What to Include in a LinkedIn About Section
A strong About section usually answers four questions: who you help, what problem you work on, what proof makes that believable, and what someone should do next. It does not need to tell your entire career story. The best versions are specific enough for the right reader to recognize themselves and simple enough to skim on a phone.
Use Proof Without Overstuffing the Bio
Proof can be a result, a type of project, a customer group, a portfolio pattern, or a repeated responsibility. It should support the positioning, not interrupt it. One concrete line is often better than a long list of adjectives. If you do not have a metric, use a grounded example of the work you do.
Make the First Lines Count
LinkedIn truncates profile text, so the first lines should carry the main point. Avoid starting with a broad mission statement unless it says something unusually clear. A useful opening often sounds like: I help [audience] do [outcome]. Then the rest of the section can explain how, where, and why.
Template-Based, Not Fake AI
This generator uses fixed writing patterns and the details you provide. It does not invent achievements, pull data from LinkedIn, or call an AI model. That is intentional. A profile section should be easy to verify and edit. Use the output as a first draft, then replace any phrase that does not sound like you.