Reading time: ~7 min


Page Jarvis works inside LinkedIn’s post editor, comment section, and message inbox. Use it to write better posts, tighten hooks, improve replies, and draft outreach messages: all without leaving LinkedIn. The key advantage: LinkedIn has a specific voice and format expectations, and Page Jarvis adapts to that context better than generic AI tools because you can save platform-specific prompts.

What you’ll learn:

  • How Page Jarvis works in LinkedIn posts, comments, and messages
  • Workflows for writing, rewriting, and polishing LinkedIn content
  • Role-specific examples for founders, recruiters, and operators
  • LinkedIn-specific prompts to save to your library

LinkedIn is a writing surface with its own conventions. The posts that perform well aren’t just well-argued โ€” they’re well-structured: a strong hook, a clear flow, and a closing that invites engagement. The same is true of outreach messages, comments, and replies.

Most people who use LinkedIn for professional purposes are writing there every day โ€” posts, comments, connection requests, InMail โ€” and most of them are doing it without AI assistance, or with AI that requires leaving LinkedIn to use.

Page Jarvis changes that by working directly inside LinkedIn’s text surfaces.


How Page Jarvis Works on LinkedIn

LinkedIn’s post composer, comment fields, and InMail are all text surfaces that Page Jarvis recognizes in Chrome.

Access Page Jarvis on LinkedIn via:

  • Right-click on highlighted text โ†’ Page Jarvis actions in the context menu
  • Toolbar icon โ†’ Page Jarvis panel

Page Jarvis works in:

  • Post composer (new posts)
  • Comment section (replies to posts)
  • LinkedIn messages (InMail and direct messages)
  • Company page posts
  • Newsletter articles

Workflow 1: Writing a LinkedIn Post

From Rough Notes to Final Post

  1. In the LinkedIn post composer, write your rough version โ€” the ideas, the points you want to make
  2. Highlight the rough content
  3. Run: Rewrite this as a LinkedIn post with a strong hook, clear points, and an engaging closing
  4. Read the output โ€” tighten the hook further with: Shorten the opening to 1-2 punchy lines
  5. Add a personal observation or question at the end if the AI didn’t include one

Polishing an Existing Draft

You wrote a post draft and it reads flat:

  1. Highlight the post
  2. Run: Shorten and punch this up โ€” LinkedIn readers scroll fast
  3. Run: Strengthen the opening hook if the start is still weak
  4. Run: Add a closing question to drive comments if engagement matters for the post

Making a Technical Post Accessible

You want to post about something technical but your LinkedIn audience is mixed:

  1. Write the technical version
  2. Highlight it
  3. Run: Simplify this for a professional but non-technical audience
  4. Add a hook that frames the insight at the top

Workflow 2: Writing Smarter Replies

Replying to comments on your posts โ€” or engaging thoughtfully on others’ posts โ€” is where a lot of LinkedIn value lives. But writing a good reply takes thought.

Quick Quality Upgrade

  1. Write your reply in the comment field
  2. Highlight it
  3. Run: Shorten this reply and make it more engaging
  4. Post the polished version

Replying to a Technical Question

Someone asked a question in the comments that deserves a substantive answer:

  1. Draft your answer
  2. Highlight it
  3. Run: Make this clear and informative without being condescending
  4. Post

Workflow 3: LinkedIn Outreach and InMail

LinkedIn outreach โ€” connection requests and InMail โ€” is a high-volume activity for recruiters, sales professionals, and founders. The difference between a personalized message and a generic template is measurable in response rates.

Connection Request with Context

  1. Open a prospect’s LinkedIn profile โ€” note their recent post or current role
  2. Draft a rough connection request in the composer
  3. Highlight it โ†’ Run: Rewrite as a personalized LinkedIn connection request, referencing their work
  4. If it’s too long for the connection note field, run: Shorten to under 300 characters

InMail for Recruiters

  1. You’re reaching out to a candidate about a role
  2. Draft the message with the role details
  3. Highlight โ†’ Run: Make this sound personalized and human, not templated
  4. Shorten if the InMail length limit is tight

Outreach for Sales

  1. Research the prospect’s company and recent activity
  2. Draft a message that references something specific
  3. Highlight โ†’ Run: Shorten and strengthen โ€” make it feel like one person reaching out to another
  4. Add the personal reference you gathered from their profile

LinkedIn-Specific Prompts to Save

Build these into your LinkedIn-specific prompt library:

  • Rewrite as LinkedIn post with strong hook and closing question
  • Shorten and punch up this opening
  • Make this sound more personal and less templated
  • Simplify for a general professional audience
  • Shorten to under 300 characters for connection request
  • Strengthen the call to action on this post
  • Rewrite as a thoughtful comment that adds value

Role-Specific Examples

For Founders

Posting about your company, product, or lessons learned:

  1. Draft the raw version
  2. Run: Rewrite as a founder's LinkedIn post โ€” authentic, specific, not salesy
  3. Run: Shorten the hook to get to the insight faster
  4. Add a personal element from your experience

Outreach to potential partners or investors:

  1. Reference something specific about their work
  2. Run: Rewrite as a brief, warm outreach message
  3. Keep it under the InMail character limit

For Recruiters

Outreach to passive candidates:

  1. Reference a specific post or accomplishment from their profile
  2. Run: Rewrite as personalized recruiter outreach that sounds human
  3. Shorten to fit the connection note limit

Follow-up after initial contact:

  1. Run: Shorten and make this follow-up feel timely, not desperate

For Operators and Sales

Sharing insights about your industry:

  1. Draft the observation
  2. Run: Strengthen the hook โ€” what makes someone stop scrolling?
  3. Run: Add a closing that invites connection or comment

Prospecting messages:

  1. Research the prospect on LinkedIn first
  2. Reference something specific from their profile or recent activity
  3. Run: Rewrite as a brief, specific, valuable-sounding outreach

What Makes LinkedIn Different From Other Surfaces

LinkedIn rewards:

  • Specificity โ€” vague posts don’t get engagement, specific ones do
  • Voice โ€” LinkedIn readers can tell when something sounds generic
  • Brevity โ€” the best LinkedIn posts are long enough to be substantive, short enough to be scannable
  • Directness โ€” passive voice and corporate language don’t perform well

Page Jarvis’s selection-based editing works well on LinkedIn because you can refine specific elements โ€” the hook, the closing, a single paragraph โ€” without rewriting the whole post. This preserves your voice while improving the structure.


Key Takeaways

  • Page Jarvis works directly in LinkedIn’s post composer, comments, and InMail
  • Write rough drafts in LinkedIn, then refine with targeted prompts
  • LinkedIn-specific prompts preserve platform voice better than generic instructions
  • Role-based workflows (founder, recruiter, operator) match the content to the audience
  • Shortening and hook-strengthening are the highest-value LinkedIn-specific actions

Next Steps

Try this: The next time you draft a LinkedIn post, run it through two refinement steps before publishing: one shorten pass and one hook-strengthening pass. Compare the result to your original draft โ€” notice what’s different and why.


Page Jarvis brings AI directly into LinkedIn โ€” better posts, smarter replies, faster outreach. Try it and see the difference in your LinkedIn engagement.


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