Turn a Blog post into LinkedIn posts
A source-specific, platform-specific plan: why this pairing works, the exact asset mix to produce, and the adaptation mistake most likely to make the result feel like a lazy cross-post.
WHY THIS PAIRING WORKS
Why a blog post fits LinkedIn
Blog posts are already structured long-form arguments. On LinkedIn they convert better as native posts and carousels than external links because the platform rewards in-feed value.
OUTPUT SHAPE
What to make from the source
1 native long post (condensed 1200-2000 characters with personal framing). 3-4 carousels, one per major section or list. 1 poll based on the post's central thesis. Add fresh commentary or data updates.
PRODUCTION SEQUENCE
From blog post to native LinkedIn posts
- 01 · EXTRACT
Find supportable moments
Mark the arguments, examples, stories, and quotable lines that can stand on their own without changing what the source says.
- 02 · SHAPE
Build the supplied asset mix
Use the output plan above as the production brief, including its post count, media form, sequencing, hooks, and calls to action.
- 03 · QA
Check source and platform fit
Verify every factual claim against the source, then test each asset against the pitfall above before scheduling it.
Make the whole pack in one consistent voice
LoomVox works from the long-form material you provide, extracts the real points, and turns them into a structured set of social assets in one selected voice preset.
Blog post to LinkedIn FAQ
- Why repurpose a blog post for LinkedIn?
- Blog posts are already structured long-form arguments. On LinkedIn they convert better as native posts and carousels than external links because the platform rewards in-feed value.
- What should a blog post-to-LinkedIn content pack include?
- 1 native long post (condensed 1200-2000 characters with personal framing). 3-4 carousels, one per major section or list. 1 poll based on the post's central thesis. Add fresh commentary or data updates.
- What is the biggest mistake when adapting this content for LinkedIn?
- Copy-pasting the entire blog post as the LinkedIn update, which gets truncated and feels like link spam instead of native thought leadership.