I’ve been posting on LinkedIn consistently for a while now, and one of the quiet problems nobody really talks about is the formatting.
You write something. It looks clean in your notes app or in a Google Doc. You paste it into LinkedIn and suddenly everything is a wall of text. The bolded texts changes to regular. The line breaks are gone. The spacing is off. The post that felt punchy and tight in your drafts now looks like you’re writing a terms-and-conditions agreement.
That was me. Everytime.
Then I found a free tool from AuthoredUp called the LinkedIn Text Formatter, and it’s become a part of how I write for the platform.
What It Actually Does
The tool is simple on the surface: you paste or type your post, apply formatting, and see a live preview of exactly how it will look on LinkedIn before you ever touch the publish button.
But the details are where it earns its place in the workflow.
You can add bold, italic, underline, and strikethrough text. You can build out bullet points and numbered lists that actually render correctly in the feed. There’s even a staircase formatting option that reorders lines by length to create a natural reading rhythm. And you can upload a photo to see how the image sits alongside your text.
The preview updates in real time. What you see in the tool is what you get on LinkedIn.
Why I Keep Coming Back to It
I write in my voice. I think in paragraphs, in ideas that build on each other. But LinkedIn is a skimming platform. People are scrolling fast. The post that lands is the one that’s visually broken up, easy to scan, and draws the eye down the page.
This tool closes the gap between how I think and how the post needs to perform.
Before I found it, I was doing a lot of guessing. I’d draft in Ulysses, copy into LinkedIn, fiddle with spacing, realize something was broken, and start over. Now I draft, format, preview, copy, and post. The feedback loop is tighter and my posts look intentional instead of accidental.
That’s the thing about formatting. It’s not decoration. It’s part of the story. A well-formatted post says, quietly, that you care about the reader’s experience. That you thought about how this lands, not just what it says.
Lastly, the first 3 lines are the most important. You get a preview of the first 3 line to get a sense of what the reader will see and if it’s “worth it” for them to see more so make your first 3 lines the strongest.
You Can Try It Right Here
I’ve embedded the tool directly on this page. Go ahead and use it. Paste in something you’ve been sitting on, play with the formatting options, see how it looks.
Copy the previewed text and paste that to LinkedIn, it’ll have all of your formating.
One More Thing
If you found this useful, bookmark this page to used the builder. I’m also building this blog as a resource for people who think seriously about how they show up online, and tools like this are part of that conversation.
More posts, more resources, more of the thinking behind the work. It’s all here.
Come back when you need it.
Have a LinkedIn post you’ve been overthinking? Drop it in the formatter below and see how it looks. Start typing on the empty bar under readability.




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