Skip to main content
Back to Writing generators

Writing

About Page Bio Generator

Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.

An about page bio generator solves one of the most common writing blocks for freelancers and small business owners: writing about yourself. Most people know their work well but freeze when asked to describe it. This tool generates a polished bio from three inputs — your name, your role, and your preferred style — so you start with structured, professional copy instead of a blank page. Choose from four styles: warm first-person, formal third-person, story-driven, or punchy and brief. Each follows a proven structure that opens with what you do, establishes credibility, and closes with an invitation to connect. The output is a strong first draft you can publish or personalize in minutes.

Loading usage…

Free forever — no account required

How to use

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

Detailed instructions

  1. Enter your full name or brand name in the Name field, then type your specific role or profession (e.g., 'brand strategist for tech startups').
  2. Select a Bio Style from the dropdown — choose first-person warm for personal sites, third-person professional for press or agency pages, or punchy short-form for social bios.
  3. Click Generate to produce your About page bio and read it through in full before copying.
  4. Copy the generated bio and paste it into your website editor, doc, or email — then replace any bracketed placeholders with your real details.
  5. Personalize the draft by adding one specific credential, client type, or result that only you can claim, making the bio uniquely yours.

Use Cases

  • Freelance designer adding a first-person bio to a Squarespace or Webflow portfolio before launch
  • Conference speaker sending a third-person bio to an event organizer for a program listing
  • Career changer reframing a decade in finance as a UX research background on a new personal site
  • Small business owner writing warm About page copy that builds trust before a discovery call
  • Solopreneur updating their Substack or LinkedIn bio after pivoting to a new niche or service

Tips

  • Your role input shapes the entire output — be specific: 'UX designer for SaaS products' produces a sharper bio than just 'designer'.
  • Generate the same bio in both first and third person, then mix: use first-person on your main About page and third-person for press kit or speaker submissions.
  • If the generated opener feels generic, keep everything after it — the structure is solid, and the first sentence is the easiest part to rewrite with a specific hook.
  • Avoid listing every skill in your role field; pick the one you want to be known for most, since the bio will anchor to it throughout.
  • Pair your bio with a professional headshot and a one-line tagline directly above it — the bio does more work when visitors already have a face and a quick hook to anchor it to.
  • Run two or three generations with slightly different role descriptions, then combine the strongest sentences from each draft into a single final version.

FAQ

should my about page bio be in first person or third person

First person ('I help brands...') feels more direct and builds trust faster on personal and freelance sites. Third person works better for press pages, speaker directories, and agency sites where authority matters more than warmth. If you're unsure, generate both styles and compare — most personal sites convert better with first person.

how long should an about page bio actually be

Aim for 100 to 200 words for a main About page. That's enough to cover who you are, what you do, and why someone should hire you without losing the reader's attention. If you want options, use the punchy style for a short intro near the top and a longer version further down the page.

can I use the generated bio as-is or do I need to rewrite it

You can publish it as-is, but adding one or two specific details will make it significantly stronger — a notable client, a concrete result, or a niche you serve. Generic bios are professional but forgettable; a single specific line like '40+ e-commerce brands' sets you apart. Treat the output as a first draft, then layer in what only you know.