Save, Summarize, Organize, and Remember LinkedIn Posts
LinkedIn is where the best professional thinking shows up: a sharp take on your industry, a hiring framework, a career lesson, a post whose structure you wish you could write yourself. The problem is the feed. The post that made you stop scrolling is gone tomorrow, and “I’ll find it again” rarely happens. Recall pulls the posts worth keeping off your feed and into your knowledge base as searchable cards, so the insights you want are there long after the feed has moved on.
Why use Recall for LinkedIn
- Never lose a post again: the insights, frameworks, and advice you care about live in one place instead of disappearing into a feed you’ll never scroll back through.
- Get the gist of a long post: have a long thought-leadership post or article summarized into the key points, so you keep the substance without the scroll.
- Build a professional knowledge base: tag posts by theme so insights on leadership, hiring, or your field sit next to the articles and notes you’ve saved on the same topic.
- Keep a swipe file: save posts whose hook or format you admire, so you have a reference library to draw on when you write your own.
- Find it months later: search your library with natural language and pull up a post even when you can’t remember who wrote it.
For example, you read a post laying out a hiring framework you want to use. Instead of liking it (and never returning), you save it to Recall, which summarizes it into the core steps. You tag it hiring. Months later, when you’re building a team, you search “hiring framework” and pull up the post alongside your own notes.
The LinkedIn workflow, step by step
Whatever you save, the flow is the same: save, summarize, organize, chat, remember, and connect. Expand any step to see what it looks like with a LinkedIn post.
Part 1Save
- Paste the URL: copy the link to a post or article and paste it into Recall.
- Browser extension: while reading on LinkedIn in your browser, save the post in one click without leaving the page. Install it for Chrome or Firefox.
- Mobile share sheet: from the LinkedIn app on your phone, tap share and choose Recall, or paste the link into the Recall app. If you don't see Recall in the share sheet the first time, tap More to find it, where you can enable it for next time. Get Recall on the App Store or Google Play.
Example: Between meetings you see a post breaking down a go-to-market strategy. You click the Recall extension, save it, and get back to work. It's summarized and waiting when you have a moment.
Part 2Summarize
LinkedIn posts can run long, and articles longer. Recall summarizes them so you keep the substance without the scroll.
- Key points at a glance: a long post or article becomes a few clear takeaways.
- Pre-screen before you dig in: read the summary first and decide whether the full piece is worth your time.
- Keep the whole thing: the full post is saved alongside the summary, so nothing is lost.
Example: A 1,500-word LinkedIn article on management becomes a short list of the author’s core principles, so you can apply them without rereading the whole piece.
Part 3Organize
Your professional learning is worth organizing as deliberately as your work. Recall keeps every saved post where you’ll find it.
- Automatic tagging: Recall reads the post and tags it by topic, so it lands in the right place without any effort.
- Your own tags: add tags that match how you work, like
leadership,marketing, or a specific project name. - Topic libraries: over time, posts on the same theme sit together instead of scattered across your feed. Learn more in Tagging.
Example: You save three posts on personal branding and tag them branding. The next time you open that tag, they sit alongside the articles and notes you’ve saved on the same subject.
Part 4Chat
Turn a saved post into something you can interrogate and apply.
- Chat with the post: ask questions like “what’s the framework here?” or “how would I apply this to my team?” Answers are grounded only in that post, so they stay accurate to the source.
- Chat across everything: open global chat in the left panel by clicking the AI icon, then
@mention a tag to ask a question across every post, article, and note you've saved on a topic at once. See global chat. - Capture your own takeaways: add notes to the card for the ideas you want to act on.
Example: After saving several posts on fundraising, you ask across all of them, “what do these say about pitching to investors?” and get a synthesized answer you can take into your next deck.
Part 5Remember
Saving a post only helps if you can find it again. Recall makes every saved post searchable and brings it back when it’s relevant.
- Search: find any saved post with natural language, months after you first read it.
- Augmented Browsing: related posts come back to you as you browse the web, reconnecting you with ideas you'd saved and forgotten. See Augmented Browsing.
- Browse by tag: open a topic tag and see every post, article, and note you've saved on that subject in one place.
- Quiz the study-worthy ones: for genuinely educational content, you can turn the key ideas into quizzes with spaced repetition so they actually stick.
Example: Before a performance review, you search “feedback frameworks” and instantly pull up the posts and articles you’d saved on giving feedback.
Part 6Connect
Instead of sitting in isolation, saved posts join a growing web of ideas across everything you’ve saved.
- Automatic connections: Recall links each post to related content you've already saved, with no work on your part. A post on leadership links itself to a podcast and book summary you saved on the same topic.
- Your own connections: want to go further? You can create connections by hand to capture a link only you would see, tying post to a specific project or goal. See Connect Content. It's entirely optional.
- See it visually: explore how everything fits together in the Knowledge Graph, or learn more in Connect Content.
Example: You save LinkedIn posts, a podcast, and a few articles on building a team. Without linking anything by hand, Recall connects them around shared themes like “hiring” and “culture,” so the whole topic is tied together when you need it.
How LinkedIn posts become part of your second brain
On their own, saved posts are just likes you’ll never revisit. In Recall, every LinkedIn post you keep joins everything else you’ve saved: your articles, podcasts, videos, and notes. They get summarized, tagged, and connected, so a post you saved today resurfaces next to the articles and episodes you’ve saved on the same theme. That growing, connected library is your second brain: a place where the best professional thinking from your feed compounds into knowledge you can apply.
See how it all fits together in the AI Second Brain guide.Supported platforms and limitations
Recall works with public LinkedIn posts and articles. Here’s what’s supported today and what to know before you save.
Supported
- Posts, articles, and videos: save LinkedIn posts, long-form articles, and videos by URL, browser extension, or mobile app.
Limitations
- Save a specific post or article, not a profile or feed. Profile pages, feed views, and other non-post URLs cannot be saved, so paste a link to an individual post or article.
- Private, members-only, and company-internal posts may not save.
- Embedded previews appear only for embeddable post URLs. Other links fall back to the extracted text.
For the full list of content Recall supports, see All Supported Content.
Frequently asked questions
How do I save a LinkedIn post to Recall?
To save a LinkedIn post to Recall, paste the post URL into the app, save it in one click with the Recall browser extension while you’re reading, or share it from the LinkedIn app on your phone. Recall stores the post as a searchable card in your knowledge base, so the insight stays accessible long after it scrolls out of your feed.
Can I save a LinkedIn article or newsletter?
Yes. Recall saves long-form LinkedIn articles and newsletter editions as well as standard posts. Save it with the browser extension or by pasting the URL, and Recall keeps the full piece with an AI summary you can search, organize, and chat with later.
How do I summarize a long LinkedIn post?
Save the post to Recall and it summarizes it into the key points, so a long thought-leadership post becomes a quick read. The full post is saved alongside the summary, so you keep the original while getting the gist at a glance.
How do I organize saved LinkedIn posts?
In Recall, saved LinkedIn posts are automatically tagged by topic and connected to related content you’ve saved. You can also add your own tags, like leadership, hiring, or a specific project, so professional insights on the same subject sit together instead of getting lost in your feed.
Can I build a swipe file of LinkedIn posts in Recall?
Yes. Recall is a natural home for a swipe file: save the posts whose format, hook, or framing you admire, tag them, and they become a searchable, connected reference library. When you sit down to write your own posts, you can pull up everything you’ve saved on a theme in one place.
Can ChatGPT save LinkedIn posts for me?
ChatGPT can summarize a post you paste into a chat, but it won’t save it, organize it, or let you find it again. Recall is built for keeping what matters: save any public LinkedIn post or article in one step, summarize it, tag it automatically, connect it to related content, and search or chat with it whenever you need it.