A carousel gets pushed to more feeds than almost anything else you post. That is the good news and the trap. More reach means more people deciding, in half a second, whether to swipe or keep scrolling. Most never swipe. Everything below is about that first decision.
1Slide one has one job
Slide one is not a title slide. It is the hook. If it does not make someone curious enough to swipe, nothing else on the carousel matters, because nobody sees it. Lead with a tension, a number, or a promise. Never a topic.
2One idea per slide
The fastest way to lose a reader mid-carousel is to crowd a slide. One idea, one sentence, one visual. White space is not wasted space, it is what makes the next tap feel effortless. If a slide needs two breaths to read, split it into two.
3Leave the loop open
Every slide should end slightly unfinished, so the next one answers it. This is the same pull a good story uses. End middle slides on a small cliffhanger and only close the loop on the last slide.
Lines that earn the next swipe: "but there is a catch", "here is the part most people miss", "slide 5 is the one that actually matters".
4A skeleton you can reuse
Keep it to seven slides. A carousel is a sprint, not a deck.
5Draft it with AI in two minutes
Paste this into ChatGPT or Claude, fill in the brackets, then edit it into your own voice.
You are helping me write a LinkedIn carousel. Topic: [your topic] Audience: [who it is for] Write 7 slides. - Slide 1 is a scroll-stopping hook built on tension or a number, not a title. - One idea per slide, 12 words max per slide. - Each middle slide ends on an open loop the next slide answers. - Slide 7 is a single, clear call to action. Return it as Slide 1 to Slide 7.
The AI gives you the skeleton. You bring the voice and the real example. Never post its first draft as is.
6Before you post
- Does slide one still work with no caption and no context? It has to.
- Can a reader get the whole point from the slides alone?
- Is there one, and only one, action on the last slide?
- Would YOU swipe past slide one? Be honest.
The caption gets the click. The slides get the read. Get slide one right, and the format that already reaches the most people starts converting like your best writing does.