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LinkedIn Post Writer

Engaging LinkedIn posts that build your professional brand

★★★★★ 4.8/5·Free · No signup·Used by 10K+ writers

Try it free — no signup needed

See the Difference

Before

I finished a big project at work. It was difficult but we succeeded. I learned many things about teamwork.

After

6 months ago, I was handed a project nobody wanted to touch. 4 teams. 3 time zones. Zero existing documentation. Everyone said it couldn't be shipped on time. Here's what I learned: → Overcommunication isn't annoying. It's the job. When I started sending daily 3-line status updates, confusion dropped by half. → The loudest voice in the room isn't always right. Our best technical decision came from the quietest person on the call. → "Done" means nothing if the handoff fails. We spent the last 2 weeks making sure the next team could run without us. We shipped on time. The client extended the contract. But the real win? I finally understand what it means to lead — not manage. What's the hardest thing you've learned about cross-team collaboration? 👇

Before

English is my second language. Sometimes it is hard to communicate professionally. But I improved a lot.

After

My first professional email in English took me 45 minutes to write. I drafted it 6 times. Asked 3 colleagues to review it. Still hit send with my heart pounding. That was 5 years ago. Last week, I led a 2-hour product strategy session with our London office — entirely in English — and someone asked where I learned to communicate so clearly. The honest answer? Deliberate practice and a lot of embarrassment. If you're a non-native English speaker building a career in a global company: ✓ The discomfort is the practice ✓ Your perspective is the advantage ✓ Clarity beats fluency every time The best professional communicators I know aren't native speakers. They're people who had to think carefully about every word — and that habit never left them. Where are you in your professional English journey?

How It Works

1
📋

Paste Your Text

Type or paste your text into the editor above. Up to 500 characters in the free tool.

2

AI Processes It

Our AI analyzes your text for improvements and generates a polished version in seconds.

3

Copy & Use

Copy the improved text with one click. Install the extension for unlimited use on every website.

Why Use This Tool

🎯

Hook-first writing

Posts start with a line designed to stop the scroll and earn the "see more" click.

📈

Algorithm-aware format

Short paragraphs, whitespace, and engagement questions that LinkedIn rewards with reach.

🌍

ESL-friendly

Natural, confident professional voice — no stilted or overly formal language patterns.

Any topic

Career milestones, lessons learned, industry insights, personal stories — any LinkedIn content type.

Who Is This For?

🎓

Students

💼

Professionals

🌍

ESL Speakers

✍️

Content Writers

What Users Say

★★★★★

Finally a tool that understands non-native English! My emails sound so much better now.

🇮🇳

Priya S.

Software Engineer

★★★★★

I use this before every important email. The suggestions are always natural and professional.

🇯🇵

Yuki T.

Product Manager

★★★★★

Way better than Grammarly for my needs. It catches mistakes other tools miss.

🇧🇷

Carlos M.

Marketing Lead

FluentEditor vs Other Tools

FeatureFluentEditorGrammarlyQuillBot
Built for Non-Native Speakers
Free to Use✅ 200/mo❌ 5/day✅ Limited
Catches ESL Patterns
Explains Corrections✅ (Premium)
Chrome Extension
Works on 40+ Sites
No Account Required✅ 5/day
Pattern Tips for Learning

Fix Writing Everywhere

Install FluentEditor for Chrome and get AI writing help on Gmail, LinkedIn, GitHub, Slack, and 40+ sites.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a LinkedIn post go viral?
Hook in the first line (before "see more"), personal story over generic advice, concrete specifics (numbers, names, outcomes), a question at the end, and whitespace for readability. The algorithm rewards comments over likes, so ask something worth answering.
How long should a LinkedIn post be?
150-300 words is the sweet spot for most posts. Short enough to read in 60 seconds, long enough to have something worth saying. Very long posts (1000+ words) can work for deep expertise pieces but need a strong hook to justify the length.
Should I use hashtags on LinkedIn?
3-5 relevant hashtags placed at the end. More than 5 looks spammy. Use specific professional hashtags (#productmanagement, #softwareengineering) rather than generic ones (#success, #motivation) which are too crowded to drive reach.
How often should I post on LinkedIn?
Quality beats frequency. 2-3 posts per week from your own experience outperform 7 recycled industry news shares. LinkedIn rewards consistency over volume — find a cadence you can maintain for 6+ months.
How can non-native speakers write better LinkedIn posts?
The challenge is sounding natural and confident, not overly formal or translated-sounding. This tool automatically uses the short sentences, active voice, and conversational-professional tone that performs best on LinkedIn.

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