Turn Client Questions Into LinkedIn Posts That Teach the Wider Market
@coachcontent
Turn client questions into LinkedIn posts by converting repeated, anonymized questions into useful answers for people with the same problem.
What this recording is really about
Repeated client questions are high-signal content prompts when they are anonymized and turned into public lessons.
The safest client-question content teaches the pattern behind the question, not the private story behind the client.
If one client asks a question, others in the market may need the answer too.
Coaches, consultants, advisors, and service providers who want to publish from real work while protecting client privacy.
Platform-ready posts
Repurposed from one recording and adapted for each platform.
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Question to postTranscript
Turn client questions into LinkedIn posts by separating the public lesson from the private context. Coaches, consultants, advisors, and service providers hear useful questions every week. Those questions reveal what the market is trying to understand, what people are afraid of, and where a framework needs to be explained more clearly. But the question came from a real person, so it has to be handled with care. The first filter is repetition. If one client asks something once, it may be too specific. If several clients ask a similar question, there is probably a broader pattern worth teaching. Write down the pattern in neutral language. Instead of saying, my client was worried about launching after a failed webinar, you might write, many founders delay a second launch because they treat one weak result as proof the offer is broken. Next, remove identifying details. Names, numbers, screenshots, company context, health details, financial specifics, and emotional disclosures should not appear in the post unless there is clear permission and a reason to include them. In most cases, the stronger post does not need them. It needs the problem, the explanation, and the lesson. Then answer the question as if you were helping someone who has not hired you yet. This changes the tone from private advice to public education. LinkedIn is a good place for the longer answer, X can carry the sharp principle, and Facebook can make the idea more conversational. If you record a short voice note after the client session, Cliposts can turn that note into drafts while the insight is still fresh. A helpful structure is question, pattern, answer, example, takeaway. The question gives relevance. The pattern makes it bigger than one person. The answer demonstrates expertise. The example makes it practical. The takeaway gives the reader something to remember. You can also keep a private question bank. After each call, write the sanitized question, the broader theme, and whether it could become a post, newsletter idea, or sales page section. This turns client work into a repeatable learning loop without exposing the client relationship. When used carefully, client questions can become a steady content source. They keep the creator close to real demand and help future clients understand how the expert thinks. The trust stays protected because the post teaches the lesson, not the private story.