Editorial

LinkedIn Post Generator: Start With a Draft That Still Sounds Like You

A practical guide to using a LinkedIn post generator without publishing generic AI filler or burying the point below the fold.

ALinkedIn post generator is only useful if it helps you start faster without making you sound like everyone else who clicked the same prompt.

That is the trap with a lot of AI writing tools. They generate complete paragraphs so quickly that the draft feels finished before it has said anything distinct. The structure looks polished. The point still feels borrowed.

A better workflow is to treat the generator like a first-draft partner, not like the final author. You want help with the opening line, the order of the ideas, and the shape of the call to action. You do not want the tool to erase your actual proof.

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“The draft should save you from the blank page, not save you from thinking.”

What the generator should really do for you

The first job is speed. It should give you a cleaner way into the post than staring at an empty text box and trying to guess the opening line.

The second job is structure. LinkedIn posts are judged in the collapsed preview first, so the generator has to help you say the useful part earlier, break the copy into readable blocks, and make the next step feel earned instead of tacked on.

Use the generator for the first pass

Let it solve the blank page problem.

Start with the post type, the real point, and the audience. If the prompt is weak, the output will sound broad no matter how advanced the model is.

Add your proof back in

Specificity is the part AI loses first.

The strongest version of the post usually appears after you replace generic claims with one client detail, one observation, one metric, or one concrete moment.

Edit the opening against the feed

The top paragraph is expensive.

If the best line still lands too late, the draft is not ready. Tighten the opening before you polish the lower paragraphs or formatting.

Why LinkedIn posts need a different kind of draft

LinkedIn is not only another caption field. The network rewards posts that bring a fresh perspective, open a conversation, and carry a clear professional context. That means the generator should help with angle and order, not only with tone.

The more useful version of the tool is the one that gives you four different directions to react to: point-first, story-led, framework, and conversation. From there, you can keep the one that sounds most like your real voice and delete the rest.

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