LinkedIn post and carousel
LinkedIn plays by its own rules. Native posts get far more reach than updates that push readers off the platform. Drop an external link inside the post or first comment and the algorithm throttles you. The fix is simple: share value natively, tease the guide, then point people to the link in your Featured section or profile headline. The prompt below turns one long-form article into five post ideas and three carousel outlines you can use straight away.
How to create single LinkedIn posts
Take the ideas the prompt gives you, pick the two or three that fit your voice and turn them into native LinkedIn posts.
- Start with a clear hook in the first two lines.
- Keep the body under 1,300 characters, one or two lines per paragraph.
- Wrap up with a question that invites comments, then tell readers the full guide is linked in your Featured section. If that's how you want to promote your content.
- Want cleaner line breaks and bold headings? Paste your draft into Taplio's free LinkedIn post formatter.
For a full breakdown of how to create engaging LinkedIn posts (including hooks, stories and CTAs) read my chapter Create engaging LinkedIn content.
How to create a carousel
Take the three carousel outlines from the prompt, choose one and build it slide-by-slide.
- Slide 1: strong title that promises a result.
- Slides 2 - 7: one short headline and a supporting sentence or stat.
- Final slide: prompt readers to find the full guide, with a shortened link (solidgrowth.com/1) or say "Google site:solidgrowth.com [title]".
- Drop your headlines into Taplio's free LinkedIn Carousel Generator and export the PDF ready for native upload: https://taplio.com/free-tools/linkedin-carousel-generator
For a detailed walkthrough of creating caroussels, read Create engaging LinkedIn content.
Meet people where they hang out. Some skim newsletters, others queue podcasts for a commute, many binge YouTube late at night. When you have already written a guide, repackaging that research into audio or video brings fresh eyes and ears with very little extra work.
Step 1: Generate hook ideas
First, find angles that will grab attention in the feed. Drop the article and target persona into the prompt below. It returns three podcast hooks and three video hooks, each tied to a different section of your guide.
Read the lists and pick one hook for each format. A hook that names a pain point or surprising result usually wins.
Step 2: Turn a hook into a podcast outline
Now feed the chosen podcast hook back into the assistant to build a five-minute show plan.
Paste the outline into your content calendar. When recording day arrives you can step straight to the mic without rewriting.
Step 3: Turn a hook into a YouTube outline
Repeat the process for video. The prompt below delivers a ten-minute script with clear scene cues.
Add the outline to your calendar next to the podcast brief. When you are ready to record, you can read straight from the script, drop diagrams over the edit and publish without any extra research.
With audio and video briefs filed, you have opened two new channels for the same core idea. In the next section we will slice these recordings into short clips that spark even more engagement.
A ten-minute YouTube explainer is a gold mine for bite-sized clips. Each sixty-second segment can live on TikTok, Reels, Shorts and even LinkedIn, putting your message in front of new viewers who never click long videos.
Step 1: Spot the high-impact moments
Copy the full video transcript, then run the prompt below. It flags scenes that hook attention in the first three seconds and wrap in under seventy-five words perfect raw material for short-form.
Step 2: Polish the clips
Trim each segment to fifty-five to sixty seconds. Add burned-in captions so viewers can watch on mute. Overlay one on-screen line that says "Full guide link in profile".
Step 3: Export for every feed
- Format 1080 × 1920 (9 : 16).
- Save one file per platform to preserve analytics.
- Post natively on TikTok, Reels, Shorts and LinkedIn for maximum reach.
Short clips extend the life of your research yet take minutes to create once the long video exists.