A good new job announcement is four moves: the news stated plainly in the first line, one line on what you will actually be doing, a thank-you that names something specific, and a forward-looking close. It runs 80 to 150 words and posts a week or two after you start, not the day you sign. Give this generator your notes and it writes that post.
The announcement goes up after you start, ideally one to two weeks in. Three reasons, all practical. Start dates move and offers occasionally fall through, and an announcement you have to retract is worse than none. Your last employer's colleagues deserve to hear it from you before the feed tells them. And a week in, you have something true to say about the actual work, which is what separates an announcement from a template.
Tell the people who need to hear it directly: your manager, your team, your references. The feed can wait until the ink and the start date are both real.
The colleagues who mattered get a message, not a mention. A private thank-you costs five minutes and outlasts any tag in a post.
Add the new position, refresh your headline and About section. You can turn off the automatic notification and let your own post carry the news instead.
Now you know what the job actually is, the post can say something real. This is the window where the news is still news and the details have arrived.
The announcement is the one post where your whole network shows up. Answer the congratulations; half of them are conversations worth having.
Include four things: the news in the first line (role and company, stated as fact), one line on the work itself, gratitude that names something specific, and a close that looks forward or invites the right people to reach out. Skip the rest: the day-by-day story of your job search, a roll call of twenty tagged names, adjectives about your new employer you cannot know yet ("world-class team" on day three), and "excited for this next chapter", which appears in so many announcements that readers no longer see it.
The thank-you paragraph is where most announcements fall apart, and the failure has one shape: gratitude aimed at everyone lands on no one. "I want to thank every single person who has been part of my incredible journey" is not thanks; it is an acceptance speech. The fix is to shrink the audience and grow the specificity. Pick one group or one person, and name the thing they actually did: what they taught, what they risked, what they caught.
One more rule: tag at most two or three people, and only people the post says something specific about. Tagging thirty people is a notification blast wearing a thank-you costume, and everyone tagged knows it.
Four announcements from this generator, unedited. The shape holds across situations; what changes is which part carries the weight.
Some personal news: this week I started as Senior Product Manager at Meridian Health. I will be leading the patient-scheduling team, working on the problem that first pulled me into health tech: the 40 minutes it can take to book a 10 minute appointment. Before looking ahead, a thank you. To my team at Corebridge, you taught me what good looks like, and your standards are coming with me. Day 3 and already deep in the roadmap. If you work on scheduling or patient access, I would love to compare notes.
Why it works: the news is line one, the work is described in the writer's own words, and the gratitude names one team and one lesson. Nothing here could be copied into anyone else's announcement.
New title, same mission: as of this month I am Engineering Manager at Halbrook. The honest version of this news is that a team performed well enough that someone had to be promoted, and I was standing closest. I will spend the next year trying to deserve it. To Priya, who told me two years ago to stop hoarding the hard problems and start teaching them: this one is yours too.
Why it works: promotions risk reading as self-congratulation, so the post hands the credit away and keeps the humility concrete instead of performed. Promotions also have their own etiquette around updating your profile; our guide to announcing a promotion on LinkedIn covers it with examples.
After nine years of teaching high school science, I have started as a Customer Success Manager at Lumen Analytics. The jump is smaller than it looks on paper. My job was explaining complex systems to skeptical audiences and catching confusion before it became failure. That is this job too; the audience just got older. Thank you to the mentors who reviewed my applications and told me the truth about what was not ready. You shortened this switch by months. If you are a teacher wondering whether your skills transfer: they do, and my messages are open.
Why it works: a career change announcement has to answer "why does this make sense" in one paragraph, and this one does it by naming the transferable skill instead of claiming transferability in the abstract.
I started my first analyst role this week: Data Analyst at Novara Logistics. I will be building reporting for the operations team, which is exactly the work I retrained for. Two people made the difference while I was switching fields: the mentors who reviewed my projects and told me the truth about what was not good enough yet. You know who you are, and it worked. If you are mid-career and eyeing analytics, my messages are open. I kept every note from the switch.
Why it works: no apology for being new, no inflated title, and the close turns the announcement into something useful for the people a step behind.
When should I announce my new job on LinkedIn?
One to two weeks after you start. Waiting past day one protects you if the start date moves, gives your old colleagues time to hear the news from you directly, and means the post can say something true about the actual work. Announcing the day you sign an offer is the riskiest version for no extra benefit.
How do I announce a new job on LinkedIn?
Write a short post with four parts: the news in the first line (role and company, stated plainly), one line on what you will be doing, a thank-you that names a specific person or team and what they did, and a forward-looking close. 80 to 150 words is the range that gets read in full. Update your headline and About section before the post goes live.
Is it cringe to post a new job announcement on LinkedIn?
The announcement itself is not; it is expected, and people genuinely like congratulating each other. What reads as cringe is the decoration: "thrilled and humbled", a paragraph of adjectives about an employer you started at on Monday, or twenty tagged names. State the news plainly, thank someone specifically, and the post lands fine.
Who should I thank in a new job announcement?
One group or one or two people, for something specific they did: the team that taught you, the mentor who reviewed your work, the manager who advocated for you. Gratitude aimed at everyone lands on no one. People who mattered most deserve a private message as well, before the post goes up.
Do I have to announce a new job on LinkedIn at all?
No. Updating your Experience section keeps your profile accurate, and LinkedIn can notify your network of the change without a post. The announcement post is worth writing when the visibility helps you: client-facing roles, career changes worth explaining, or a network you want to re-engage. If none of those apply, a quiet update is a legitimate choice.
Is this new job announcement generator free?
Yes. Enter your new role, what you will be doing in your own words, and who you want to thank, and you get an announcement you can edit and post. It comes from Resume Worded, whose resume and LinkedIn tools have been used by over 5 million job seekers.
Old colleagues, new teammates and recruiters will all click through this week. Our free LinkedIn review scores what they find: headline, About section, experience, and the keywords that decide whether the visit turns into anything.
Get my free LinkedIn review »More free LinkedIn tools: the headline generator for the line under your name, and the post generator for everything you publish after this one.
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