LinkedIn post ideas for coaches who sell expertise, not noise
LinkedIn post ideas for coaches: athlete questions, service clarity, decision frameworks, case notes, events, and useful proof.

Valentina Coach
Swim technique coach

New post: what to check before adding threshold sets.
Instagram bio
Who you help, where, and the next link.
LinkedIn post
One client lesson, one practical takeaway.
YouTube idea
Answer the question prospects already ask.
LinkedIn works best when the idea is concrete
Coaches do not need vague leadership lessons or recycled motivation. A useful LinkedIn post should show judgment: how the coach sees a problem, makes a decision, or helps an athlete think.
Post ideas
- A mistake your typical athlete makes before asking for help.
- A decision framework you use in sessions.
- A before-and-after from an athlete situation with privacy protected.
- A short explanation of who your service is not for.
- A lesson from a workshop or event.
LinkedIn examples
Career coach
The first question I ask a new manager
Explain the question, why it matters, and how it changes the session. Link to the discovery call page or a related guide.
Executive coach
A decision framework for overloaded calendars
Show the framework in plain language and avoid turning the post into a sales pitch. The service page can carry the commercial details.
Performance coach
What a missed goal can still teach
Use a privacy-safe story to show judgment and process, not guaranteed outcomes.
Point back to the right page
A strong post should link or lead naturally to a service page, guide, event, or request form.
Keep the voice useful
Posts that teach a specific decision usually age better than posts built around platform trends. A useful post can later become a blog section, FAQ answer, or newsletter note.
How Coloseos helps
Grow can prompt LinkedIn and other social posts, and Colos-AI can draft captions from the coach's services, blog posts, reviews, programs, and events.