How To Write An About Section On LinkedIn | Proof-Ready Bio

A strong LinkedIn About section turns a skim into a click by spelling out what you do, who you do it for, and what happens next.

Your LinkedIn headline gets the first glance. Your experience section proves you’ve done the work. Your About section is the part that pulls it together in plain language.

If you’ve ever stared at the empty box and thought, “I can’t fit my whole career in here,” you’re not alone. The fix isn’t more words. It’s better choices: the right details, in the right order, with a clear next step.

This article walks you through a clean structure you can reuse, plus writing prompts, examples, and a final fill-in draft you can paste into your profile today.

What Your About Section Must Do In One Scroll

Most people don’t read your profile like a novel. They scan, pause, then decide. Your About section earns that pause when it does four jobs fast.

Make Your Role Obvious

Don’t make readers guess what you’re “into.” Say what you do in normal words. If your title is niche, translate it once so a hiring manager, client, or peer can follow along.

Name The People You Work With

“I work in tech” is broad. “I help B2B SaaS teams ship onboarding that cuts churn” lands. Pick a real group of people and call them out.

Show Proof Without Sounding Like A Robot

Proof can be numbers, outcomes, awards, or a short list of wins. Keep it tight. One or two strong results beat a long roll call.

Give A Next Step

End with a clear action. Connect, message, book a call, view a portfolio, grab a resume link. If you don’t say what to do, many readers won’t do anything.

Before You Write, Gather The Raw Material

Good writing gets easier when you stop trying to invent on the spot. Spend ten minutes collecting real inputs, then write from the pile.

Pick One Primary Goal

Choose the main outcome you want from the About section. One is enough. You can still be human and multi-skilled, but your page should point somewhere.

  • Job search: recruiters and hiring managers
  • Client work: buyers who want a clear offer
  • Networking: peers in your space
  • Speaking or writing: event hosts and editors

List Your “Receipts”

Open a note and list the facts you can stand behind. No fluff. No guessing.

  • 2–4 projects you’re proud of
  • Outcomes you can name (time saved, revenue, quality gains, fewer errors)
  • Tools, methods, or domains you use often
  • Industries you’ve worked in
  • Proof signals: certifications, publications, talks, awards

Write Two Reader Questions

These keep your About section reader-led. Write them as if a stranger clicked your profile and wanted answers fast.

  • “Can this person solve my problem?”
  • “Do they sound like someone I’d enjoy working with?”

How To Write An About Section On LinkedIn

Here’s a structure that works across roles because it follows how people decide: clarity first, proof next, then a simple close.

Step 1: Start With A One-Line Hook

Lead with a line that says what you do and why it matters. Skip buzzwords. Skip dramatic openers. Aim for a calm, confident sentence a real person would say.

  • Good: “I help operations teams turn messy workflows into clear, trackable processes.”
  • Good: “I build data dashboards that answer the questions leaders ask every Monday.”
  • Not so good: “Passionate professional with a proven track record…”

Step 2: Add A Short “Who I Work With” Line

Make it easy for the right people to self-select. Name the role, industry, stage, or problem. One sentence does the job.

Try this pattern: I work with [people] who want [result] without [pain].

Step 3: Give Proof In 2–4 Bullets

This is where you earn trust. Keep each bullet one line. Start with a verb. Use numbers only when you can stand behind them.

  • Shipped X → led to Y outcome
  • Cut cycle time by Z through process changes
  • Built a repeatable system used across a team
  • Owned a launch from plan to post-launch fixes

Step 4: Share Your Working Style In Plain Words

People hire people. Add 2–3 sentences that show how you think and how you work. Keep it grounded.

Options that read well: how you plan a project, how you work with stakeholders, what you value in collaboration, what you won’t compromise on (quality, clarity, deadlines).

Step 5: Add A “Now” Line

Make your current focus obvious. This stops mixed signals.

  • “Right now, I’m looking for product analytics roles in Helsinki or remote.”
  • “I’m taking on two freelance copy projects per month.”
  • “I’m open to advisory work with early-stage teams.”

Step 6: Close With A Direct Call To Action

Tell readers how to reach you and what to send. This removes awkward back-and-forth.

  • “Message me with the role title and a link to the job post.”
  • “Send a note with your timeline and what success looks like.”
  • “If you’re hiring for X, I’d love to chat.”

Step 7: Format For Skimming

LinkedIn is a skim-first place. Keep paragraphs short. Use bullets for proof. Use line breaks so the “See more” cutoff still leaves a complete thought.

LinkedIn’s own profile guidance points out that your summary should communicate your motivation and skills, and that bullets are fine if paragraphs feel hard to write. You’ll find that guidance in LinkedIn Help’s profile tips, which also frame your profile as a professional landing page you control. LinkedIn Help profile tips

Common Writing Choices That Quietly Hurt Results

These aren’t dramatic “mistakes.” They’re the small choices that make a reader drift away.

Listing Tasks Without Outcomes

“Responsible for” lines feel like a job description. Swap tasks for results: what changed because you did the work.

Sounding Like Everyone Else

If your About section could be pasted onto ten other profiles, it won’t stick. Add one detail that’s hard to copy: a specific niche, a method, a type of project, or a signature result.

Writing For A Crowd Instead Of A Person

Pick one reader. Write to them. A focused message attracts better opportunities than a vague one that tries to please everyone.

Forgetting The Public View

Some people view your profile while signed out or via search tools. LinkedIn explains that changes to your public profile can take time to show up in search tools outside LinkedIn. If you update your About section for a job hunt, do it early, not the night before you apply. LinkedIn public profile visibility notes

Build Blocks You Can Mix And Match

If you’re stuck, don’t write from scratch. Assemble a draft from proven blocks. Use the table below to pick what fits your goal, then write each block in your own voice.

Block What To Write Slip To Avoid
Hook line One sentence: role + outcome Abstract titles with no outcome
Who you help Audience + result they want Trying to target everyone
Proof bullets 2–4 wins, each one line Long paragraphs of tasks
Specialties 4–8 skills or domains you use often Dumping a giant keyword list
Working style How you plan, communicate, deliver Vague “team player” claims
Current focus What you want next, stated clearly Mixed signals about direction
Call to action How to contact + what to include No next step at all
Personality line One human detail tied to work Random trivia with no link to work

Write Versions That Fit Different Career Moments

Your About section shouldn’t sound the same at every stage. The tone can stay calm and direct, while the focus shifts based on what you want next.

When You’re Job Hunting

Make role targets clear. Show proof that matches those roles. Remove distractions that point in a different direction.

Good pattern: target role → relevant proof → tools/domains → location/remote → call to action.

When You’re Freelancing Or Consulting

Lead with the offer, not the backstory. Buyers want to know the problem you solve, how you work, and what an engagement looks like.

Add one line that sets expectations: typical project length, the way you start (audit, workshop, discovery), and what a good handoff looks like.

When You’re Switching Fields

Don’t hide the switch. Name it, then connect the dots with transferable proof. Focus on the skills that carry over: systems thinking, stakeholder work, writing, analysis, shipping projects, customer insight.

Keep old titles brief. Spend more space on what you can do now.

When You’re Growing A Network

Make the “why connect” obvious. Name the topics you want to talk about, the people you want to meet, and what you can offer back: introductions, feedback, collaboration on projects.

Mini Starters You Can Copy And Personalize

Use these as starters, then rewrite so they sound like you. The goal is speed without sounding canned.

Goal Opening Line Closing Line
Job search I build [type of work] that helps [audience] reach [result]. If you’re hiring for [role], message me the job link and what matters most in the first 90 days.
Freelance services I help [audience] solve [problem] with [service]. Send your timeline, budget range, and what “done” should look like.
Career switch I’m moving from [past area] into [new area], using [transferable strength] to drive [result]. If you work in [new area] and have advice or roles, I’d value a message.
Leadership I lead teams that ship [outcome], with a focus on [principle]. I’m open to roles where I can own [scope] and build [capability].
Student or grad I’m a [student/grad] focused on [area], building skills in [tools/domains]. If you’re open to an internship chat, I’ll send a short note and a portfolio link.
Creator I write about [topic] for [audience] who want [result]. Connect if you’re into [topic]; I’m always up for a sharp exchange of notes.

Polish Checklist Before You Hit Save

Do this quick pass. It takes five minutes and often doubles clarity.

  • First two lines: Do they state your role and outcome?
  • Reader match: Can the right person see themselves in your audience line?
  • Proof: Are there 2–4 wins that show results?
  • Skim: Do bullets and line breaks make it easy to scan?
  • Close: Is there a single next step?
  • Voice: Does it sound like you in a good work conversation?

Copy-Ready About Section Draft

Paste this into a note, fill the brackets, then edit for your voice. Keep the sentences you like. Cut the rest.

I help [audience] achieve [result] by [how you do it].

Right now, I’m focused on [role/offer] in [industry or niche]. My work usually involves:
- [win or outcome]
- [win or outcome]
- [win or outcome]

I’m known for [working style in plain words]. I care about [value you bring to teams or clients] and I like work that [type of work you want more of].

Specialties: [4–8 skills/domains/tools]

Want to connect? Message me with [what to include], and I’ll reply with [what you’ll do next].
  

Once you’ve filled it in, read it out loud. If a line feels stiff, rewrite it like you’d say it on a call. That simple test catches most awkward phrasing.

References & Sources