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Personal Brand for Developers: A 30-Day LinkedIn Challenge

April 28, 2026, 02:00 Europe/Berlin

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Most of what you do as a developer stays private. You learn a tool, fix a bug, or choose one library over another. Then you move on, and the work disappears.

In this workshop you turn that work into public proof of your learning. You take on a 30-day challenge to make posting a habit.

The session is about personal brand for developers, focused on LinkedIn. It's not a coding workshop. You'll get comfortable publishing what you learn before it feels perfect, and you'll get a repeatable system, so you never face a blank page. The challenge is small: three LinkedIn posts a week for four weeks.

You run the system on a weekly loop. You capture small notes from your daily work as they happen. Once a week you book a short block and pick three notes. You draft each one with an AI assistant, then edit it into your own voice and schedule it.

flowchart LR work["daily work: learning, building, debugging"] -->|capture notes| backlog["idea backlog"] backlog -->|once a week, pick 3| draft["draft with AI"] draft -->|edit yourself| post["publishable post"] post -->|schedule| linkedin["LinkedIn 3 posts/week"] linkedin -->|reflect| backlog

Capture and drafting never happen at the same time, and that separation is deliberate. Capture is high-frequency and low-effort. It can be a voice note after a debugging session. It can be a screenshot of an error or a one-line idea saved to yourself. Drafting is a single focused block where you turn raw notes into posts in batches.

We spend most of our time getting past the reasons people don't post. You don't need to be an expert. Nothing has to be original. Early posts that get no reactions are normal, and still useful.

The rest covers the practical side:

  • where post ideas come from
  • what a good post looks like
  • templates you can copy
  • a live walkthrough of turning a project write-up into a post

Links

Resources referenced in the session:

  • Steal Like an Artist and Show Your Work by Austin Kleon. Short books on why nothing is fully original and why sharing your process is worth it.
  • The challenge runs in the #linkedin-challenge channel in the AI Shipping Labs community. It has a shared draft-review document and individual draft threads for feedback.

Hosted by

Valeriia Kuka

Valeriia Kuka

Content Strategist

Content strategist and technical writer specializing in AI/ML education. I focus on making complex technical concepts accessible and helping builders learn through clear, practical content.

At AI Shipping Labs, I work alongside Alexey to shape the community's content strategy and member experience. I ensure that motivated learners have the resources, frameworks, and clear direction they need to make consistent progress on their AI projects. My goal is to help builders bridge the gap from ideas to shipped products by providing structure and removing friction from the learning-by-doing process.

valeriia@aishippinglabs.com

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