Turn a Case study 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 case study fits LinkedIn
Case studies contain hard proof (numbers, timelines, challenges overcome) that B2B buyers on LinkedIn actively seek for credibility and social proof.
OUTPUT SHAPE
What to make from the source
1 detailed story post with results front-loaded. 3-4 carousels: problem/setup, solution approach, quantified results (big numbers), and lessons. Use client quote or logo where appropriate. Spread across the week.
PRODUCTION SEQUENCE
From case study 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.
Case study to LinkedIn FAQ
- Why repurpose a case study for LinkedIn?
- Case studies contain hard proof (numbers, timelines, challenges overcome) that B2B buyers on LinkedIn actively seek for credibility and social proof.
- What should a case study-to-LinkedIn content pack include?
- 1 detailed story post with results front-loaded. 3-4 carousels: problem/setup, solution approach, quantified results (big numbers), and lessons. Use client quote or logo where appropriate. Spread across the week.
- What is the biggest mistake when adapting this content for LinkedIn?
- Leading with logos, process details, or company names instead of leading with the painful problem and impressive business result that actually stops the scroll.