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January 15, 2026

In This Article:
1. Why LinkedIn Content Matters for Consultants
2. Four Content Categories That Work
3. 30+ LinkedIn Post Ideas You Can Use Today
4. How to Never Run Out of Content Ideas
5. From Ideas to Actual Posts: Building the System
"I know I should post more. I just never know what to say."
If you're a consultant, you've probably muttered this. Maybe this morning.
Here's the thing: you explain complex ideas to clients every single day. You clarify confusion, challenge assumptions, give people frameworks they didn't have before. That's literally your job.
The problem isn't that you have nothing to say. It's that translating what you know into a LinkedIn post feels like a completely different skill.It's not. You just need a system.
Research from Consulting Success found that 31% of consultants struggle primarily with marketing—specifically, generating conversations with potential clients. Another 42% struggle most with converting those conversations once they happen.
LinkedIn is where a lot of those conversations start. Sometimes directly (someone DMs you after seeing a post), more often indirectly (someone hires you because they've been quietly watching you for months and decided you know what you're talking about).
The consultants who post consistently aren't choosing between content and client work. They're using content to generate the client work. That's why high-growth consulting firms, according to Hinge Marketing's research, rank content creation as their top marketing priority.It's not a nice-to-have. It's the engine that keeps pipelines full.
Before we get to specific ideas, understand the buckets. Every effective consulting post fits one of these four:
These show what you know. A framework you use. A pattern you've noticed. A mistake you keep seeing. A counterintuitive take based on actual experience.
Expertise posts build authority. They're why someone eventually trusts you enough to pay you.
These show you can deliver. Client results (anonymized if needed). Before-and-after scenarios. Testimonials. Numbers from your track record.
Proof posts validate everything else. In a platform full of people claiming expertise, showing results separates you from the noise.
These make you human. A lesson you learned the hard way. A decision you made and what came of it. A belief that puts you at odds with your industry's conventional wisdom.
Story posts build connection. People hire people they feel like they know.
These invite response. A question for your audience. A poll. A mildly spicy take that sparks discussion. A request for other people's experiences.
Engagement posts signal quality to the algorithm. Comments matter more than likes—and these generate comments.
A sustainable rhythm rotates through all four. You're not always teaching, not always selling, not always connecting—you're mixing modes so your feed has texture and your audience doesn't tune out.
Here's the list. Pick one. Write it. Post it.
Expertise Ideas
1. The framework you use most often. What mental model or process shows up in almost every client engagement? Walk through it.
2. The question every client asks first. You've answered this a hundred times. Write it as a post. Other people are wondering the same thing.
3. What's changed in your industry this year. What are you seeing now that you weren't seeing twelve months ago?
4. The myth you're exhausted from debunking. What do people commonly believe that's just wrong? Explain why.
5. What you wish clients understood before they hired you. What would make every engagement smoother from day one?
6. The difference between [X] and [Y]. Pick two concepts people confuse constantly. Clarify.
7. Three signs [problem] is about to get worse. What are the early warnings that someone's heading for trouble?
8. What most people get wrong about [topic]. Challenge the conventional wisdom. Be specific about why it's wrong.
9. The 80/20 of [topic]. What's the 20% of the work that generates 80% of the results?
10. A checklist for [process]. Give someone a tool they can use immediately. Checklists get saved and shared.
Proof Ideas
11. A client result, anonymized. "Worked with a [industry] client struggling with [problem]. After [what you did], they achieved [specific outcome]."
12. Before and after. What did a situation look like before you got involved versus after?
13. A testimonial, with context. Share what a client said about working with you, then add the backstory that made the engagement successful.
14. The project that taught you the most. What engagement shaped how you work today?
15. A failure that made you better. What went wrong? What did you change because of it?
16. Numbers from your track record. How many clients? How many years? How many industries? What's the number that makes you credible?
17. The pattern you see across every client. What keeps showing up regardless of industry or company size?
Story Ideas
18. Why you became a consultant. What's the path that led here? People are curious about origins.
19. The hardest part of what you do. What's genuinely difficult? Being honest about struggle is more compelling than pretending everything's easy.
20. A belief that shapes how you work. What do you hold to be true that most of your industry doesn't?
21. What you're actively learning right now. What skill or topic are you developing? Admitting you're still growing makes you more relatable.
22. What a random Tuesday looks like for you. Behind-the-scenes content humanizes you.
23. Something you've changed your mind about. What did you believe before that you see differently now? What changed it?
24. Advice you'd give your younger self. What do you know now that would have helped ten years ago?
25. What success means to you. How do you define it beyond revenue?
Engagement Ideas
26. Ask a real question about your industry. "For those in [industry]: what's your biggest challenge with [specific thing] right now?"
27. Run a poll. Three or four options on something relevant. Polls get interaction.
28. Share a hot take, invite pushback. "Unpopular opinion: [statement]. Tell me why I'm wrong."
29. Request stories. "What's the best professional advice you've ever received?"
30. Celebrate someone else. Spotlight a client, peer, or mentor. Explain what you've learned from them.

Thirty ideas will carry you through a month or two. But you need a renewable source.
The "client conversation" method: After every call, ask yourself—what did I explain that surprised them? What question did they ask that others probably wonder about too? What mistake were they making that I corrected?Each answer is a post.
The "what I said in the meeting" method: Pay attention to your own words. When you hear yourself explaining something clearly and the client leans in, write it down. That explanation is a post.
The "this is wrong" method: When you see a LinkedIn post in your industry and think "they're missing something" or "I see this differently"—that's your cue. Write your version.
The question log: Keep a running list of questions people ask you. Clients, prospects, people at events. Questions are content prompts. Your answers are posts.
Having thirty ideas doesn't mean you'll post thirty times. Ideas aren't the bottleneck for most consultants—execution is.If you have a list of ideas and still aren't posting, the problem is the system, not the content.
You need:
A Schedule
Which days are you posting? What times?
A Batch Process
Block time to write multiple posts in one sitting instead of scrambling one at a time.
A Buffer
Posts should be written and scheduled ahead so a busy week doesn't derail everything.
The consultants building real audiences treat content like operations, not inspiration. They don't wait for the muse. They show up on their scheduled days with something worth saying because they did the work earlier.

Some consultants have the bandwidth to write their own posts forever. They enjoy it, they protect the time, they stay consistent.
Most don't. The demands of client work consistently win.
If you've built the idea bank and the schedule and the batch process and you're still not posting consistently—it might be time to stop pretending DIY is the answer.
Brooks Kits delivers LinkedIn posts monthly. You fill out one intake form—fifteen minutes, once—telling us about your business, your audience, your voice. Then content shows up in your portal on the first of every month. 8 posts, 12 posts, or 20 posts depending on your package. Written, labeled, ready to schedule.
No calls. No briefs. No draft reviews unless you want them.That's one way to solve the content problem without fighting your own schedule.
See the packages →
You have expertise people pay real money for. LinkedIn is where that expertise becomes visible to people who haven't hired you yet.
The ideas in this post will get you started. The frameworks will help you keep generating more. But none of it matters unless you actually publish—consistently, week after week, until you're the consultant people think of first.
More on this:
How to Stay Visible on LinkedIn Without Burning Out
How Often to Post on LinkedIn in 2026
Should You Outsource Your LinkedIn Content?

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