How to Format a LinkedIn Post for Readability
A readable LinkedIn post usually has a clear first line, enough white space, and a closing line that makes the next step obvious. The first line earns the click. The body delivers the point. The CTA invites a reply, a save, or a practical action. This formatter helps separate those parts so the post does not feel like one long paragraph.
Hook, Body, CTA: A Useful Order
The hook should be specific enough to tell the right reader they are in the right place. The body should use short paragraphs or bullets when there are multiple ideas. The CTA should match the post: ask for examples after a lesson, invite a message after an offer, or point to a resource after a launch. The tool gives you several layouts so you can choose the rhythm that fits the draft.
Line Breaks Matter on Mobile
Many LinkedIn posts are read on narrow screens. A paragraph that looks reasonable on desktop can become a heavy block on mobile. Extra line breaks are not just style. They give readers a place to pause and make the first few lines easier to judge. The preview helps you catch dense sections before you publish.
Use Bullets When the Post Has Parts
Bullets are useful when a post lists mistakes, steps, lessons, features, or examples. They are less useful when the post is trying to build a story. If every sentence becomes a bullet, the post can feel choppy. Use bullets for grouped ideas, then return to plain paragraphs for context and payoff.