Most LinkedIn about sections read like resumes at best and therapy journals at worst. People dump their entire career history, list every job they've held, and sprinkle in personal information nobody asked for. But your about section isn't a diary entry. So don't treat it like one. Every word should be carefully crafted to resonate with your dream customer.

I quadrupled my LinkedIn by treating every profile element like a conversion tool. Your about section sits on prime real estate on your profile. Visitors land there looking for one thing: proof that you understand their world better than anyone else. Give them that proof and you'll have a fan for life. Miss the mark and they'll click away to someone else.

Write your LinkedIn about section like your best LinkedIn post

Lead with the core lesson or truth you stand on

No warmup. No "I'm passionate about helping people succeed" dross. Open with the one belief that drives everything you do. Your dream client should read line one and think "yes, this person gets it." The first three lines determine whether anyone reads line four. Bury your best stuff in paragraph three and nobody will find it.

State your truth like you mean it. “You’re posting every day but you’re not winning clients.” “Every discovery call takes ages and then they ghost you.” "You’re wearing burnout like a medal." Pick the belief your ideal clients secretly hold but rarely see articulated. That becomes your opening line.

Tell the story that made you believe it

Every strong belief came from somewhere. What moment gave you yours? Maybe you watched a client struggle because they ignored your advice. Maybe you got bored of chasing revenue that gave you zero fulfilment. Maybe you stumbled onto a discovery that changed how you work.

Keep it short. Real. Human. The goal is three sentences that carry weight, not three verbose paragraphs. Your story creates connection because people remember narratives. The right story makes them lean in. A generic origin story makes them close the tab.

Make the reader feel understood

Now they understand where you're coming from, show your reader you know their world. Name the frustration that wakes them up and gives them nightmares. Describe the gap between where they are and where they want to be. When someone reads your about section and thinks "this person has been in my head," you've won.

Speak to their specific situation. Not "entrepreneurs who want more success" but "e-commerce founders who feel stuck at six figures." Not "coaches looking to level-up" but "coaches who work 1-to-1 and want to start a group program." Precision creates recognition. Recognition creates trust. Trust creates clients.

What do you actually do? What transformation do you create? Most about sections dance around this because directness feels uncomfortable. But confusion never converts. After someone finishes reading, they should know exactly how you help and who you help.

One offer. One outcome. One clear path forward. "I help estate agents build lead systems that bring customers to them." "I show founders how to exit in three years." "I turn expertise into premium offers." You can fix your LinkedIn profile by removing every sentence that doesn't support your core offer.

End with a direct call to action

Tell them what to do next. "DM me the word 'ready' if this resonates." "Grab my free guide in the featured section." "Connect and send me a voice note about your biggest challenge." Without direction, interested readers just nod and move on. With direction, they take the step you've designed for them.

Your CTA should feel like a natural extension of everything you've written. You identified their problem. You showed you understand. You explained how you help. Now hand them the logical next move. Make that move simple. One action. One instruction. No confusion about what happens when they reach out.

Your LinkedIn about section is where you win fans and build authority

Your about section should read like your best post, not your resume. Lead with the truth you stand on. Tell the story that made you believe it. Show you understand their struggles. State your offer without apology. End with a clear next step. Turn a forgettable bio into an unforgettable presence that attracts the right people.

The way you see your work, the experiences that shaped your beliefs, the specific people you serve. All of that belongs in your about section. Keep editing until every sentence makes someone want to know more.

Get the LinkedIn profile structure that wins you coaching and consultancy clients.