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Free Bio Ideas

LinkedIn Bio Ideas 💼

Professional headlines and bio templates for your LinkedIn profile. Copy, customize, and stand out to recruiters.

Tech & Engineering

Marketing & Growth

Creative & Design

Leadership & Executive

Startup & Founder

Career Change & Transition

Your LinkedIn headline is the most visible line on your entire profile. It appears in search results, connection requests, comments, and messages. The default headline just shows your job title and company—but customizing it can dramatically increase profile views and inbound opportunities.

A strong LinkedIn headline does three things: it tells people what you do, who you help, and what makes you different. Instead of just "Marketing Manager at Acme Corp," try something like "Marketing Manager | Helping B2B SaaS companies grow through content & SEO." That extra context makes recruiters, clients, and collaborators far more likely to click.

This collection features over 30 LinkedIn headline and bio templates organized by industry and career stage—from tech and marketing to creative roles, leadership positions, startup founders, and career changers. Every template uses clean formatting with pipe separators (|) and bullet points (·) that display well on LinkedIn's interface.

Tips for a great LinkedIn headline: use all 220 characters available. Include keywords that recruiters search for. Lead with your value proposition, not just your title. Add a personal touch or specialization that sets you apart. Update your headline whenever your role, focus, or goals change.

FAQ

LinkedIn Bio FAQ

LinkedIn headlines allow up to 220 characters. Most people only use a fraction of that. Use the full space to include keywords, your value proposition, and what makes you unique. Every character counts for search visibility.

Absolutely. LinkedIn's search algorithm heavily weighs the headline. Include job titles, skills, and industry terms that recruiters search for. For example, 'React Developer' is more searchable than 'Code Enthusiast.'

Your headline (220 chars) appears everywhere—search results, comments, messages. It should be a punchy summary. The About section (2,600 chars) is your story—background, achievements, goals, and personality. Use both strategically.

It depends on your industry. Creative, marketing, and startup roles often benefit from tasteful emoji. Conservative fields like finance, law, or enterprise sales may prefer clean text. When in doubt, use pipe separators (|) and dots (·) instead.

Update it whenever your role, goals, or focus changes. If you're job hunting, tailor it to your target role. If you just got promoted, reflect that. Regular updates also signal to the algorithm that your profile is active.

Using the default headline that just shows your job title and company. It tells people what you are but not what you do or why it matters. A custom headline with context, specialization, and value outperforms the default every time.

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