Writing
Professional Bio Generator
Your bio is often the first thing people read about you. Make it count. Describe your background and get a bio that positions you exactly where you want to be.
AI-generated output
Fill in your details above and click Generate to get your professional bio.
How it works
Enter your name, current role, and a summary of your relevant experience and background. Think about what you want to be known for — your bio should position you, not just describe you.
List one or two specific achievements that demonstrate your expertise. Quantified outcomes ("grew revenue by 40%", "keynoted at three international conferences") land better than vague claims.
Select the tone and length that match your use case. A speaker bio for a tech conference needs a different register than a LinkedIn profile read by potential hiring managers.
Practical example
For example, a product manager with 8 years of experience who has shipped three major consumer apps might get an opening like: "Alex Chen has spent eight years turning complex user problems into products that millions of people actually use" — leading with impact, not job title.
The third-person version is ready for speaker profiles; a first-person version is automatically adapted for LinkedIn and personal websites. Both versions can be generated from the same inputs.
Frequently asked questions
Should a professional bio be written in first or third person?
It depends on context. Third person ("Sarah Johnson is a product leader...") is standard for speaker profiles, press kits, and conference bios — contexts where someone else might read it aloud. First person ("I help companies...") works better for LinkedIn, personal websites, and networking contexts where the formality of third-person would feel odd. The generator produces third-person by default, but notes how to adapt for first-person use.
What if I am early in my career and do not have big achievements yet?
Everyone has something to work with. Focus on what you are building toward, what problems you care about solving, any projects or work you have done (including personal, academic, or freelance), and what makes your perspective or background distinctive. Early-career bios should lead with direction and potential, not just past positions.
How often should I update my bio?
At minimum, when you change roles, launch something significant, or have a new achievement worth mentioning. Many people only update their bio when forced to — for an application, a conference, or a press request — and end up submitting outdated versions. A quarterly review is a good habit, even if the changes are minor.
Can I use this for a team "About" page bio?
Yes. Enter the team member's details in the input fields and select a tone that matches your company voice. For "About" pages, the medium length and conversational or warm tone tend to work best — enough to feel like a person, concise enough that visitors will actually read it.