The trick is to use AI like an art director would, not like a prompt generator.
Let’s break down a strategy that works well for professional posts.
The images that perform best on LinkedIn usually behave like magazine illustrations:
Instead of illustrating the topic directly, they suggest the idea.
“media server controlling projectors in a concert venue”
This produces generic visuals.
“a beam of light sculpting a cathedral made of pixels”
This communicates media server creativity metaphorically.
Good LinkedIn images often rely on visual metaphor.
a conductor directing an orchestra made of light beams and projection screens, dark theater stage, dramatic spotlight, cinematic lighting
constellations in the night sky connected by glowing lines, forming a hidden geometric pattern, minimalist scientific illustration, deep black background
a medieval clockwork machine made of gears and light rays, intricate mechanisms controlling beams of projection, mysterious workshop atmosphere
These feel artistic and intellectual, not corporate.
AI images are often recognizable because they are:
You can avoid this by prompting for styles like:
These reduce the “AI look”.
For LinkedIn visuals, a reliable structure is:
a beam of light carving geometric shapes in a dark theater space, symbolizing digital scenography, minimalist cinematic photography, strong contrast lighting, dramatic composition --ar 16:9
This feels intentional and conceptual.
One of the easiest ways to avoid the AI look is to prompt as if you are a photographer.
dark theater interior, a single projector beam illuminating floating geometric shapes, cinematic lighting, fine art photography, high contrast shadows --ar 16:9
This looks far less AI-ish.
MJ is particularly good at:
So instead of trying to illustrate hardware, illustrate atmosphere and creation.
ancient stone cathedral interior, walls transforming into luminous geometric projections, beams of light sculpting the architecture, mystical atmosphere, cinematic lighting --ar 16:9
That suggests media servers without looking like marketing material.
A trick designers use to make images feel more professional:
Limit colors.
This creates visual identity.
If you plan to use AI images regularly, pick a visual signature.
Example style directions:
Option A – cinematic minimalism dark environments + beams of light
Option B – abstract geometry light + shapes + minimal backgrounds
Option C – architectural projection real spaces + surreal lighting
Consistency builds recognizable branding.
LinkedIn favors wide images.
Good ratios:
–ar 16:9
or
–ar 1.91:1
These display better in the feed.
10. My Honest Opinion
Using MidJourney for LinkedIn posts can absolutely work, especially in your field.
Your domain (media servers, projection, visual creativity) is perfect for atmospheric imagery.
The key difference between mediocre and powerful posts will be this:
Bad AI posts illustrate the tool. Good ones illustrate the idea.
To pursue, ask for : five prompt archetypes specifically designed for media server professionals
that produce images which feel more like concept art for creativity and technology rather than generic AI graphics.