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Writing Standards Knowledge Pack Files

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Social Content

Creates platform-specific social media content that builds audience, drives traffic, and establishes authority. This module handles the last mile: taking ideas, blog posts, and brand positioning and turning them into posts that work on each platform's algorithm and audience expectations.

This module is brand-agnostic. Voice, tone, and content pillars come from the consumer's brand-context.md at runtime. Platform-specific mechanics (algorithms, formats, timing) are universal and documented here.

Platform Quick Reference

PlatformBest ForFrequencyKey FormatCharacter Limit
LinkedInB2B thought leadership, professional networking, career content3-5x/weekText posts, carousels, articles3,000 (posts)
X/TwitterReal-time commentary, tech community, product updates1-3x/dayShort posts, threads, quote tweets280 (posts), unlimited (threads)
InstagramVisual storytelling, brand personality, behind-scenes3-5x/weekReels, carousels, stories2,200 (captions)
FacebookCommunity building, groups, longer discussions3-5x/weekText + image, video, group posts63,206 (posts)

Content Pillars for Social

Allocate content across pillars to avoid becoming a one-note account. The exact percentages depend on your brand and goals, but this distribution works as a starting point:

PillarAllocationPurposeExample
Industry insights30%Establish expertise, comment on trendsAnalysis of a new industry report, your take on a market shift
Behind the scenes25%Build trust, humanize the brandHow you solved a hard problem, team processes, lessons from failures
Educational25%Provide value, earn followsHow-to threads, frameworks, checklists, tip series
Personal/Culture15%Create connection, show personalityProfessional journey, team culture, conference takeaways
Promotional5%Drive conversions when earnedProduct launches, case study highlights, feature announcements

The 5% promotional rule matters. Accounts that promote more than they teach get unfollowed. You earn the right to promote by consistently providing value in the other 95%.

Adapting Pillars to Brand Context

When a brand-context.md is provided:

  • Map brand voice rules to social tone (formal brands stay professional; casual brands can use humor and slang)
  • Align pillar topics with the brand's content themes
  • Adjust promotional allocation based on product launch cycles (temporarily bump to 10-15% during launches, then return to 5%)

Hook Formulas

The first line determines whether anyone reads the rest. On most platforms, only the first 1-2 lines are visible before the "see more" fold. Every post needs a hook that earns the click.

Curiosity Hook

Creates an information gap the reader needs to close.

Formula: "Most [audience] don't know that [surprising fact]..."

Examples:

  • "Most marketers don't know that 73% of blog traffic comes from posts older than 6 months."
  • "Most founders don't know that their pricing page is the second-most visited page on their site."
  • "Most engineers don't know that the CI pipeline is their biggest deployment bottleneck."

When to use: Data-backed insights, counterintuitive findings, industry statistics.

Story Hook

Opens with a specific moment that creates narrative tension.

Formula: "Last week I [specific experience that reveals a lesson]..."

Examples:

  • "Last week I lost a $40K deal because of a typo in a proposal."
  • "Last week I reviewed 200 resumes and noticed a pattern nobody talks about."
  • "Three years ago I made a decision that cost our team six months of work."

When to use: Personal experiences, lessons learned, behind-the-scenes stories.

Value Hook

Promises a specific, tangible takeaway.

Formula: "[Number] ways to [achieve benefit] without [common pain point]..."

Examples:

  • "5 ways to double your email open rate without clickbait subject lines."
  • "7 ways to reduce deployment time without rewriting your pipeline."
  • "3 ways to run better meetings without adding more meetings."

When to use: How-to content, frameworks, actionable advice.

Contrarian Hook

Challenges a widely accepted practice or belief.

Formula: "Stop [common practice]. Here's what works instead..."

Examples:

  • "Stop posting motivational quotes on LinkedIn. Here's what actually builds an audience."
  • "Stop measuring developer productivity by lines of code. Here's what works instead."
  • "Stop A/B testing your homepage. Fix your value proposition first."

When to use: When you have evidence or experience that contradicts conventional wisdom. Don't be contrarian for shock value; back it up.

Writing for the Fold

On every platform, only the first 1-2 lines are visible before the reader must tap "see more" or expand. This is the fold. Everything above it must earn the click.

Above-the-fold rules

  • LinkedIn: approximately 210 characters visible. The hook must be complete and compelling in that space. Don't split a thought across the fold.
  • X/Twitter: full tweet is visible (280 chars). But in threads, only the first tweet appears in the timeline. It must stand alone.
  • Instagram: first line of the caption is visible. Make it a hook, not a preamble.
  • Facebook: approximately 3 lines visible in feed. Lead with the most interesting part.

Below-the-fold structure

Once someone expands your post, maintain their attention with:

  • Short paragraphs: 1-3 sentences maximum. One idea per paragraph.
  • Visual whitespace: single-line breaks between paragraphs on LinkedIn. Walls of text get abandoned.
  • Progressive disclosure: each paragraph should reveal something new. If the reader can predict where you're going, you've lost them.
  • Landing: the final line should either prompt action (question, CTA) or deliver a punch (the sharpest version of your insight). Weak endings undermine strong hooks.

Content Formats by Goal

Match your format to your objective. Using the wrong format for your goal wastes effort.

GoalBest FormatsWhy
Build followersThreads (X), text posts (LinkedIn), reels (Instagram)High discoverability, sharable, low barrier
Drive trafficPosts with link in comments, Stories with link stickerLinks in post body are suppressed; indirect linking works
Build authorityCarousels (LinkedIn/IG), breakdown threads (X)Demonstrate depth and expertise
Generate leadsCarousels with "DM me for [resource]", comment-gated contentCreates direct conversation opportunities
Community buildingQuestions, polls, group posts (Facebook/LinkedIn)Two-way interaction signals to algorithms

Content Repurposing System

One long-form piece should produce 5-10 social posts across platforms. This is not copying the same text everywhere. Each platform requires reformatting for its audience and algorithm.

Blog Post to Social Content

Source: A 2,000-word blog post

LinkedIn (2-3 posts):

  • Post 1: Pull the most surprising data point or insight. Write a story hook around it. Expand into a 150-200 word post with a question at the end.
  • Post 2: Extract the core framework or list. Reformat as a standalone how-to post. Link to the full article in the comments, not the post body.
  • Post 3: Share the contrarian angle. Challenge the conventional wisdom the article argues against. Drive discussion.

X/Twitter (2-3 posts):

  • Post 1: Single tweet with the article's key insight. Link in reply, not in the tweet (better reach on most algorithms).
  • Post 2: Thread (5-8 tweets) that walks through the article's framework with one point per tweet. Link to the full article in the final tweet.
  • Post 3: Quote or stat from the article as a standalone observation. No link. Pure value.

Instagram (1-2 posts):

  • Post 1: Carousel with 5-8 slides summarizing the article's key points. Each slide: one idea, large text, minimal design. Caption retells the core insight.
  • Post 2: Reel (30-60 seconds) where you talk through the main takeaway. Hook in the first 3 seconds.

Repurposing Rules

  • Never copy-paste the same text across platforms. Each platform's audience has different expectations.
  • Strip all blog formatting (headers, bullet points, links) and rewrite for the platform's native format.
  • The best social posts from repurposing often outperform the original article because they're sharper and more focused.
  • Space out repurposed posts: don't publish all variants on the same day. Spread across 1-2 weeks.

Content Calendar

Weekly Template

DayActivityTime
MondayPlan the week: review pillar allocation, select topics, draft hooks45 min
TuesdayWrite and schedule 3-4 posts (batch creation)90 min
WednesdayEngage: reply to comments, comment on others' posts, build relationships30 min
ThursdayWrite and schedule 3-4 posts (batch creation)90 min
FridayEngage + review weekly metrics, note what worked30 min

Batching Strategy

Social content production is most efficient when batched:

  1. Ideation batch (monthly, 60 min): Generate 20-30 post ideas from blog content, industry news, personal experiences, and audience questions. Store in a backlog.
  2. Writing batch (twice weekly, 90 min each): Pull ideas from the backlog, write hooks first, then expand into full posts. Schedule via native platform tools or a scheduler.
  3. Visual batch (weekly, 30 min): Create any needed images, carousels, or video thumbnails. Template-based production is fastest.
  4. Engagement batch (daily, 15-20 min): Reply to comments on your posts. Comment thoughtfully on 5-10 posts from your network.

Best Posting Times (General Benchmarks)

PlatformBest TimesBest DaysAvoid
LinkedIn7:30-8:30 AM, 12:00-1:00 PMTuesday-ThursdayWeekends, Friday afternoons
X/Twitter8:00-10:00 AM, 12:00-1:00 PMMonday-FridayLate nights, Sunday mornings
Instagram11:00 AM-1:00 PM, 7:00-9:00 PMMonday, Wednesday, Friday3:00-5:00 AM
Facebook9:00 AM-12:00 PMTuesday-FridaySaturdays, late nights

These are starting points. Your audience may differ. Check platform analytics after 30 days and adjust based on your actual engagement patterns.

Engagement Strategy

Posting content is half the job. The other half is engagement: responding to comments, participating in conversations, and building relationships that amplify your reach.

Daily Engagement Routine (15-20 minutes)

  1. Reply to all comments on your posts within 4 hours of posting. Prioritize substantive replies over "thanks!" Generic responses signal disinterest.
  2. Comment on 5-10 posts from people in your network or industry. Write comments that add perspective, ask genuine questions, or share related experience. Minimum 2 sentences. "Great post!" doesn't count.
  3. Share or repost 1-2 posts from others with your own commentary. Tag the original author. This builds reciprocal relationships.
  4. DM follow-up if a comment thread turns into a real conversation. Move high-value interactions to direct messages.

Quality Commenting Framework

Good comments do one of these:

  • Add a data point: "We saw similar results. Our conversion rate increased 34% after the same change."
  • Share a counterexample: "Interesting take. In our case, the opposite happened because..."
  • Ask a specific question: "How did you handle [specific edge case]? We've been stuck on that."
  • Connect ideas: "This pairs well with [other person]'s post last week about [related topic]."

Bad comments to avoid:

  • One-word reactions ("Agree!", "This!")
  • Generic praise ("Great insights!")
  • Self-promotion disguised as commentary
  • Contrarianism without substance

Relationship Building

Track 20-30 accounts in your industry that consistently produce good content. Engage with them regularly (not just once). Over 30-60 days, mutual engagement creates real professional relationships. These relationships drive organic amplification better than any algorithm hack.

Analytics and Optimization

Metrics That Matter

Ignore vanity metrics (follower count, impressions). Focus on these:

MetricWhy It MattersTarget
Engagement ratePercentage of viewers who interact (like, comment, share)2-5% on LinkedIn, 1-3% on X
Profile visits from postsShows your content drives curiosity about you/your brandTrending upward month-over-month
Link clicksDirect traffic to your site from socialTrack per post to identify what drives clicks
Saves/bookmarksIndicates high-value content people want to reference laterTrack which post types get saved most
Comment qualityAre people engaging substantively or just reacting?More multi-sentence comments over time
Follower growth rateNew followers per week, not total countSteady growth, not spikes from viral posts

Weekly Review (15 minutes, Friday)

  1. Pull metrics for all posts from the past week
  2. Identify the top 2 performers and the bottom 2
  3. For top performers: what hook type, topic, format, and posting time? Note the pattern.
  4. For bottom performers: what was different? Topic mismatch? Weak hook? Wrong timing? Bad format?
  5. Adjust next week's plan based on findings

Optimization Actions

  • Hook A/B testing: Try two different hooks for similar content topics. Track which hook type consistently outperforms.
  • Format testing: Alternate between text-only, text + image, carousel, and video for similar topics. Identify which format your audience prefers.
  • Timing adjustments: Shift posting times by 1-2 hours based on engagement data. Small timing changes can double reach.
  • Pillar rebalancing: If educational content consistently outperforms behind-the-scenes, shift 5-10% allocation from behind-scenes to educational. Follow the data.

Content Testing Framework

Social content is fast-feedback. You publish, you see results in 24-48 hours, you adjust. Use this framework to systematically improve.

Variables to Test

Test one variable at a time. Changing multiple variables simultaneously makes it impossible to attribute results.

VariableHow to TestMeasurement
Hook typePublish two posts on the same topic, different hooks (curiosity vs value)Compare engagement rate within 48 hours
Post lengthSame topic and hook, one short (50-80 words) and one long (200-250 words)Compare dwell time (LinkedIn) and engagement rate
FormatSame message as text-only vs carousel vs videoCompare reach and engagement
Posting timeSame content type, shift by 2-3 hours on different daysCompare first-hour engagement
CTA typeSame post, different ending (question vs statement vs no CTA)Compare comment count

Testing Cadence

  • Weekly: compare this week's top performer to last week's. What was different?
  • Monthly: review all tests and update your content playbook with findings
  • Quarterly: reassess pillar allocation and format mix based on accumulated data

Building a Content Playbook

After 30 days of testing, you should have a working playbook that answers:

  1. Which hook type gets the most engagement for your audience?
  2. What post length works best on each platform?
  3. What posting time consistently outperforms?
  4. Which content pillar resonates most?
  5. Which format (text, carousel, video, thread) drives the best results?

Document these answers. Update them monthly. This playbook becomes your competitive advantage because it's calibrated to your specific audience, not generic best practices.

Common Tasks

  1. Create a LinkedIn post — given a topic or source article, write a LinkedIn text post with a hook, body (150-200 words), and engagement prompt. Apply brand voice from context.

  2. Create an X/Twitter thread — given a topic, write a 5-8 tweet thread with a hook tweet, one point per tweet, and a summary tweet with CTA. Keep each tweet under 280 characters.

  3. Plan a weekly social calendar — given content pillars and available source material, produce a 5-day posting schedule across platforms with topics, hook types, and formats.

  4. Repurpose a blog post — given a published article, produce 5-8 social posts across LinkedIn, X/Twitter, and Instagram with platform-appropriate formatting.

  5. Write a carousel script — given a topic, produce 6-10 slide texts for a LinkedIn or Instagram carousel. One idea per slide, large-text-friendly, with a hook slide and a CTA slide.

  6. Audit a social profile — review recent posts, assess pillar balance, engagement patterns, hook quality, and posting consistency. Provide actionable recommendations.

Tips

  • Write the hook first, always. If you can't write a compelling first line, the topic isn't ready for social. Rethink the angle.
  • LinkedIn rewards dwell time. Longer posts (150-250 words) that people actually read outperform short posts. But every sentence must earn the next one.
  • On X/Twitter, threads outperform single tweets for building followers. Single tweets outperform threads for engagement rate. Use both.
  • Never start a post with "I'm excited to announce..." or "Thrilled to share..." These are the fastest way to get scrolled past.
  • Hashtags: LinkedIn (3-5 relevant hashtags), X/Twitter (0-2 hashtags max), Instagram (5-15 in the caption or first comment).
  • Ask a question at the end of your post to drive comments. Specific questions ("What tool do you use for X?") outperform generic ones ("What do you think?").
  • Repurpose your own old content. Your best post from 3 months ago can be rewritten with a new angle and posted again. Most of your audience didn't see it the first time.
  • Native content outperforms links on every platform. Algorithms suppress posts with outbound links. Put links in comments or replies.

Gotchas

  • LinkedIn's algorithm changed significantly in 2024. Engagement bait ("agree?", "like if you...") is now penalized. Genuine value and conversation are rewarded.
  • X/Twitter reach is volatile. Don't judge your strategy based on one viral post or one dead post. Evaluate over 30-day rolling windows.
  • Instagram reels get 2-3x the reach of static posts, but only if the first 3 seconds hook the viewer. Front-load the payoff.
  • Cross-posting identical content across platforms damages your presence on all of them. Each platform has different norms and audiences.
  • Personal accounts consistently outperform brand accounts on LinkedIn and X/Twitter. If possible, post from a personal account and reshare to the brand account.
  • Engagement pods (groups that artificially like/comment on each other's posts) are detectable by algorithms and increasingly penalized. Build real engagement.
  • Scheduling tools can hurt reach on some platforms if detected. Test scheduled vs manually published posts and compare performance.
  • LinkedIn connection request limits and comment velocity limits exist. Too much activity in a short window can trigger restrictions.

Related Modules

  • writing/copywriting — provides headline formulas, CTA patterns, and voice handling applicable to social copy.
  • writing/content-strategy — upstream module that determines what topics to cover and how they map to business goals.
  • writing/writing-quality — quality gate for detecting AI writing patterns in social content. Shorter-form content has different quality signals than long-form.