- name:
- marketing-linkedin-content
- description:
- Use when writing LinkedIn posts from an idea, work experience, observation, or topic the user provides. Produces 2-3 variations with different hooks for direct copy-paste into LinkedIn.
- category:
- marketing
Core Workflow
- Identify the input — determine what the user has provided: a raw idea, a work experience, an observation, or a topic. Ask if unclear.
- Load the style guide — read
references/linkedin-style-guide.md before writing anything.
- Select hooks — choose 2-3 different hook styles from the taxonomy below, each giving a different angle.
- Draft variations — write one post per hook following the hook-story-insight-question structure.
- Quality check — run each draft against the checklist below.
- Invoke writing:humanizer — if the
writing plugin is available, run humanizer on each draft.
- Present inline — output all variations directly in the conversation with a one-line rationale for each.
Hook Taxonomy
The hook is the first line of the post — it shows before "see more" and determines whether anyone reads the rest.
- Problem solved — lead with the problem and hint at the fix ("I spent 6 months debugging the wrong thing.")
- Lesson learned — "X years of Y taught me one thing above all others..."
- Honest failure — lead with what went wrong, deliver the insight from it
- Surprising observation — lead with something counter-intuitive you noticed ("The most productive engineers I know rarely look busy.")
- Numbers-first — lead with a specific metric, outcome, or timeline ("3 contracts. 1 lesson. Here it is.")
- Sceptic converted — "I used to think X. Then Y happened." (only with a real story, never fabricated)
Post Structure
Every LinkedIn post should follow this structure:
- Hook (1 line) — the most interesting or specific part of your insight. Must stand alone before "see more."
- Story/Context (2-3 short paragraphs) — what happened? What did you observe? Ground it in a specific, real experience.
- Insight (1-2 paragraphs) — what did you learn? What would you tell someone facing this? This is the payoff.
- Question (1 line, optional) — invite responses with something specific. "Has anyone else seen this on GCP?" beats "What do you think?"
Quality Checklist
Before presenting any draft, verify:
- [ ] Hook earns the "see more" click — compelling without context
- [ ] Story is grounded in a specific, concrete experience (not generic)
- [ ] Single clear insight or takeaway
- [ ] 150-300 words total
- [ ] Short paragraphs (1-2 sentences max)
- [ ] Line breaks between paragraphs for mobile readability
- [ ] 3-5 hashtags at the very end, never embedded in body text
- [ ] No AI vocabulary, no em dashes
- [ ] No corporate-speak: leverage, synergy, ecosystem, thought leader, stakeholders
- [ ] No humble-bragging ("So humbled to announce...")
- [ ] No code blocks (LinkedIn does not render them)
- [ ] British English throughout
Reference Guide
| Topic | Reference | Load When |
| ----- | --------- | --------- |
| LinkedIn Style | references/linkedin-style-guide.md | Always — before writing any post |
Constraints
MUST DO
- Write in British English
- Present 2-3 complete variations, each with a different hook
- Output all content inline in the conversation, formatted for direct copy-paste into LinkedIn
- Follow the hook-story-insight-question structure
- Include 3-5 relevant hashtags at the end of each variation
- Invoke
writing:humanizer on every draft if the writing plugin is available
- State the hook style used for each variation (one line)
MUST NOT DO
- Write to disk or assume any directory structure exists
- Embed hashtags in body text
- Use code blocks
- Copy an X post format directly (different audience, different tone)
- Use engagement bait ("Like if you agree, comment if you disagree")
- Write more than 300 words unless the user specifically asks for long-form
- Fabricate stories or invent experiences — only real situations
- Assume the user's industry, role, or seniority — ask if unclear