LinkedIn is where your webinar audience lives, it's where the registrations came from, and it's where the recap should go. Paste the recording or transcript and Tugan.ai mines the session for its most post-worthy moments, then writes finished LinkedIn posts around them: a recap post with the session's single most surprising stat, insight posts that stand on their own, and a promo post for the replay, each with a thumb-stopping first line, short scannable paragraphs and a close that drives comments. Clip tools give you a 60-second video most of the feed scrolls past; this gives you native written posts that get read, and it builds them from what was actually said, not a "thanks to everyone who joined!" shell.
Why turn a webinar recording into a LinkedIn post?
- Your webinar audience is already on LinkedIn. B2B registrants come from the feed, and the recap posted back into that feed reaches the 95% of your market that didn't attend.
- Written posts beat clips in the feed. Native text gets read on mute in a scroll; a 60-second video clip of a talking head is the easiest thing on LinkedIn to skip.
- One session holds a week of posts: the surprising stat, the framework, the contrarian take, the best Q&A exchange, each one is its own post, not bullets in one recap.
- Speakers out-reach company pages. Posts written for your host's and guests' personal profiles carry the webinar far beyond what the brand account alone can.
See it in action
Webinar: "RevOps benchmarks 2026: what 900 SaaS companies told us", 47 min [22:15] SPEAKER: "...the number that surprised us most: companies that responded to inbound demo requests within 5 minutes closed at 2.3x the rate of those that took an hour. But the median response time across the whole dataset? 3 hours and 42 minutes. Everyone knows speed-to-lead matters, and almost nobody staffs for it. The teams in the top decile all did the same unglamorous thing: they put a human on demo-request triage during business hours. Not a bot. A person..."
We asked 900 SaaS companies about their inbound funnel. One number stopped us cold. Companies that respond to demo requests within 5 minutes close at 2.3x the rate of those that take an hour. The median response time across all 900 companies? 3 hours and 42 minutes. Everyone "knows" speed-to-lead matters. Almost nobody staffs for it. And what the top 10% do differently is almost embarrassingly simple: A human on demo-request triage during business hours. Not a bot. A person. We unpacked the full 2026 benchmark report in yesterday's webinar, replay link in the comments. What's your team's real response time? Be honest.
What is the Webinar to LinkedIn Post?
A webinar-to-LinkedIn-post generator converts a recorded session into written posts for the platform where B2B webinar content actually performs. A webinar is an hour of expert material seen by a fraction of registrants, then archived; LinkedIn is where the rest of your market scrolls every day. This tool extracts the strongest insights, stats and Q&A moments from the recording and reshapes each one into a native post, recap, standalone insight or replay promo, so one session feeds your company page and your speakers' personal profiles for a week instead of producing a single event announcement.
How it works
- 1
Paste the webinar
Drop in the recording link or transcript from Zoom, Demio, Livestorm or wherever you host. No editing or note-taking needed.
- 2
Tugan finds the post-worthy moments
It works through the full session and pulls the strongest stats, stories, frameworks and Q&A exchanges, each a candidate post.
- 3
It writes native LinkedIn posts
A recap post, standalone insight posts and a replay promo, each with a hook line, short paragraphs, white space and a comment-driving close.
- 4
Post and space them out
Publish the recap the day after the session, then drip the insight posts across the week, from the company page and the speakers' profiles.
What a great LinkedIn post includes
- A thumb-stopping first line built on the session's most surprising moment
- Short, scannable paragraphs with deliberate white space, written for the feed
- One specific stat, story or framework per post, pulled straight from the recording
- No "thanks to everyone who joined" boilerplate, every post delivers real value
- A close that drives comments, plus a replay link placed where it helps reach
- Multiple angles from one session: recap, insight posts, Q&A post, replay promo
Who it's for
B2B marketing teams
Turn every monthly webinar into a week of feed content that reaches the buyers who never registered.
Founders & speakers
Repurpose the session you already delivered into personal-profile posts that build authority between events.
Agencies & webinar producers
Ship a ready-to-post LinkedIn recap set with every webinar you produce, no extra writer needed.
Coaches & course creators
Mine live trainings and masterclasses for insight posts that sell the next session.
Benefits
- One webinar becomes a week of LinkedIn posts, not one announcement
- Written posts that get read in the feed, not clips that get skipped
- Keeps the session's real stats, stories and Q&A moments
- Angles for both the company page and speakers' personal profiles
- The replay keeps earning views long after the live date
Frequently asked questions
What kinds of posts can I get from one webinar?+
Several distinct angles: a recap post built on the session's most surprising takeaway, standalone insight posts that never mention the event, a Q&A post from the best audience exchange, and a promo post that drives replay views or the next registration. Each is a complete post, not bullets in a summary.
How is this different from clipping the webinar into videos?+
Clip tools like OpusClip or Munch output short videos, which work on some feeds but are the easiest content to scroll past on LinkedIn, where text posts are read on mute. A written post delivers the insight natively, gets skimmed, quoted and commented on, and doesn't require anyone to press play. The two also pair well: a written post with the clip in the comments.
Will the posts just say "thanks for joining"?+
No. The event-announcement recap is exactly what this replaces. Every post is built around a specific moment from the recording, a stat, a story, a framework, so it earns reach with people who never heard of the webinar, then routes the interested ones to the replay.
Can I generate posts for the speakers as well as the company page?+
Yes, and you should: personal profiles consistently out-reach company pages on LinkedIn. Generate a first-person version for the host or guest, "a number from our webinar stopped me cold...", and a brand version for the page, and the same session covers both without sounding duplicated.
Can it also create posts for other platforms from the same webinar?+
Yes. The same recording can become tweets, an Instagram caption, a full follow-up email sequence or a blog post. LinkedIn is usually the first stop for B2B webinar content, but one session can feed every channel you run.
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