How to Remix Your Meeting Notes into a Viral LinkedIn Post
How to Remix Your Meeting Notes into a Viral LinkedIn Post
Most people treat meeting notes like they belong in a Notion graveyard.
But founders, operators, and creators know:
meetings are a goldmine for content.
Inside every customer call, sales sync, or investor check-in are insights your audience needs—but never hears.
Why? Because you didn’t share it.
Let’s change that.
Here’s how to remix your meeting notes into viral (or at least really engaging) LinkedIn posts.
🧠 Step 1: Look for Insight, Friction, or Emotion
Every great post starts with a moment that made you think:
- Did the customer say something that surprised you?
- Did you hit a blocker you didn’t expect?
- Did someone say the quiet part out loud?
Look for things like:
- “I don’t care how it works. I just need it to feel fast.”
- “We’re not buying software—we’re buying time.”
- “We tried X and it totally bombed.”
That’s not just a quote. That’s a hook.
✍️ Step 2: Choose Your Angle
Turn the raw note into a story your audience will care about:
- What this says about your ICP
- What you learned about your own positioning
- What most people assume that isn’t actually true
💡 Example:
A prospect told me, “We don’t need AI. We just need fewer tabs.”
That completely changed how we pitched our value prop.
This isn’t about sharing the transcript. It’s about sharing the meaning.
🔨 Step 3: Structure It Like a Post (Not a Memo)
Use this format:
- Hook – The aha moment or surprising quote
- Story – What happened in the meeting
- Lesson – What you took away from it
- CTA – Invite people to share their own version
💡 Example:
“We don’t need AI. We need fewer tabs.”
That line changed how I talk about our product.
I thought we were selling automation.
Turns out—we’re selling relief.What’s something a customer said that completely reframed your thinking?
🛠️ Tools That Make This Easy
- Otter.ai / tl;dv / Grain – Record and transcribe meetings
- Jerry – Surfaces post-worthy moments from notes or transcripts and turns them into hooks
- Notion or Google Docs – Use a simple “meeting notes → post idea” database
Bonus: Build a weekly habit of reviewing 3 calls and pulling out 1 insight per meeting. That’s your content calendar—done.
🚫 What Not to Do
- Don’t write a full meeting summary.
- Don’t name-drop or share confidential info.
- Don’t try to sound “smart”—just sound honest.
The most viral posts sound like you’re thinking out loud after a meaningful conversation.
🔁 Pro Tip: Use This Format Again and Again
Every time you write a post based on a real conversation:
- You build credibility
- You show you’re listening
- You create content that resonates because it’s grounded in reality
No AI tool can replace that.
TL;DR — Your Calendar Is Full of Great Content
You don’t need to invent content.
You need to mine your meetings.
If a conversation made you pause, rethink, or nod your head—it can probably do the same for your audience.
Capture it. Frame it. Share it.
P.S.
We built Jerry to help you turn those raw meeting moments into posts that connect.
It analyzes transcripts, surfaces insights, and gives you hooks + outlines you can edit in your own voice—without wasting another idea.