Craft a bio that teaches a valuable framework, builds trust, and naturally leads readers to your services without ever pitching.
A strategic copywriting prompt that transforms a standard bio into a powerful thought-leadership piece.
Instead of listing credentials, it guides the AI to craft a conversational, insight-driven narrative that builds trust before any call to action.
Ideal for LinkedIn profiles, About pages, and speaker bios.
<role>
Act as an expert personal branding copywriter and thought-leadership strategist.
</role>
<objective>
Write a "Conversational Teaching Bio" for my LinkedIn profile, website About page, or speaker kit. Unlike a traditional resume bio, the goal is to immediately establish thought leadership by teaching the reader a valuable concept, shifting their perspective, and building a relationship — before any pitch or offer is made.
</objective>
<input>
- Core Belief / Contrarian View: [A one-line statement that challenges the industry norm — e.g., Productivity isn't about doing more things; it's about doing the right things]
- Industry Problem / Status Quo: [What is broken or misunderstood in your space right now — e.g., We live in a hustle culture that praises burnout and exhaustion]
- Core Teaching Point / Mini-Framework: [The key idea or framework you want to be known for — e.g., To reclaim your time, you must master the 3 Ds: Delete, Delegate, and Delay]
- Client Goal 1: [e.g., To help you build a business that runs without your daily involvement]
- Client Goal 2: [e.g., To design a customized operating system for your unique brain]
- Client Goal 3: [e.g., To restore your joy and peace of mind as an entrepreneur]
- Target Audience and Service: [Who you serve and what you offer — e.g., entrepreneurs who need private coaching]
- 1:1 Contact URL: [e.g., MyWebsite.com/contact]
- Speaking / Workshops URL: [e.g., MyWebsite.com/speaking]
- Free Resource URL: [e.g., MyWebsite.com/freebie]
</input>
<context>
The Conversational Teaching Bio follows a 5-part psychological structure designed to educate first and sell never. The reader should finish the bio feeling they have already received value and that I am the only logical person to help them.
The tone should feel like a confident, wise letter from a trusted advisor, not a resume or a pitch deck. Think short paragraphs, plain language, and a natural flow from one idea to the next. Do not use capitalized section headers. The bio should read like an engaging article.
Reference tone example (do not copy, only match the voice and flow):
"We have forgotten how to connect in this digital age of automation and spammy content. There are three identities to every brand: the verbal identity, the visual identity, and the value identity. Over the last decade I have worked with some of the industry's highest-paid thought leaders, and it has led me to one conclusion: People want to buy; they do not want to be sold."
</context>
<instructions>
Using my input, write the bio following the 5-part structure below in strict order.
<part id="1" name="The Hook">
Open with my Core Belief as a single, punchy statement that immediately challenges the industry norm. This is the first sentence the reader sees — make it stop them mid-scroll.
</part>
<part id="2" name="The Context and Problem">
Expand on why the industry is broken or why people are struggling right now. Set up the reader to feel understood and frustrated before the solution arrives.
</part>
<part id="3" name="The Teaching Point">
Introduce my core framework or philosophy. This is the "Aha!" moment — teach the reader something genuinely valuable so they immediately recognize me as an expert. The transition from Part 2 into Part 3 must feel seamless and surprising, like a perspective shift clicking into place.
</part>
<part id="4" name="The Goals">
State my three client goals as a clean numbered list. Keep each goal to one sentence starting with "To."
</part>
<part id="5" name="Calls to Action">
Direct the reader to the right next step based on how they want to engage. Use the three URLs provided, each on its own line, labeled clearly.
</part>
<writing_rules>
- No generic marketing language: Avoid hollow phrases like "empowering your journey," "bridging the gap," or "unlocking your potential." Every line should sound like a real expert speaking plainly.
- No resume language: Do not list job titles, credentials, or career history. Stay focused on the reader's problem and my perspective.
- Mobile-first formatting: Use short paragraphs of 2–3 sentences maximum. Bold key concepts where they first appear. Use the numbered list only for the Goals section.
- Teach before you pitch: The reader must receive a genuine insight before any call to action appears.
</writing_rules>
</instructions>