LinkedIn's Saved items page is buried at a URL the 2026 UI hides, has no folders or tags, no full-text search across the body of saved posts, and dumps articles, jobs, and posts into one flat list. MarkIt saves the post, the AI summary, and an auto-category - all searchable from one place across every platform you save from.
Tap Share on any LinkedIn post, article, or job, and send the link to MarkIt's WhatsApp or Telegram bot. The bot saves the URL, the author's name, the preview image, any body text LinkedIn exposes, an AI summary, and an auto-category - all in about 5 seconds. Search later with natural language. Free up to 40 saves per month.
LinkedIn is where a lot of high-value professional content lives in 2026: long-form thought-leadership posts that take 5+ minutes to read properly, carousels packed with frameworks, hiring announcements, founder threads about pricing or fundraising, salary breakdowns, interview tip threads. The kind of content people genuinely want to return to weeks or months later when a job search starts or a relevant decision comes up.
LinkedIn's answer is Saved items, a per-account flag that lands at linkedin.com/my-items/saved-posts/. The link is buried in the UI (the 2026 redesign moved it again, prompting confused 'where did Saved go?' threads), has no folder system, no tags, no full-text search across the body text of saved posts, and dumps articles, courses, posts, and job listings into the same flat reverse-chronological list.
Most professional users end up with the same workaround: copy-paste the best posts into Notion or a notes app. Which loses the formatting, the author context, and the link back to LinkedIn.
Saved items is a 2018-era feature LinkedIn has not seriously updated as long-form content on the platform exploded.
Tap Share on any LinkedIn post, article, or job listing, send the URL to MarkIt's WhatsApp or Telegram bot. Or paste the URL into the web dashboard. The bot accepts posts, Pulse articles, job links, and event pages.
The bot pulls the post URL, the author or page name, the preview image, any body text LinkedIn exposes in its Open Graph metadata, an AI summary, and an auto-category. Works for posts you can open in a logged-out browser. Member-only or login-walled content saves as a URL with limited preview.
Find that founder thread later with natural language - 'the post about Series A pricing strategy from the marketplace founder' - even if you do not remember the author. Inside WhatsApp itself, ask the bot 'find that LinkedIn post about interview rubrics.'
LinkedIn restricts what third-party crawlers can see; MarkIt captures what is publicly exposed plus the AI enrichment on top of it:
Preserved so you can revisit the post on LinkedIn itself anytime.
When LinkedIn exposes the author in the Open Graph preview, MarkIt captures it for filtering.
When LinkedIn renders an Open Graph preview with body text, MarkIt indexes it as searchable content.
The image card LinkedIn shows in link unfurls.
When you save a LinkedIn Pulse article, the title and publication context are captured cleanly.
Built from whatever text LinkedIn exposes to public preview.
Your saves are yours. MarkIt does not train AI on your library, does not sell data, and does not share what you save with other users. Saving a LinkedIn post via MarkIt is private and does not register as engagement on LinkedIn. Export your full library as JSON anytime by emailing [email protected].
Yes, as long as you can open the post URL in a browser without logging in. Member-only or login-walled posts will only save the URL and any public Open Graph data.
No. Saving in MarkIt is private. The post author does not get any notification, and the save does not count as a like, share, or engagement on LinkedIn.
Not always. LinkedIn aggressively rate-limits and restricts third-party crawlers (LinkedInBot itself respects robots.txt). Some posts unfurl as title + preview image only, not full body text. The save still works, just with less indexable content.
Yes. Pulse articles unfurl reliably with title, author, preview image, and excerpt. The AI summary is built from whatever excerpt LinkedIn exposes.
Yes. The job link, title, company, and preview save cleanly. Note that LinkedIn removes job listings from the public site once they close, so the live page may eventually 404 even though your MarkIt entry stays.
Yes. LinkedIn newsletter pages unfurl with title, author, and excerpt, and save like any Pulse article.
MarkIt is one library across every source you save from. The bot understands LinkedIn and these:
Free up to 40 captures a month. Includes the WhatsApp bot, Telegram bot, AI summaries, AI categorization across 12 buckets, semantic search, and full export. No credit card.
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