Bio
The Paragraph That Precedes You
Your bio arrives before you do. It is read by the conference organizer deciding whether to invite you, the journalist deciding whether to call you, the potential client deciding whether to schedule a meeting, the hiring manager deciding whether to take your application seriously. It is the first impression you make in every context where you are not physically present to make it yourself.
Most people have a bio they wrote once, years ago, that no longer reflects who they are or what they do. Or a bio written by someone else that sounds nothing like them. Or no bio at all, which means someone else will write one for them from whatever they can find, which is worse than any of the alternatives.
A bio is not a resume summary. It is not a list of credentials. It is a story — compressed, purposeful, and calibrated to the specific context where it will be read — that answers the question every reader is actually asking: why should I pay attention to this person?
This skill answers that question well, in your voice, for every context where it needs to be answered.
The Same Person, Many Contexts
The bio that works for a LinkedIn profile is not the bio that works for a conference speaker introduction. The bio that works for a website about page is not the bio that works for a podcast guest appearance. The bio that works for a professional directory is not the bio that works for a grant application.
Each context has a different reader with a different purpose and a different amount of time. LinkedIn readers are scanning for professional relevance. Conference attendees want to know why this speaker's session is worth attending over the three others scheduled at the same time. Website visitors want to know if you are the right person to help with their specific problem. Podcast listeners want to know why your perspective on this topic is worth an hour of their commute.
The skill writes the version of your bio that fits each context. Same person, same true story, different emphasis, different length, different opening. It maintains a consistent voice across all of them — because the person across all these contexts is the same — while calibrating each one to the specific reader and purpose.
Finding the Right Opening
The opening sentence of a bio does the most work and receives the least thought. Most bios open with a name and a title. This is the least interesting possible opening because it is the information the reader already has — your name is on the invitation, your title is on the website.
The opening sentence should earn continued reading by telling the reader something they did not already know that is genuinely relevant to why they are reading the bio in the first place. Not a clever turn of phrase for its own sake. Something true and specific that reframes how the reader will understand everything that follows.
The skill generates multiple opening options for any bio, explains what each one does and for which reader it works best, and helps you choose the one that fits the context and feels authentically like you.
Credentials Without Credential-Listing
Credentials belong in a bio. The degree, the publication, the company, the award — these things establish the authority that makes your perspective worth taking seriously. The question is how to include them without producing a bio that reads like a CV summary, which is technically informative and deeply unpersuasive.
The skill integrates credentials into narrative rather than listing them. The publication that is mentioned in the context of what it contributed to your thinking. The company that is named in the context of the problem you were hired to solve. The degree that appears in the context of the question it taught you to ask. Credentials embedded in story are more convincing than credentials listed in sequence, because they demonstrate not just what you have accomplished but how you think about it.
Voice Matching
A bio written in a voice that does not sound like you creates a specific kind of dissonance. The reader meets the bio first, forms an impression, and then meets you — and the gap between the two raises a question about which one is real.
The skill learns your voice from how you write and talk about your work. The level of formality you naturally maintain. The humor you use or do not use. The things you are willing to say directly and the things you prefer to imply. The professional persona you have built and the personal dimension you choose to share or not share.
Every bio it produces sounds like you wrote it, because it is built from how you actually describe yourself when you are being honest rather than performing.
Keeping It Current
A bio written at one stage of a career becomes misleading at the next. The work you were known for two years ago may no longer be the work you want to be known for. The title that was accurate when you wrote it may have changed. The projects that defined your practice then have been superseded by ones that define it now.
The skill tracks the elements of your bio and prompts you to review them when your work changes. A new role, a significant project completed, a publication released, a speaking engagement that signals a new area of expertise — each of these is a reason to update, and the update takes minutes rather than the hours it takes to write a bio from scratch.
Your bio should always reflect the person you are now, not the person you were when you last had time to update it.