SaaS onboarding post
We changed one onboarding screen after watching five users skip the same step. The fix was not a new feature. It was a clearer sentence, a better label, and one fewer choice on the page.
Choose tags from a curated library, preview them in your post, then copy. No live trending feed.
Formatting uses Unicode characters. Previews follow standard LinkedIn feed dimensions.
Hashtag selection flow
A short workflow that matches this tool instead of another generic content block.
Best when you need a small relevant tag set after the post is already written.
Open hashtag libraryPick a sample close to your situation, load it into the tool, then replace the details with your own.
We changed one onboarding screen after watching five users skip the same step. The fix was not a new feature. It was a clearer sentence, a better label, and one fewer choice on the page.
I rewrote my LinkedIn headline from a vague open-to-work line into a role-specific headline with product marketing, B2B SaaS, and launch messaging keywords. Recruiter searches started matching the role I actually wanted.
A feature can be useful and still be wrong for the first session. We moved an advanced setup option out of onboarding and completion improved because new users had one less decision to make.
From rough draft to a cleaner LinkedIn post in under a minute.
Type your idea, paste a draft, or start from a practical template.
Apply selective emphasis, clean spacing, and readable line breaks.
Copy the result, paste it into LinkedIn, and review it before publishing.
Dense paragraphs are hard to scan. A structured post is easier to read.
Using bold and italic text on LinkedIn can make the opening line easier to notice. Clear formatting can support readability, especially when the post has a strong first line and useful content. This tool safely converts your text into Unicode characters that render as bold and italic inside LinkedIn's text box, while automatically protecting your URLs, @mentions, and #hashtags from being altered.
LinkedIn hashtags work best when they classify the topic clearly. The goal is not to stuff the post with every trending tag; it is to choose a small set that matches the audience and the conversation you want to join.
Use this page after the post is drafted. The content should lead, and hashtags should support discoverability without making the post look automated.
Creators and teams who want a quick set of topic, audience, and niche hashtags for a finished post.
Use three to five hashtags for most posts. Mix broad category tags with one or two niche tags.
Irrelevant trending tags, long hashtag blocks, and tags that promise an audience your content does not actually serve.
Most visitors arrive for one task. These related tools keep the workflow moving without forcing a sign-up or sending the user away.
Plonivo is free for formatting and previewing. For scheduling, analytics, and larger content systems, a partner tool may be useful.
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For most posts, three to five relevant hashtags is a reasonable range. More is not automatically better.
Only when they genuinely match the post. Relevance is more important than chasing a broad tag.
Usually at the end of the post, after the main idea and call to action, so they do not interrupt reading.