LinkedIn Carousel Format for UI Design Conversion, LinkedIn carousels are everywhere. Before/after UI comparisons are everywhere. Yet most of them get scrolled past in under a second. The problem isn’t the format it’s the execution.
Why the before and after UI carousel works on LinkedIn
The LinkedIn Carousel Format mimics how designers think. You’re not teaching theory you’re showing the moment of improvement. That’s the content people save, share, and come back to. One visual contrast does more than three paragraphs of explanation ever could.
The five-slide LinkedIn UI carousel before after formula
Slide 1 — Hook. Lead with the result, not the problem. “One small layout change. Engagement jumped 3×.” Make them curious before they even see the UI.
Slide 2 — Before. Show the broken state. Crop tightly to the problem area full-page screenshots lose the diff. Crucially, the before should feel slightly uncomfortable to look at. If it looks fine, the after won’t feel like an upgrade.
Slide 3 — After. Show the fixed state. Same crop, same framing. Let the contrast do the talking. Add a single annotation circle if needed one clear marker beats five arrows.
Slide 4 — Why it works. Explain the principle behind the change, not just the change itself. “Removed visual competition between the CTA and the nav” is more useful than “made the button bigger.”
Slide 5 — CTA. End with a question. Not to be clever because LinkedIn rewards comments, and a direct question is the simplest way to get one.
Four rules for UI comparisons that land
Label everything. Write “Before” and “After” in large, obvious type on every slide. Never assume the order is self-evident.
Crop ruthlessly. Isolate the changed element. Context is the enemy of clarity in a carousel.
Tie it to a number. Even a soft metric works “felt cluttered,” “users missed the button entirely.” Specificity builds credibility.
Keep annotations minimal. One red circle on the before, one green highlight on the after. More than that and you’re teaching, not showing.
The real secret
Consistency beats perfection. A LinkedIn Carousel Format posted every week even an imperfect one builds more authority than a flawless post once a month. The format is forgiving. The algorithm rewards regularity.
Post it. Let the UI speak before the caption does. The carousel is the argument; the caption is just the handshake.
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