Paste your LinkedIn draft and start with Smart Clean for the fastest first pass. If the post still feels too noisy, add Remove Extra Spaces, Remove Bullets, or Remove Emojis depending on how polished you want the final text to look before you paste it into LinkedIn.
LinkedIn text often starts in another tool first: ChatGPT, Claude, Google Docs, Word, email, Notion, or a notes app. By the time you paste it into LinkedIn, the spacing may feel uneven, bullets may be too heavy, and the structure may look more like a document than a post. This page is designed to simplify that text for cleaner publishing.
Use this tool for LinkedIn posts, About sections, comments, job descriptions, connection requests, DM drafts, and profile updates. It is especially useful when you want cleaner paragraphs, fewer bullets, and less formatting noise without rewriting the content itself.
Many AI drafts come out over-structured for LinkedIn. They may include too many bullets, awkward list formatting, or decorative emoji that distract from the message. This page helps normalize that text so it reads more naturally in a feed, comment thread, or profile field.
This example shows a LinkedIn-style post draft pasted from another editor with too much list structure and spacing noise.
🚀 Three lessons from this quarter:
- Build smaller tests
- Talk to users earlier
- Share wins more often
Would love your take.
Three lessons from this quarter:
Build smaller tests
Talk to users earlier
Share wins more often
Would love your take.
Here is a second example showing a profile-style paragraph copied from a document with broken spacing and line wraps.
I help teams improve internal
processes, simplify reporting,
and build cleaner workflows
across operations and sales.
I help teams improve internal processes, simplify reporting, and build cleaner workflows across operations and sales.
Paste the text, start with Smart Clean, and then remove any remaining bullets, extra spaces, or emoji clutter. That usually gives you cleaner text to paste into a LinkedIn post or profile field.
It works well for posts, About sections, comments, connection notes, job descriptions, short-form professional updates, and AI-generated drafts you want to normalize before publishing.
Yes. The tool runs in the browser so you can clean LinkedIn drafts without installing extra software.
No. It depends on your tone. Use Remove Emojis when the draft feels too promotional or visually noisy, but keep them if they support the style you want.