AI Prompts for AI Prompts for LinkedIn Strategy

20 of the best prompts for AI prompts for LinkedIn strategy, step by step across 4 stages. Works with ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.

AI Prompts for AI Prompts for LinkedIn Strategy

AI Prompts for AI Prompts for LinkedIn Strategy

20 of the best prompts for AI prompts for LinkedIn strategy, step by step across 4 stages. Works with ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini.

Scroll to explore

Published July 14, 2026

LinkedIn rewards consistent, specific, valuable content from people who clearly know what they do and who they help. The problem is that most professionals either post nothing or post corporate boilerplate that generates zero response. AI removes the blank-page friction: it helps you articulate your positioning clearly, write posts that match the tone that works on the platform, and build a system you can maintain without burning hours every week. These prompts cover LinkedIn from profile through pipeline.

Define your positioning

Before posting anything, your profile and positioning need to clearly signal who you help and how. These prompts sharpen your LinkedIn identity.

Write a LinkedIn headline that converts profile views

Write 5 LinkedIn headline options for [YOUR ROLE] who helps [TARGET AUDIENCE] achieve [SPECIFIC OUTCOME]. Each headline should: be under 120 characters, lead with value rather than title, and avoid generic terms like "passionate," "results-driven," or "thought leader." Format: [WHO YOU HELP] + [WHAT YOU HELP THEM DO] + optional differentiator.

Define your positioning

Rewrite your About section as a positioning statement

Rewrite my LinkedIn About section using this structure: (1) one sentence that names who I help and what problem I solve; (2) two to three sentences about my specific approach or methodology; (3) two to three concrete results or proof points; (4) what to do next if the reader wants to connect. Current About section: [PASTE YOURS]. My role, audience, and results: [DESCRIBE].

Define your positioning

Audit your profile for missed opportunities

Audit this LinkedIn profile for the top 5 missed opportunities: [PASTE HEADLINE / ABOUT / FEATURED / EXPERIENCE SECTIONS]. Check: (1) does the headline communicate value or just title? (2) does the About section speak to the reader or about the writer? (3) are experience descriptions accomplishment-focused or task-focused? (4) is there a clear call to action? (5) is the Featured section being used? Give specific rewrites for the worst two areas.

Define your positioning

Define your LinkedIn content niche

Help me define my LinkedIn content niche. My background: [DESCRIBE ROLE AND EXPERIENCE]. My target audience: [WHO DO I WANT TO REACH]. What I want LinkedIn to do for me: [CLIENTS / OPPORTUNITIES / BRAND / JOB]. Give me 3 niche positioning options at different specificity levels, with a sample post topic for each so I can see how the content would look in practice.

Define your positioning

Write a LinkedIn banner concept and tagline

My LinkedIn banner is a blank default image. Help me design a concept. My role: [DESCRIBE]. My audience: [DESCRIBE]. What I want people to feel when they land on my profile: [DESCRIBE]. Give me 3 banner concepts: what visual to use, what text to overlay (under 10 words), and what impression it creates. Write each as a brief creative brief I can hand to a designer or use in Canva.

Define your positioning

Build your content system

Consistency on LinkedIn requires a system, not willpower. These prompts help you build a content calendar, identify your best topics, and write posts in a format that performs.

Generate a 30-day LinkedIn content calendar

Create a 30-day LinkedIn content calendar for [YOUR ROLE / NICHE]. Post frequency: [3X PER WEEK / DAILY / SPECIFY]. Mix of content types: personal story, tactical tip, industry take, case study or result, question for engagement, and reshare with commentary. For each post: give the type, a headline or hook, and a one-sentence description of what the post covers. I will write the full posts using a separate prompt.

Build your content system

Write a LinkedIn post from a work experience

Write a LinkedIn post based on this work experience: [DESCRIBE WHAT HAPPENED]. Format: (1) hook sentence that opens with a tension, contradiction, or surprising result; (2) 3-5 short paragraphs that tell the story or share the insight; (3) a single key takeaway; (4) a question or call to action. Keep the tone conversational, not corporate. Under 300 words. No em dashes.

Build your content system

Turn a lesson learned into a LinkedIn carousel

Turn this lesson into a LinkedIn carousel: [DESCRIBE THE LESSON OR INSIGHT]. Create 8 slides: slide 1 is the hook (one big claim or counterintuitive statement), slides 2-7 each cover one point with a short headline and 2-3 sentences of context, slide 8 is the summary and call to action. Keep each slide under 50 words so it works visually.

Build your content system

Write a LinkedIn post series on one topic

I want to build authority on [TOPIC] with a 5-post series on LinkedIn. Generate the series: give each post a title, the core argument or insight, the best format (story / list / how-to / take), and 3-5 bullet points of what to cover. The series should build logically so someone who reads all five comes away with a complete perspective on [TOPIC].

Build your content system

Repurpose old content into LinkedIn posts

Here is content I have already created (article, newsletter, talk, or thread): [PASTE CONTENT]. Extract 5 LinkedIn post ideas from this single piece. For each: give the hook sentence, the format (story / list / tip / take), and the main point. Do not just summarize the original. Find the most interesting idea buried inside it and build each post around that.

Build your content system

Engage and grow your network

LinkedIn growth comes from two-way activity. These prompts help you turn engagement into relationships and expand your reach strategically.

Write a connection request that gets accepted

Write 5 LinkedIn connection request notes (under 300 characters each) for different scenarios: (1) someone whose post I commented on; (2) someone I met at an event; (3) a potential client in my target audience; (4) someone in my niche I want to learn from; (5) a recruiter or hiring manager. Each note should feel personal and specific, not templated. Give a structure I can adapt for my context.

Engage and grow your network

Write comments that start conversations

I want to build relationships on LinkedIn by leaving comments that add real value rather than "Great post!" responses. For the following posts, write a comment that: adds a new angle or data point, shares a relevant personal experience, or asks a thoughtful follow-up question. Do not just agree. Comments should be 2-4 sentences: [PASTE POST 1]. [PASTE POST 2]. [PASTE POST 3].

Engage and grow your network

Plan a LinkedIn engagement strategy

Help me build a 20-minutes-per-day LinkedIn engagement strategy. I want to: grow my following in [NICHE], be visible to [TARGET AUDIENCE], and eventually generate [GOAL: LEADS / OPPORTUNITIES / REFERRALS]. Give me a daily routine: how to prioritize who to follow, which posts to engage with first, what kind of comments to leave, and how to track whether the activity is moving toward my goal.

Engage and grow your network

Write a LinkedIn DM sequence for warm outreach

I want to reach out to [TARGET PERSON OR ROLE] on LinkedIn to [GOAL: EXPLORE PARTNERSHIP / HAVE A DISCOVERY CALL / GET AN INTRODUCTION]. They connected with me but we have not spoken. Write a 3-message sequence: message 1 opens the conversation without a hard pitch, message 2 (sent 3-5 days later if no reply) adds value or a relevant resource, message 3 (sent a week later) is a direct but respectful ask. Under 100 words each.

Engage and grow your network

Analyze what is working in your LinkedIn content

Review this LinkedIn content performance data and identify patterns: [PASTE POST TITLES / FORMATS / TOPICS WITH IMPRESSION OR ENGAGEMENT NUMBERS]. Which post types are getting the most reach? Which topics generate comments vs. just likes? Are there any posts that underperformed despite good effort? Give me 3 specific recommendations for what to double down on and 1 thing to stop doing.

Engage and grow your network

Convert LinkedIn activity into opportunities

A LinkedIn presence that does not generate outcomes is a hobby. These prompts help you turn followers and visibility into tangible results.

Write a LinkedIn lead magnet offer post

Write a LinkedIn post offering a free resource to attract [TARGET AUDIENCE]. The resource: [DESCRIBE: CHECKLIST / TEMPLATE / GUIDE / FRAMEWORK]. Format: (1) hook that names the problem the resource solves; (2) what is inside and who it is for; (3) simple call to action (comment a keyword or DM me). Keep under 200 words. The post should feel useful, not salesy.

Convert LinkedIn activity into opportunities

Create a LinkedIn pinned post that converts visitors

Write a LinkedIn pinned post that serves as my best first impression. It should: explain who I am and what I do in plain language, describe who I help and what outcomes I create, share a relevant proof point or result, and make it clear what to do next. Format as a narrative, not a bullet list. Under 300 words. This will be the first post someone reads when they visit my profile.

Convert LinkedIn activity into opportunities

Write a case study LinkedIn post

Write a LinkedIn post sharing a client result or project outcome. Context: I helped [CLIENT TYPE] go from [BEFORE STATE] to [AFTER STATE] by [WHAT YOU DID]. The post should: open with the result (not the backstory), walk through what made the situation challenging, explain what the approach was, and end with a transferable lesson for readers who are not that client. Under 300 words.

Convert LinkedIn activity into opportunities

Build a LinkedIn newsletter to capture your audience

Help me plan a LinkedIn newsletter. My audience: [DESCRIBE]. My niche or expertise: [DESCRIBE]. What I want the newsletter to do: [BUILD AUTHORITY / GENERATE LEADS / BOTH]. Give me: a newsletter name and tagline, a 4-issue pilot plan (topic + angle for each issue), a cadence recommendation, and the first issue intro paragraph to establish the tone.

Convert LinkedIn activity into opportunities

Write a LinkedIn post announcing an offer or service

Write a LinkedIn post announcing [SERVICE / PRODUCT / OFFER] without it reading like an ad. My target audience: [DESCRIBE]. What the offer does: [DESCRIBE THE OUTCOME, NOT THE FEATURES]. Who it is for specifically: [DESCRIBE]. How to take the next step: [DESCRIBE]. Write it as a post that leads with the problem, positions the offer as the natural solution, and ends with a single clear action. Under 250 words.

Convert LinkedIn activity into opportunities

Frequently asked questions

How often should I post on LinkedIn to grow my audience?+

Three times per week is the sweet spot for most professionals building a LinkedIn presence. Daily posting can work but it often leads to lower-quality content. Consistency matters more than frequency: three strong, specific posts per week will outperform seven generic ones. Use AI to help you batch-write posts on a single session so you have content ready to schedule.

What types of LinkedIn posts get the most engagement?+

Posts that perform best on LinkedIn share personal stories with a clear lesson, give away genuinely useful tactical information, or take a clear position on something relevant to your audience. Lists and carousels tend to get saves. Questions generate comments. Stories generate reshares. Mix all three rather than defaulting to one format every time.

Should I use AI to write my LinkedIn posts?+

Yes, but with your voice and experience as the input. AI is most useful for removing the blank-page problem, improving drafts, and repurposing existing content. The best LinkedIn posts combine your genuine experience and perspective with AI help for structure and editing. Never publish AI output that sounds generic. The prompts here are designed to extract your real knowledge first.

How do I turn LinkedIn followers into clients?+

Followers become clients through a combination of consistent positioning (they know exactly what you do), demonstrated results (case studies and outcomes), and a clear next step (a pinned post or lead magnet that captures interest). The move from follower to client rarely happens in one post. It happens when someone has seen you be consistently useful over time and then sees a clear way to work with you.