Wednesday, June 24, 2020

How to Write a Bio Like a Superhero (Easy 3-Part Process)

Writing a good bio is hard.


You have to knock ’em dead with two or three dazzling sentences that show you’re a likable, credible, and accomplished expert.


When readers read your bio (aka byline), they must believe you’re the answer to their prayers — a superhero who will swoop in and solve the big problem keeping them awake at night.


(And if you’re a freelance writer, your bio should make them want to hire you on the spot.)


No pressure, right?


Here’s the good news:


Learning how to write a bio that dazzles readers doesn’t require feats of strength or the ability to leap tall buildings in a single bound.


No, all you have to do is keep reading. Because in this post, I’m going to show you a simple three-step process for writing a professional bio that readers will adore. But first, we’ll look at a few short bio examples that make readers run for the exits.


Let’s dive in.


The 6 Common Bio Blunders That Make You Look Like an Amateur (And What to Do Instead)


#1: Making It All About You




I’m Jill — a free-spirit with a passion for quilting, bird watching, Tai Chi, and calligraphy.”

Thanks for sharing, Jill. But do I really care? Nah.


It’s confusing, I know. “Bio” is short for biography, which suggests it should be all about you.  But the main purpose of your author bio is to show your audience how you can help them solve their problem with the skills you bring to the table.


So, it’s not about you, Jill. It’s about them.


What to Do Instead:


In this post on sensory words, using almost the same number of words as Jill, Kevin gives us just enough information about himself to tell us what he does and how he helps his audience.



As the Editor in Chief at Smart Blogger, Kevin J. Duncan helps readers learn the ropes of blogging, hone their writing skills, and find their unique voice so they can stand out from the crowd.

It’s clear, precise, and focused on the outcome, not on Kevin. He uses phrases like “hone their writing skills,” and “stand out from the crowd,” which directly target the deep-rooted desires of aspiring writers. He speaks their language.


Here’s another tip: It’s usually best to write in the third person, as Kevin does in the above bio example. It’s more professional.


#2: Writing a Condensed Resume, or a Laundry List of Accomplishments




John Brown is a qualified personal trainer with a sports medicine degree from Fremont College, as well as professional certifications from the American College of Sports Medicine and the National Strength and Conditioning Association.

Your bio is not a dumping ground for your career path, job titles, and qualifications. It’s a tiny elevator pitch that’s selling you as a credible solver of your reader’s problems.


So don’t list every degree you have or talk about your first job out of school. Readers don’t really care. They only care whether or not you have the solutions they are looking for.


What to Do Instead:


Your bio should only include details about yourself that directly relate to your intended audience’s problem.


Think about your career, education, and skills, and then carefully select the most pertinent facts that are going to impress the audience you are writing for. Like this:



Jessi Rita Hoffman is a book editor who helps authors get their books out of their heads and into print. A former publishing house editor-in-chief, she has edited books for Donald Trump and bestselling/award-winning authors. Visit her blog for writers here.

Jessi tells us the most important thing about herself (that she is a book editor), and what she can do for her audience (get their books into print), while establishing her credibility (“best-selling,” “editor-in-chief”).


Everything she mentions is designed to appeal to the audience she’s trying to reach.


#3: Sharing Irrelevant Details or Stuff You Think Your Audience Should Care About




Joe Brown is a content and affiliate marketer with a passion for snowboarding. When he’s not at his computer, you can find him at his nearest half-pipe, or maybe on Twitter @joeb, where he likes to tweet about his pet python. Alternatively, try his email at joe@xyz.com, and he’ll probably shoot you back a list of his favorite origami folds.

This sample bio is from someone whose expertise is content and affiliate marketing, although he hides it well.


Much like your degrees and career path, your audience doesn’t care about your hobbies, passions, and personal details either, unless they directly impact the problem they’re trying to solve.


What to Do Instead:


As mentioned earlier, only share the details that your audience will find relevant.


If you’re mad keen on knitting and you’re writing for an arts and crafts blog, then go ahead and mention your passion. It’s relevant. But don’t tell them about your cat, unless Fluffy can knit too.


#4: Trying to Cram Too Much In



Okay, so you’ve managed to include only relevant details about yourself, so you’re safe. Right?


Not if you included too many of them.


Like this one from Jo. She’s had an impressive career, but her bio feels endless:



Jo Smith is a personal finance blogger with 20 years of experience in accounting, international banking, and financial planning. She started as a trainee bank teller in Little Rock, Arkansas, before completing her accounting degree and climbing the corporate ladder at Citibank. More recently, Jo decided to follow her dreams and leave the safety net of her six-figure salary to start her own coaching business.

This is way too much information.


Writing your own bio can be hard. Sometimes you’re too close to the subject matter to realize what’s important and what can be left out. But your bio isn’t the place to share your entire life story, and it certainly shouldn’t have an endless word count. You need to be picky.


What to Do Instead:


With some careful pruning, the real gems hidden away in Jo’s bio can be given center stage:



Jo Smith is a personal finance blogger and coach with 20 years of experience in the high-powered world of international banking and accountancy. Jo is on a mission to help everyday families build sustainable wealth, stop stressing about their financial security, and start living the life they’ve always wanted.

Go through your bio word by word and ask yourself, “Does this bit of information make any difference to my audience?”


If the answer is no, take it out, and limit your bio to two or three sentences.


#5: Being Overly Formal (a.k.a. Boring)




Joe Jones is an accomplished marketing consultant who specializes in the field of physician practices. He works with medical centers and practitioners to maximize their online real estate, garner new market segments, and engender business growth.

If you’re anything like me, you had to read this bio more than once to get a sense of what Joe does. It’s way too formal. Most people will just glaze over this.


What to Do Instead:


Instead of using stilted words and phrases like “maximize their online real estate” and “engender business growth”, Joe missed a great opportunity to showcase his personal brand and make himself stand out from the crowd.


Perhaps he could have started with something like:



“Joe Jones is an expert marketer who can take your medical practice from queasy to fighting fit…”

Do you see how that might grab a few more eyeballs, cut through the noise, and make an impact with his target audience of doctors?


#6. Being Vague (or Overly Woo-Woo)




Cecile is a life coach and devoted mom. She loves day breaks and giving things a go. She is passionate about her fellow humans and wants to be their inspiration for growth, as they find their way through the dark to their true self.

Hands up, whoever doesn’t have a clue what this person is talking about. What does she do? How does she help solve my problem? Why should I be interested in her?


You need to avoid ambiguous phrases like “inspiration for growth” and “find their way through the dark.” These phrases might have a nice ring to them, but they mean very little to your reader. They’re too open to interpretation.


What to Do Instead:


You don’t have time to beat around the bush in your bio. Get straight to the point. Like this:



Cecile is a qualified self-development coach who is passionate about helping professional women develop the skills and self-assurance they need to take control of their working lives. Download her free guide, How to Quit Your Dead-End Job Without Risking Your Income, and open the door to your dream career today.

In two sentences, Cecile tells me everything I need to know about what she does and how she can help me. No fluff, no messing about, and a juicy opt-in bribe to seal the deal.



So now you can see where you might’ve gone wrong with your bio after you started your blog, and you’re dying to write a new version of it. But how do you ensure your next bio won’t commit the same blunders?


Easy. Just follow this simple three-step process to write a professional bio that your ideal readers can’t resist clicking.


1. Introduce Yourself with a Bang



This is where you tell the audience who you are and what makes you different (while avoiding the common blunders we’ve just discussed). You need to spark their interest and curiosity and get them to say, “Tell me more.”


Let’s start with this example from a blogger in the personal development niche.



Sue Smith is a self-help writer and coach with a degree in psychology…

This tells me what Sue does, but it’s rather dull and same-y in a sea full of personal development blogs. For a first sentence, it’s too bland. There’s nothing here to set her apart or pique our interest.


Let’s give it a twist:



Self-help writer, Sue Smith, is part social scientist, part agony aunt, who…

That sounds a bit more interesting. Sue manages to appeal to her audience on different levels by sounding educated, professional, and personable at the same time. Describing herself as an “agony aunt” downplays the more clinical “social scientist.”


I’m curious to know more, and it certainly makes her distinctive.


But there’s another angle Sue could take:



Sue Smith is a certified psychologist who specializes in beating social anxiety.

Now, this one is more similar to the first example, but the difference is that it adds more credibility — “certified psychologist” sounds much more credible than “has a degree in,” which suggests she’s fresh out of college — but it also sets her apart more.


She has a specialty, which gives her ideas on the topic more weight than others. If you suffer from social anxiety, you’d want to listen to the expert on it, right?


Compare also:



Sue Smith’s books on beating social anxiety have won her international acclaim. She has been featured as an expert on Psychology Today, The Oprah Winfrey Show, and Good Morning America.

This version goes even further in establishing Sue’s credibility. Not only has she published multiple books on the topic of social anxiety, but she’s even been featured on some well-known media channels, adding social proof to her expertise.


We’ve talked before about not delivering a laundry list of accomplishments, but if you have specific accomplishments that make you stand out, those are worth including.


Here’s an excellent bio example that both offers a point of interest and adds credibility:



Jessica’s outside-the-box approach to business plan writing has helped her clients collectively raise almost $50 million in financing to start and grow new businesses. Sign up for her 5-part business plan training series for FREE here so you can get your business plan done and get your money sooner.

Jessica doesn’t just say she’ll help you write a business plan, she mentions she has an “outside-the-box approach,” which immediately makes you curious what that approach is. Then she steps it up even more by mentioning her approach has collectively raised $50 million in financing. That’s nothing to sneeze at and creates instant credibility.


It’s an excellent bio that will absolutely pique her audience’s interest.


2. Call Out Your Audience and Say How You Help Them



Remember, this isn’t about you, it’s about what you can do for your audience. So you need to define who they are and what problem of theirs (their key fear or desire) you can solve.


You should aim for both a logical and emotional connection.  It’s tough, but do-able.


Let’s take Kim, a blogger in the parenting niche:



Kim’s passion in writing is to inspire other parents to not just “hang in there” or “make it through” but to thrive. She does this through blogging at kimbiasottotoday.wordpress.com and speaking.

By using language most parents will relate to and zeroing in on their fears, Kim makes a strong emotional connection. At the same time, there’s no mistaking the practical (logical) solution Kim offers.


Note: Of course, Kim’s bio would be even further improved if she had a call to action that linked to an incentive rather than her homepage. More on that in the next step!


Here’s another example:



Jessica Blanchard, registered dietitian and Ayurvedic practitioner, helps busy people re-energize with super simple food, yoga, and wellness strategies that work. Grab your free 7-Day Plan and learn to eat, move, and live better in ten minutes a day.

Jessica clarifies immediately who she helps (busy people) and how she helps them (by re-energizing them through food, yoga, and wellness strategies).


You must be absolutely clear about this. If readers can’t identify themselves in your bio and see you have the solution they’re looking for, they will move on.


3. Offer an Irresistible Reason to Click



You’ve told your audience who you are, what you do, and how you can help them. You’ve impressed them with your credentials and sparked their curiosity.


They’re ready to move to second base, but they need that last push. An irresistible reason to click through to your site and sign up. You need to offer an incentive.


Take a look at this bio:



Henneke Duistermaat is an irreverent copywriter and business writing coach. She’s on a mission to stamp out gobbledygook and to make boring business blogs sparkle. Get her free 16-Part Snackable Writing Course For Busy People and learn how to enchant your readers and win more business.

Boom! In 46 carefully curated words, Henneke tells us who she is, what she does, how she can help, and then gives us a gold-plated reason for parting with our email address.


Her free report is 16 parts, but it’s “snackable,” which makes it sound very easy to digest. And it’s for “busy people,” which shows Henneke understands her audience. She promises results and cleverly relates this back to her own blog, Enchanting Marketing.


Unfortunately, we can’t all steal Henneke’s bio, but we can use it as a fine example of how to write our own.













This post is part of Smart Blogger's





Freelance Writing Hub





From elevating your writing skills to getting paid to write, learn everything you need to know about freelancing.









Go to the Hub














Ready to Write Your Best Bio Ever?


Writing a bio like a superhero is simple, but it’s not easy, so give your bio the time it requires. You should brainstorm several options for each of the steps.


Whether they’re concluding an article you’ve written or they’re inside your Twitter bio, LinkedIn profile, or any other social media account, bios are hard to craft. But, they are also one of the most effective pieces of marketing you can create when you get it right.


You now know how to write a bio your audience will love. They’ll want to know more and they won’t be able to resist your free offer.


They’ll see you as a credible, personable problem-solver. Their problem-solver.


And they’ll click through to your personal website, ready and willing to hand over their email address to their new blogging superhero.


You.


Note: For a handy visual reminder of the six bio blunders you can download or share on your own website, check out the image below:



The 6 Common Bio Blunders That Make You Look Like an Amateur (And What to Do Instead)


Embed This Infographic On Your Site:





The post How to Write a Bio Like a Superhero (Easy 3-Part Process) appeared first on Smart Blogger.