-only skills have minimal disk/exec footprint. Nothing is downloaded or written by the skill itself.
Credentials
No required environment variables, credentials, or config paths are declared or referenced. The guidance does not request tokens or external service keys.
Persistence & Privilege
always is false and there is no behavior that modifies other skills or system-wide agent settings. Autonomous invocation is allowed but that is the platform default and is not combined here with other red flags.
Assessment
This skill is an instruction-only authoring template for LinkedIn posts and appears coherent and low-risk. Before installing or using it: (1) do not paste sensitive or confidential client data into prompts (the skill asks for proof points and specifics), (2) verify any numbers/claims the model fills in (it suggests placeholders), and (3) review generated posts for accuracy and compliance with your employer or client policies. No credentials or system access are requested — the main operational risk is accidental disclosure of sensitive information in the conversation.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

Runtime requirements

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483downloads
1stars
2versions
Updated 1mo ago
v1.0.3
MIT-0

READ BEFORE USE

HOW TO USE THIS SKILL EFFECTIVELY

READ BEFORE USE

LinkedIn Post Engine

Overview

This skill helps you create strong LinkedIn posts that feel human, useful, and credible.

It combines:

  • proven hook frameworks,
  • clear narrative structures,
  • proof-first writing,
  • and practical CTA design.

Keywords: linkedin, thought leadership, personal brand, founder posts, b2b content, storytelling, case study, hooks, engagement, authority


Process Workflow

Phase 1: Audience + Positioning (CRITICAL)

Before writing, define:

  1. Audience — Who is this for? (founders, recruiters, engineers, operators, marketers, sales leaders, etc.)
  2. Goal — Reach, authority, leads, hiring, trust, replies, profile visits?
  3. Core insight — What is the one thing worth remembering?
  4. Proof — What makes this believable (numbers, before/after, constraints, mistakes, outcomes)?

If proof is missing, use placeholders like [X%], [Y hours] and request exact values.

Phase 2: Structure + Hook Selection

Choose a format first, then write:

  • Story
  • Framework
  • Contrarian
  • Case study
  • Teardown
  • Build-in-public

Then select 2-3 hooks and finalize one.

Phase 3: Draft + Polish

  • Keep paragraphs short (1-2 lines)
  • Front-load specifics
  • Remove generic filler
  • End with one clear CTA
  • Add 3-6 hashtags max

LinkedIn Feed Dynamics (Practical)

What usually performs best:

  1. Strong first two lines (stops the scroll)
  2. Specificity (numbers > adjectives)
  3. Credible vulnerability (mistakes + lessons)
  4. Clear structure (easy to skim on mobile)
  5. Conversation CTA (quality comments over empty likes)

Avoid:

  • Buzzword soup
  • Generic motivation posts
  • Overlong hashtag blocks
  • Fake certainty without evidence

Hook Formulas (Most Important)

The Contrarian Hook

  • “Most people do [X]. That’s exactly why they stay stuck.”
  • “Unpopular opinion: [industry belief] is outdated.”

The Specific Result Hook

  • “In [timeframe], we improved [metric] by [number]. Here’s how.”
  • “We cut [cost/time] by [X%]. Not with a new tool—by changing this one workflow.”

The Mistake Hook

  • “I made this [role]-mistake for months. It cost us [outcome].”
  • “We shipped the wrong thing fast. Here’s what fixed it.”

The Framework Hook

  • “The [3-step/4-step] framework I use for [outcome].”
  • “If I had to restart as [role], I’d follow these 5 rules.”

The Question Hook

  • “Would you let your team do [X] without [Y]?”
  • “What’s your biggest bottleneck in [domain] right now?”

High-Performing Post Formats

1) “This runs now” (Operational Story)

Best for real systems, workflows, and automations.

Template:

  • bold claim
  • “Not as a demo. As an actual [responsibility/workflow].”
  • “Here’s what it does:” with 4-6 concrete bullets
  • measurable result
  • perspective line + CTA question

2) Case Study

Template:

  • starting problem
  • constraints
  • intervention
  • before/after metrics
  • key lesson
  • optional “comment TEMPLATE” CTA

3) Contrarian Opinion

Template:

  • challenge popular view
  • explain why it fails in practice
  • give 3 practical principles
  • ask a polarizing but constructive question

4) Framework Post

Template:

  • name framework
  • 3-5 steps
  • one mistake to avoid
  • one practical “do this today” action

5) Build-in-Public Update

Template:

  • what shipped this week
  • what worked
  • what broke
  • what changed next
  • ask for informed feedback

Persuasion Principles

Use these to increase clarity and trust:

  • Specificity: “Saved 3.2 hours/week” beats “saved time.”
  • Mechanism: Explain how, not just outcomes.
  • Credibility: Mention tradeoffs, not only wins.
  • Relevance: Tie insight to audience reality.
  • Clarity: One post = one core idea.

Writing Rules

  • Hook in first 1-2 lines
  • 1-2 sentence paragraphs
  • Prefer plain language over hype
  • Use emojis sparingly as section markers
  • Keep claims realistic
  • Never invent outcomes, clients, or credentials

Hashtags:

  • 3-6 max
  • niche + function + audience mix
  • avoid spammy broad tags only

Output Contract

By default, provide:

  1. 3 hook options
  2. 1 full post
  3. 1 spicier variant
  4. 3 first-comment ideas (to deepen discussion)

Optional on request:

  • NL / EN / NL-EN mixed variants
  • X/Twitter adaptation
  • Short + long versions
  • Carousel text outline

Quick Prompt Template

When user gives a raw idea, ask/fill:

  • Audience:
  • Goal:
  • Topic:
  • Proof points:
  • Tone:
  • CTA preference:

Then generate outputs per contract above.


Common Pitfalls to Avoid

  • Generic “AI changed everything” without concrete examples
  • No proof signals
  • Too many ideas in one post
  • CTA mismatch (asking for leads on a pure thought-leadership post)
  • Over-formatting with noisy symbols

Execution Checklist

Before finalizing:

  • Hook is strong and specific
  • Core claim is clear
  • Includes at least one proof signal
  • Easy to skim on mobile
  • CTA invites real conversation
  • Hashtags are relevant and limited
  • Tone feels authentic to author

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