Every article you write deserves an audience. But most posts fail because they're either manipulative (using psychological tricks to force engagement) or invisible (lost in the noise because they lack clarity). The Catalytic Converter bridges this gap: it uses 11 evidence-based psychological effects to amplify genuine insight—but only when that insight is real.
The output is tight: a 120–180 word LinkedIn post ready to copy/paste, paired with effect justification and guardrail verification. No hype. No bait. Just your voice, working harder.
Workflow
The method enforces one non-negotiable rule: effects serve truth, never replace it. A post that distorts reality to use a shiny effect is manipulation. A post that amplifies real insight using the right effect is clarity.
The 11 Effects
These are psychological principles proven to drive reader engagement in written content. Each has strict guardrails to prevent misuse.
High Priority (Use liberally if truth supports):
- Knowledge Gap — Reveal what readers don't know they're missing
- Paradox/Contradiction — Two truths that shouldn't coexist, resolved with evidence
- Pattern Interrupt — Break expected rhythm to re-engage attention
- Novelty Bias — Present genuinely fresh insight
- Contrarian Frame — Go against conventional wisdom (defensible only)
- Reciprocity/Value-First — Give something valuable upfront
- Identity Growth Path — Show how adopting insight changes who you become (Mantle focus)
Medium Priority (Use if conditions align):
- Zeigarnik Effect — Incomplete information creates productive tension
- Consequence Amplification — Escalating stakes (STRICT: only real threats affecting 100+ people)
- Status/Identity — Aspirational framing (never shame-based)
Not in arsenal:
- Social Proof, Authority/Expertise — use "Perspective from Practice" in voice instead
Core Principles
Every post must honor four commitments:
1. Find the Good — Locate the constructive insight, not just the problem. Even critiques should point toward something better.
2. Reader Benefit First — Every line serves the reader, not the sender. No "look at me," no hard sell. Your voice is "I am for YOU."
3. Above-the-Fold Priority — Everything critical must be visible before LinkedIn's "more" button. If the reader must click to understand the benefit, rewrite tighter.
4. Invitation, Not Demand — Assume the reader is capable and seeking. Offer access to thinking, don't manufacture urgency with pressure language.
The Workflow
Step 1: Distill Truth. Check if your article has been distilled via the _DISTILLER skill. If not, run it first. The distilled truth (main truth + anti-truth + subsidiary truths) becomes your north star.
Step 2: Identify Reader Benefit. Extract from the distilled truth: what does the reader gain? Reframe it as invitation, not demand. Assess whether this is about growth, clarity, permission, or action.
Step 3: Select Valid Effects. Map the article's truth to the 11 effects. Keep 2–3 maximum. Verify guardrails:
- Consequence Amplification? (check 100+ threshold + evidence)
- Contrarian? (check defensibility)
- Pattern Interrupt? (check serves clarity, not just novelty)
- Identity Growth? (check Mantle alignment)
Step 4: Draft Post (120–180 words).
- Hook (1–2 sentences): Use primary effect to open. This is above-fold.
- Insight (3–4 sentences): Reframe around reader benefit. Why they should care.
- Specificity (1–2 sentences): One concrete example or stat (if it serves).
- CTA (1 sentence): Link to full article. Invitation only.
Step 5: Above-Fold Audit. Simulate LinkedIn display. Does reader understand the benefit in first 2–3 lines? If no, rewrite tighter.
Step 6: Verify Guardrails. Check each guardrail applies to the effects you're using. Document which passed.
Step 7: Update Article Frontmatter. Store two fields:
linkedin_post_text: Plaintext, ready to copy/pastelinkedin_post_generated: Structured metadata (effects, voice, guardrails, date, version)
Guardrails in Detail
Consequence Amplification — Strict Threshold Only use if threat is REAL, EVIDENCED, and affects 100+ people. Escalating stakes can manipulate if speculative. Minimum threshold prevents fearmongering while allowing legitimate urgent cases.
Contrarian Frame — Defensibility Check Contrarian angles must be defensible; not just provocative. Must explain WHY conventional wisdom is wrong. Do you have logic or evidence to back this? Would this hold up to skeptical questions?
Pattern Interrupt — Clarity Over Novelty Interrupt must serve the message, not just grab attention. Does this break rhythm to emphasize something important? Or is it just jarring/clickbait?
Identity Growth Path — Mantle Alignment Frame as growth/transformation, never as shame or inadequacy. Does this show what becomes possible? Or does it shame/blame? Is this aspirational (becoming) vs. transactional (having)?
Above-Fold Rule — LinkedIn Display Critical insight must be visible pre-"more" button. If reader must click to understand why this matters, rewrite tighter. Cut non-essential proof/examples until post is condensed.
Reader Benefit First — No Self-Serving Copy Every line must serve the reader. Does this line explain why the reader cares? Or does it highlight the author's insight/credentials? Would this change if a different author wrote it?
Invitation Over Demand Assume reader is capable and seeking. Is there pressure language ("must," "should," "have to")? Would an independent reader feel respected or coerced?
Benefits
Risks & Mitigations
Handoff
The Catalytic Converter produces two outputs, stored in article frontmatter:
linkedin_post_text — Plaintext post (120–180 words), ready to copy/paste to LinkedIn
linkedin_post_generated — Structured metadata:
- Effects used (primary + secondary) with justification
- Voice applied (contrarian, peer, guide)
- Generation date and version number
- Guardrail audit trail (which checks passed)
These outputs are part of your article's publishing workflow. The post is a distribution asset — it lives with the article, versions with it, and can be republished or adapted as needed.
The post is not a summary of the article. It is an invitation to the article, framed through the psychological effect that best serves the article's truth.
Core rule: Effects serve truth. Truth serves reader. Reader benefit first, always.