Your LinkedIn company page is competing with polished Fortune 500 brands in the same feed as your last post. The images you publish are either closing that gap or widening it. This guide walks you through exactly how to generate professional AI images for your LinkedIn company page — with real prompts you can copy and a cost breakdown that makes the case for ditching stock photo subscriptions.

Quick answer: You can create professional, on-brand LinkedIn images by describing what you want in plain English at ATXP Pics. No design skills needed, no subscription required — pay a few cents per image and your balance never expires. The entire process takes under a minute per image.
Why LinkedIn Images Deserve More Than a Stock Photo Search
Generic stock photos signal a generic company. LinkedIn's algorithm rewards posts with strong engagement in the first 30–60 minutes, and visuals are the single biggest driver of that initial click or stop-the-scroll moment. A photo of a smiling stranger in a headset is not doing that work.
The problem with stock photos specifically on LinkedIn:
- Recognition fatigue — the same Unsplash photos appear across hundreds of company pages
- Mismatch in tone — stock rarely fits the specific announcement, value, or industry you're communicating
- No brand continuity — rotating stock photos look like a company that hasn't decided who it is yet
AI-generated images solve all three. You control the subject, the style, the color palette, and the mood — every time.
What Types of Images Work Best on a LinkedIn Company Page
The highest-performing LinkedIn company page images fall into four categories, and each one maps directly to a type of prompt you can generate in seconds.
1. Announcement and milestone graphics
A clean, bold visual for a product launch, funding round, or company anniversary. Think strong contrast, minimal text space, and a subject that communicates achievement.
2. Thought leadership visuals
Abstract or conceptual images that accompany an insight post — data visualization aesthetics, architectural details, clean desk setups, or industry-specific environments.
3. Culture and team imagery
Illustrations or stylized scenes showing collaboration, office life, or remote work moments. These humanize the brand without requiring real employee photos.
4. Product and service context shots
A visual showing your product in use, your service in action, or the problem you solve — rendered cleanly without the cost of a product photography shoot.
How to Write Prompts That Produce Professional LinkedIn Images
The difference between a generic result and a polished one comes down to four elements in your prompt: subject, setting, style, and mood.
Follow this structure every time:
- State the subject clearly — what is the main focus of the image?
- Describe the setting — where is it, what's in the background?
- Name the visual style — photorealistic, flat illustration, editorial, cinematic, etc.
- Set the mood and color tone — professional, bold, minimal, warm, dark and dramatic
Prompt template:
[Subject] in [setting], [visual style], [mood/color tone], professional, high resolution, no text
Here are three ready-to-copy examples:
Announcement image:
Modern glass office building exterior at dusk, city skyline in background, cinematic lighting, navy blue and gold tones, professional, high resolution, no text
Thought leadership visual:
Close-up of two professionals reviewing documents at a minimalist white table, editorial photography style, soft natural light, clean and confident mood, no text
Product context shot:
Sleek laptop open on a marble desk with a small succulent and coffee cup, flat lay overhead view, cool white and grey tones, minimal and modern, high resolution, no text
The phrase "no text" is worth including every time — it keeps the image clean and lets you add your own copy in a tool like Canva or directly in the LinkedIn post editor.
Step-by-Step: Creating a Month of LinkedIn Images in One Session
You can batch-create a full month of LinkedIn company page images in under 30 minutes without a subscription, a design tool, or a creative brief.
- List your content calendar topics — write down 8–12 post themes for the month (announcements, tips, culture, holidays, etc.)
- Write one prompt per topic using the template above
- Generate all images at ATXP Pics — describe each one in plain English, download the result
- Review and regenerate if needed — if an image isn't right, adjust one word in the prompt and generate again; you're paying cents, not minutes of designer time
- Save to a shared folder organized by post date so scheduling is instant
One pass through this process typically costs less than $1.00 total. A single month of Getty Images licensing can run $50–$175 depending on your plan.
What to Avoid When Generating LinkedIn Images
The most common mistake is prompting too vaguely, which produces beautiful images that feel random rather than branded.
Avoid these patterns:
- "A professional image for LinkedIn" — too vague; the result will be generic
- Overcrowded scenes — asking for too many elements produces busy, confusing visuals
- Asking for text in the image — AI-rendered text is unreliable; add your own in post
- Inconsistent styles across posts — decide on one or two visual styles and stick to them for brand continuity
- Skipping the color direction — if your brand has signature colors, name them in every prompt
A small amount of prompt precision pays off in images that actually look like they came from the same brand.
The Cost Case for Pay-Per-Image on LinkedIn
Midjourney's Basic plan runs $10/month for roughly 150 images — about $0.07 per image when you use every one. But if you're creating 10–15 LinkedIn images a month, your effective cost is closer to $0.67–$1.00 per image. And you're charged whether you create that month or not.
| Usage level | Midjourney Basic ($10/mo) | ATXP Pics (pay per image) | |---|---|---| | 5 images/month | $2.00/image | ~$0.05–0.10/image | | 10 images/month | $1.00/image | ~$0.05–0.10/image | | 150 images/month | $0.07/image | ~$0.05–0.10/image | | Months you don't create | $10.00 wasted | $0.00 |
For LinkedIn content specifically — where 10–20 images per month is a realistic volume — pay-per-image is consistently cheaper, and your balance never expires between content sprints.
Create your first LinkedIn image →
Your LinkedIn Page Already Has the Right Audience
The people you want to reach are already on LinkedIn. What determines whether they stop, click, or keep scrolling is almost entirely visual. AI images for your LinkedIn company page give you the ability to show up with custom, on-brand visuals for every post — without a designer, without a stock subscription, and without spending more than a few cents per image.
Describe what you want. Get a professional image in seconds. That's it.