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    Home»How-To»How I started my own LinkedIn Newsletter – 5 Easy Stages
    How-To

    How I started my own LinkedIn Newsletter – 5 Easy Stages

    PineapplesUpdateBy PineapplesUpdateJuly 17, 2025No Comments9 Mins Read
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    How I started my own LinkedIn Newsletter – 5 Easy Stages
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    How I started my own LinkedIn Newsletter – 5 Easy Stages

    David gewirtz / elyse betters picaro / zdnet

    It has been almost two years of launch My weekly advanced geekery email newspaper On the option. Every week, I list my latest ZDNET articles, display any new videos I have entered, sometimes I am working on (and readers) on spotlight projects, and share some great YouTube videos and reading articles.

    Newspaper is a great way for those who like my work that I do.

    Recently, I have started receiving requests for a newspaper on LinkedIn from members who are very linked-centered. Ever since Twitter dives his unique dive from a rock of credibility, LinkedIn is a professional and picking up slack in terms of social networking related to work.

    Too: LinkedIn is making it easy to understand the full effect of your post – how is here

    As it turns out, it is both easy and independent to start a linked newspaper. You do not need LinkedIn premium account. When you publish the first version of your newsletter, LinkedIn will inform your network, and it will also invite new followers to subscribe. Every problem you have posed will be shared in your feed. In addition, whoever signs up as a customer will get an email notification in his inbox.

    I proceeded and established the advanced geakry on LinkedIn. The two versions (substac and linkedIn) are basically the same. Now I write and edit each issue on Substack, then copy selectively and paste the content on a new LinkedIn Newslator article.

    The newsletter on LinkedIn has a slightly lower formatting control than one on the substation, but it still looks great. I can copy text (with the link included) from the substac editor, but I must manually add any picture to the LinkedIn version. This adds about 15 minutes to my workflow, which is a small amount of effort to reach a separate audience.

    How to make LinkedIn Newslator

    In this article, I will take you through a step-by-step process to install your linkedin newsletter. If you want to set a set for Substack, I also documented it.

    It goes without saying (but look, here I am saying this) that you need to log in to your linkedIn account before doing anything else. Once logged in, click write articles in a post area.

    Show more

    Saturate

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    It is strange that you have to click on the Right Article to make a newsletter, but the way it works.

    Once you get into the article editing interface, go to the manager dropdown (indicated on 1), and then create a newsletter (indicated on 2).

    Show more

    Create- Newsletter

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    Here, you will enter all basic information about your newspaper. Enter the title of the newspaper, choose a frequency (I weekly I), and then enter a detail. You don’t have much space for a detail, there are only more than one hundred characters, so you want to prepare it ahead of time.

    Newspaper

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    You may also want to prepare a newsletter logo. I use my small 3D printer robot head logo for all advanced gaekkari projects. Make logo 300×300 pixels and upload it on the form.

    Too: According to LinkedIn, the fastest growing jobs to a new grade and how a land

    Once you click, you have an officially a linkedin newsletter. The rest is about how to prepare and send an issue. Don’t worry. Until you ask linkeded to send it out, nothing will post or mail, so prepare your time.

    Now that you have created a newspaper, you can make your first issue. Will see a newsletter button going on your profile page, which enables them to read or subscribe to your newsletter.

    Show more

    Visitors

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    Create a post. Note x. If you want to create a new newsletter version, it is the button No What do you want to click. This is fine for a regular post, but you do not find it in the newsletter editing interface.

    There may be a better way, but I have found that the fastest way to go to the newsletter editing interface is to click on LinkedIn logo at the top of the page, then click on the newsletters in the side menu.

    Logo

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    This will take you to your newsletters screen, which shows your newsletters, as well as whose membership you subscribe.

    Newsletter

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    When we are on this screen, I indicate some major items. Your newspaper will be on top (shown at 1). So far, after two days, I have 91 customers. By clicking, you will be taken to another screen, where you will start editing your first version.

    On the right is a three-dot menu (shown on 3). Clicking this will give you a share option, which you get a link if you want to share your newsletter. Is here My link is mine,

    Too: How to do LinkedIn Work to You: 3 things that you should be right

    Other newspapers you subscribe will be below him. Especially the Note is a newspaper (at 3) by Larry Diginon, which brought me to ZDNET and was the editor of ZDNET for a dozen years. Is here A link for his newspaper Too.

    Finally, pay attention to the x. If you click on creating a newspaper, you will create a new newspaper. Do not click it.

    Okay, let’s move forward. Once you click on the name of your newsletter, you will be taken to the screen where you can create a new version, which will be the real mailing of your newsletter. As you can see, I had no customer just after creating a newspaper.

    Create new-sanskrit

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    Now, finally, you will be on the newspaper editing screen. The image you upload will be shown in your feed. It should be 1920×1080 pixels.

    Show more

    Blank place

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    You can use a new image for each problem, or an image that serves as a nameplate for your newsletter.

    Nameplate

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    My approach is to cut and paste the text from my substation version. This is a fairly simple process, as rich text is preserved, as well as with links.

    Paste

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    The paintings are not cut and paste with paste. In addition, when you paste in a YouTube URL, it does not automatically expand to a good thumbnail of the video, as it does in the substation.

    Too: Want a top engineering job in 2025? According to LinkedIn, here are the skills required for you

    Adding YouTube videos to LinkedIn Newsletter is a little clutk. Linkedin has an option to add an image or video, but you have to upload an image or video to work. So what I did was uploaded to my YouTube Thumbnail and then a link for YouTube video.

    YouTube

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    Keep working in your own way through the interface until you are a newsletter. You do not need to send it out immediately. I chose to wait till Monday morning. The way to avoid sending immediately is to avoid pressing the next button. Instead, from the managed menu, choose the draft.

    Choose-Draft

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    This will show you the available draft, which will probably be a newspaper you created. Go ahead and click off, and your newspaper is all ready to go, but not sent.

    If you want to detect your draft newsletter, click on the article button on the top of your feed, then click Manage, and choose the draft. This is the same menu that you used to make a newsletter, except that you are selecting a draft instead of making a newsletter.

    Also: LinkedIn’s new AI tools guide you from finding you from jobs to Neeling interviews – how is here

    At this point, you will see a list of your drafts. Most likely, you will have only one – the newspaper you are going to publish. Click on the Three-Dot icon, be careful to avoid the option mainly placed, and choose editing.

    Show more

    Draft

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    What used to look in the top editor of my first LinkedIn issue here. I always use a title, and then a subhead, shown in the green box. You will have an opportunity to make a comment before the newsletter nameplate, which is then after the title. Therefore, for me, I selected the subhead (1) and then clicked the next (2).

    Edit

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    I pasted the subhead in the area that linked “tell your network what is this version of your newspaper …”

    Second name

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    If you scroll down in that posting window interface, you will see the schedule and publish the button.

    Scroll down

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    I clicked on the Little Clock icon, which brought me to the schedule interface. Here, I selected PT at 6 am on Monday morning, ET at 9 am, and next clicked.

    Schedule

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    The posting interface changed to show the prescribed time of publication, as well as a schedule button instead of a published button.

    prepare

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    I pressed the schedule button and presented with the following screen.

    Peeled

    Screenshot by David Guirtz/ZDNET

    This confirmed that the issue of the newsletter was ready to go. Then I finished my night, fell asleep, and shortly after waking up on Monday morning, the newspaper was automatically posted. In the future weeks, it will also be sent to all those who take membership.

    You go there. The process is a bit complex, but after a time, it will be quite easy. Each week, I will publish my weekly update to subscribers and followers, and LinkedIn subscribers and followers.

    Too: Social media first defeated TV as a top American news source, studying.

    You get success. If you make a newspaper, comment here or on LinkedIn. I would like to know.

    How are you? Have you considered starting a newspaper on LinkedIn? If you already publish someone else, are you thinking about re -presenting it like I did? What are the features or boundaries on other platforms like Substack? Do you see LinkedIn as a viable long -term place for your newsletter content? Let us know in the comments below.


    You can follow my day-to-day project updates on social media. Be sure to subscribe to My weekly update newsletterAnd follow me on Twitter/X @DavidgewirtzOn Facebook Facebook.com/davidgewirtzOn Instagram Instagram.com/davidgewirtzOn blue @Davidgewirtz.comAnd on youtube Youtube.com/davidgewirtztv,

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