Looking to improve your LinkedIn profile?
Stuck for something to say in those 60 second pitches at those stuffy networking events?
Need a way of clearly and cleverly explaining what you do, how you do it, and who you do it for?
I’m delighted to announce (but only because it took me a fucking age to finish and I’m glad it’s finally done) that I’ve just released a brand new bargain that I think is really going to help you write a great bio.
It’s £45, so if that’s more than you want to be paying for some Jo gold right now, the next 90 seconds of reading this blog isn’t going to be worth your time.
The resource (my first in over two years) is called ‘Boost Your Bio – 25 questions to make sure you don’t f*ck up your first impression!’
This handy guide to boosting a bio of pure brilliance is a short, sweet, and cynical reminder of the questions you should most definitely be considering when you’re drafting, writing, or updating any kind of bio that represents you or your brand.
I’m talking about LinkedIn profiles, headlines, and bylines, as well as profile pieces that see you featured on any membership sites, industry directories, professional publications, or any kind of social media platform that relies more on your words than on your ability to nail a cringey dance routine.
If you’re more of a ‘get out there and network’ kind of person, rather than someone who prefers to build up a bio online as a first touchpoint in communication, this dynamic little doc can work for you, too. I’ve put together these questions so that – if you answer them honestly – it’ll be really simple for you to apply them to things like elevator pitches, 60-second slots, and the dreaded “tell us about yourself” icebreakers you’re tested with whenever forced to communicate face-to-face with other humans over cold coffee and deflated croissants.
The idea with this guide is that you’ve already at least had a bash at drafting something out, and so you’re at the stage where these questions can help you edit accordingly and polish everything with pride. But, if you want to think about the questions that resonate most with you and use them to start from scratch, that can work, too. Just don’t forget to go back and review the questions again before you press publish!
Use this resource to assess your own writing logically and objectively. I didn’t spend time pulling together this bio boosting piece of pure genius for you to instead settle for someone cheerleading you with a throwaway, “It’s fab as it is, hun – go for it!”
Whether it’s a written profile (for example, a LinkedIn profile) or a spoken introduction, your bio is your first impression.
Don’t fuck it up.
Want to start benefitting from your very own download of this resource right now?
Of course you do – improve your bio right now!