Founder update
We changed one onboarding screen. Support questions dropped because users finally knew: - what to do next - where settings lived - how to recover a failed import Small copy changes can remove a lot of friction.
Paste your draft, clean spacing and emphasis, preview the cutoff, then copy.
Formatting uses Unicode characters. Rendering may vary across platforms or future LinkedIn updates.
Selective emphasis flow
A short workflow that matches this tool instead of another generic content block.
Best for highlighting a hook, number, label, or short takeaway without styling the whole post.
Try the examples firstPick a sample close to your situation, load it into the editor, then edit the details until it sounds like you.
We changed one onboarding screen. Support questions dropped because users finally knew: - what to do next - where settings lived - how to recover a failed import Small copy changes can remove a lot of friction.
Before: users skipped the setup checklist. After: we renamed each step around the outcome, not the feature. Completion improved because the page stopped sounding like internal product language.
Three edits that made the post easier to read: 1. Cut the slow intro 2. Put the result in line one 3. Bold only the key takeaway Formatting should guide attention, not decorate the whole post.
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.
This formatter is built for the small but important job of making LinkedIn text easier to scan. It converts selected text into Unicode bold, italic, monospace, or strikethrough while keeping URLs, @mentions, and hashtags readable.
The best use case is selective emphasis: a bold opening claim, a few highlighted numbers, or a monospace label for frameworks and templates.
Creators polishing a draft, job seekers improving profile posts, and marketers preparing campaign copy.
If everything is bold, nothing is bold. Keep emphasis sparse so the post still looks professional.
Unicode styles may be announced differently by assistive technology, so avoid applying them to entire long paragraphs.
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.
We may earn a commission.
Yes. Copy the converted text and paste it into the LinkedIn post composer, comment box, headline field, or about section.
They are intentionally protected so URLs remain clickable and hashtags or mentions stay recognizable.
No. It visually resembles bold or italic text, but it is made from special Unicode characters rather than native LinkedIn formatting controls.