Generate viral LinkedIn posts in your style for free.

Generate LinkedIn posts

The best LinkedIn Posts

Explore the top viral LinkedIn post examples, trends and ideas from the best LinkedIn influencers.

LinkedIn Posts that went viral yesterday

AI can give you the answers, but it can’t give you the understanding.
If you stop using your brain to solve complex problems, it will eventually atrophy...
When you lift people...you learn faster, get invited into better rooms, and create more luck.

That mix attracts:

- Better partners
- Better clients
- Better ideas

There’s enough room for all of us.

Let’s win together πŸ’―

Agree?


πŸ“Œ PS - What's ONE thing you can help someone in your network with today?
Post image by Hanna Larsson
Don't pay $100/month for the Claude Max plan.

These 12 hacks save your tokens (and your wallet):

β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”
(read all 23 token hacks: https://lnkd.in/dZVmzS9E)
β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”β€”

1: You upload PDFs raw. One page = 3,000 tokens.
Fix: Paste the text into a Google doc. Download as .md format. Under 200 tokens.

2: You use Opus for a grammar check.
Fix: Haiku for quick tasks. Sonnet for writing & coding. Opus for deep reasoning only.

3: You leave Search & Connectors on by default.
Fix: Default everything off. Turn features on per task, not per account.

4: You build files inside Cowork too early.
Fix: Plan in Chat (cheap). Build the final output in Cowork (expensive).

5: You write 500-word prompts.
Fix: Write 29 words instead: "I want to [task] to [goal]. Ask me questions using AskUserQuestion before you start."

6: You send 3 separate messages for 3 tasks.
Fix: One message, three tasks. "Summarize this, list the points, suggest a headline."

7: You type "No, I meant," stacking on the history.
Fix: Click 'Edit' on your original message. Fix it. Regenerate. History replaced, not stacked.

8: You say "redo the whole thing" to correct part 3.
Fix: "Only redo section 3. Keep everything else. No commentary. Just the output."

9: You never restart. Your chat hits 30 messages.
Fix: Every 15-20 messages β†’ summarize, copy the brief, start a fresh session.

10: You keep 3 topics in 1 chat. It re-reads all of it.
Fix: New topic = new chat. Always. Dead context is dead tokens.

11: You skip Personal Preferences
Fix: Settings β†’ Personal Preferences. Set your tone and style once. It persists forever. Don't waste 3-5 setup messages per chat.

12: You upload the same PDF to 5 different chats.
Fix: Use Projects. Upload once. Every new chat references it without re-burning tokens.

-----
To download all of my Claude infographics:

Step 1. Go to how-to-ai.guide.
Step 2. Subscribe for free. Don't pay anything.
Step 3. Open my welcome email (most skip this).
Step 4. Hit the automatic reply button inside.
Step 5. Download my infographics from my Notion.
Bonus. Enjoy my best copy-paste prompts, too.
Post image by Ruben Hassid
a little Chungus for everyone who had a Monday of a day

(photo credit: the one and only, Nicholas I. Knuth)
Post image by Jen Allen-Knuth
πŸ”₯ NEW: I just dropped my free Claude Cowork in 5 Minutes quick start for business professionals who want to use AI agents without the terminal.

Cowork is made for less technical, everyday business work. It lives inside the Claude Desktop app and works by pointing it at a folder, describing the outcome you want, and coming back to finished Excel sheets, Word docs, organized files, and slide decks saved to your computer.

One person I know had it organize 2,200 desktop files by category in minutes. Another ran through 14 job descriptions, a Q1 marketing strategy doc, 47 partner emails, and website copy in a 2-hour working block.

In regular Claude or ChatGPT, each one of those is a separate conversation with a separate copy-paste at the end.

What's inside the guide:
β†’ Plain-English explainer of what Cowork is and where it sits between chat and Claude Code
β†’ The 3-step installation setup
β†’ 5 real user stories with prompts to build them
β†’ How to turn any task you do often into a reusable skill with /skill-creator
β†’ How to put recurring work on autopilot with /schedule
β†’ A sample Cowork-powered work week

The punchline from page one: if you can text a friend, you can use Cowork.

Pick it up here: https://lnkd.in/e88Ccejd
Post image by Allie K. Miller
Computer Science majors are down 8% this year, the biggest drop since 2003-08.

This is the beginning of the third major decline in CS in history. If you majored in CS during the last slump, youd have pretty well for yourself. I suspect history will repeat itself today.

Source: https://lnkd.in/gczDY39v
Post image by Deedy Das
Yelling at people takes less skill than properly training people. Yelling doesn’t make you a respectable boss. It makes you lazy.

Most leaders don’t struggle with performance. They struggle with patience. Yelling is fast. Mentoring is slow. So they choose what’s easy.

Yelling takes zero skill. Training takes structure, repetition, and feedback. Yelling fixes nothing long term. Mentoring builds people who don’t need you. When you yell, you transfer stress. When you mentor, you transfer capability.

One creates compliance. The other creates ownership. If your team keeps making the same mistakes, it’s not a discipline problem. It’s a training problem.
No matter how behind they start.
It’s hard to beat a man who never stops learning.
If you haven't spent more than 20 hours learning about AI, you will fall behind.
Start this week, don't delay the first hour.