Writing
LinkedIn Connection Message Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A LinkedIn connection message generator takes two quick inputs — your role and your reason for reaching out — and produces a short, personalized note that reads like a real person wrote it. LinkedIn caps standard connection requests at 300 characters, so every word has to earn its place. Blank requests from strangers get ignored; a two-sentence message that names who you are and why you're reaching out can push acceptance rates from under 20% to 50% or higher. This tool covers five common reasons: admiring someone's work, shared industry, potential collaboration, a job opportunity, or a mutual connection. No filler openers, no immediate sales pitch.
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How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Select your reason for connecting from the dropdown — for example, 'Admire Their Work' or 'Recruiting'.
- Type your role or field into the text box so the message introduces you accurately to the recipient.
- Click Generate to produce a personalized, character-efficient LinkedIn connection message.
- Review the output and swap in one specific detail about the recipient — their company, a post, or a shared event.
- Copy the message and paste it directly into LinkedIn's connection request note field before sending.
Use Cases
- •Reaching out to a hiring manager at a target company before submitting a formal application
- •Connecting with a conference speaker whose session directly relates to your current project
- •Introducing yourself to a potential freelance client in your niche after engaging with their LinkedIn posts
- •Rebuilding a dormant professional relationship with a former colleague before a career pivot
- •Messaging a journalist or industry editor who covers your sector to establish a source relationship
Tips
- →Generate 3-4 variations by slightly rewording your role input, then pick whichever opening line feels most natural for the specific person.
- →If your reason is 'Admire Their Work,' always replace the generic reference in the output with the actual post, article, or project you have in mind.
- →Messages generated for the 'Recruiting' reason work best when you add the specific role name before sending — don't leave it vague.
- →Test shorter versions of the output by cutting the last sentence; many messages perform better as two sentences than three.
- →Save your two or three highest-performing messages in a notes app so you can adapt them quickly for similar outreach without regenerating each time.
- →Avoid sending connection messages on Mondays and Fridays when LinkedIn activity is lower — Tuesday through Thursday sees higher response and acceptance rates.
FAQ
does adding a note to a linkedin connection request actually help
Yes — blank requests from strangers are frequently ignored, especially by people managing large networks. A two-sentence note naming your role and your specific reason for connecting can lift acceptance rates from under 20% to 50–60%. Keep it under 150 characters if you can; shorter reads faster and signals respect for their time.
what's the character limit for a linkedin connection message
Standard connection request notes are capped at 300 characters. That's roughly 50–60 words, so treat it like a tweet, not an email. Write to that limit every time — even when a pathway technically allows more — because concise messages consistently outperform longer ones.
can I use the same connection message for multiple people on linkedin
Use the generated message as a starting template, then swap in one specific detail per recipient — a post they wrote, their company name, or a shared event. Recipients sense copy-paste energy even when the template is well-crafted, and that single personalized detail is what makes the difference between accepted and ignored.