How to Batch a Week of LinkedIn Content During a 15-Minute Walk
No laptop. No dedicated time block. No blank page. Here's the walk protocol that produces five posts in fifteen minutes using ideas you already have.
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You already have the ideas. You have had them for years. Here's how one afternoon of speaking, not writing, can produce more content than most people publish in a decade.
Six years of LinkedIn content sounds like an enormous undertaking. It is not. At three posts per week, that is 156 posts per year, roughly 936 posts over six years. A large number, until you realise that a founder with a decade of experience almost certainly has more than 936 things worth saying. The problem has never been a shortage of ideas. It has been the failure to capture them before they disappear.
One structured afternoon can change that entirely. Not an afternoon of writing, which is the wrong activity for most founders, but an afternoon of speaking. Talking through what you know across ten or fifteen key topics in your field. What you have learned about hiring. What you got wrong about pricing. What nobody tells you about your first enterprise deal. What the first six months of building something actually looks like versus what people say it looks like.
Each topic you speak about for five to ten minutes produces enough raw material for three to five posts. Twelve topics equals 36 to 60 posts in a single session. Do that twice and you are looking at six months of content. Do it seriously across a full afternoon with structure and you are well past a year. The ideas compound because each topic branches into subtopics you had not planned to cover.
What you are really doing in that afternoon is externalising the knowledge that already exists inside you. You are not creating anything new. You are recording what you already know before it stays locked in your head indefinitely. Most experienced founders are sitting on years of insight that has never been articulated in a form anyone else can access.
The reason most founders do not write consistently is that writing is effortful in a way that speaking is not. When you sit down to write a post, you are simultaneously trying to think of what to say and how to say it. Those two tasks compete with each other and the result is either a blank screen or a post that took 45 minutes to produce.
Speaking removes the second task entirely. You know what to say. You say it. The format problem becomes someone else's problem. SparkVox handles that conversion, turning your voice recordings into formatted, algorithm-ready LinkedIn posts without requiring you to touch a keyboard. The afternoon is not a writing session. It is a speaking session. And you will produce more usable content in three hours of talking than most people produce in three months of trying to write.
Build the pipeline once. Refill it occasionally. Post consistently for years.
No laptop. No dedicated time block. No blank page. Here's the walk protocol that produces five posts in fifteen minutes using ideas you already have.
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