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About Page Headline Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

An about page headline generator solves the blank-page problem that stops most people from finishing their About page at all. The headline is the first line a visitor reads — if it sounds like a job title or a LinkedIn summary, they leave. This tool takes your name and a plain-English description of what you do or believe in, then produces a batch of personality-driven headlines ranging from bold and direct to warm and story-led. Freelancers, coaches, founders, and creators use it to move past the default 'Hi, I'm [Name]' opener and find a line that actually signals confidence. Enter your focus, choose how many options you want, and treat the output as a shortlist to riff from rather than a final draft.

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How to use

  1. Choose your options above
  2. Click Generate
  3. Copy your result

Detailed instructions

  1. Enter your name or brand name exactly as it should appear in the headline.
  2. Write a plain, specific description of your focus in the second field — avoid jargon and be direct.
  3. Set the count to at least 6 to get a useful range of tones and angles.
  4. Click Generate and read each headline aloud to hear which ones sound natural.
  5. Copy your favorite, then tweak the wording to match your voice before publishing.

Use Cases

  • Freelance designer rebranding a portfolio site after switching from agency to solo work
  • Business coach relaunching a website after a niche pivot and needing a new positioning line
  • Startup founder writing a first public-facing About page before a product launch
  • Course creator on Kajabi or Teachable positioning a skills-based education business
  • Consultant replacing a flat job-title opener with a mission-led headline that earns the scroll

Tips

  • Run the generator twice with different focus angles — one outcome-focused, one belief-focused — to see which direction resonates more.
  • If your focus field is longer than 10 words, trim it to one sharp idea; the generator produces stronger headlines from tighter inputs.
  • Avoid headlines that only state your profession — 'Writer, Speaker, Coach' is a label, not a hook.
  • Test your chosen headline by showing it to someone unfamiliar with your work and asking them what they'd expect to read next.
  • Headlines starting with verbs ('Built on...', 'Obsessed with...', 'Turned...') tend to create more momentum than noun-led ones.
  • Save all the generated options before discarding — a headline that doesn't work today may fit perfectly when you rebrand or pivot.

FAQ

what should an about page headline actually say

It should hint at a transformation you enable, a perspective you hold, or a tension in your field — not just your job title. The best ones give a visitor a reason to read the next sentence. Think outcome or point of view, not role.

how long should an about page headline be

Under 12 words is the practical limit — short enough to absorb at a glance and render cleanly on mobile. If a generated headline resonates but feels long, try cutting the first three words; most headlines don't need their opening clause.

what do I put in the focus field to get better headlines

Write a plain, honest sentence rather than a polished one — something like 'helping burnt-out marketers find simpler systems' gives the generator real material to work with. The more specific and opinionated your input, the less generic the output. Vague focus produces vague headlines.