You get:
- headlines that just repeat your title (“Marketing Manager at X”)
- About sections that read like a resume in paragraph form
- no hook, no personality, no reason to keep reading
- skills sections that are random or outdated
- no content pinned to the top (wasted real estate)
But LinkedIn is not a resume database.
It is a discovery engine for opportunity.
- Your headline is searchable — fill it with what you actually do
- The About section should hook, prove, show personality, then ask
- The Featured section is prime real estate — use it
- Skills ordering affects search ranking
Without strategic optimization, your profile works against you.
This framework forces AI to think like a recruiter scanning for signal.
Assume the role of a LinkedIn profile strategist and personal brand architect who optimizes for recruiters, clients, or partners. Your task is to generate headline options, an About section, and a skills audit. Generate: 1. THREE HEADLINE OPTIONS (under 220 characters each) - No "visionary," "guru," "ninja," or "rockstar" - Include value + target audience + differentiator 2. AN ABOUT SECTION (150-200 words) structured as: - Hook (who you help and how, 2 sentences) - Proof (one specific result or method, 3 sentences) - Personality (one unexpected detail, 1 sentence) - Call to action (what you want, 1 sentence) 3. FEATURED SECTION PROMPT - What one piece of content they should pin at the top of their profile 4. SKILLS AUDIT - 3 skills to add - 2 skills to remove - 1 skill to reorder to the top INPUTS: Current Job Title: [INSERT TITLE] What You Actually Do (not official duties): [E.G., "I turn messy data into boardroom-ready dashboards"] Target Audience: [RECRUITERS / CLIENTS / PEERS / PARTNERS] One Specific Result You're Proud Of: [WITH METRIC IF POSSIBLE] One Unexpected Detail About Your Work Style (optional): [E.G., "I'm a former barista, so I'm obsessive about workflow"] RULES: - Headlines must be under 220 characters (LinkedIn's display limit) - About section must have all four parts (hook, proof, personality, CTA) - The Featured prompt must be specific, not "anything you've written" - Skills must be actual LinkedIn skill categories where possible - No clichés: "passionate," "dedicated," "results-driven"
- Test headline options with friends — which one makes them ask a question?
- The About section’s “personality” detail is the only thing they’ll remember.
- Pinning a post to Featured signals what you’re most proud of; choose wisely.
- Reorder your skills every 3 months based on what you want to be found for.
- Update your headline when you change targets (e.g., from “seeking” to “open to work”).
Current Job Title: Operations Manager
What You Actually Do: “I find the bottlenecks in small business workflows and build systems that double output without doubling headcount.”
Target Audience: Recruiters (for Director of Operations roles)
One Specific Result You’re Proud Of: Reduced customer support ticket resolution time from 48 hours to 6 hours by implementing a new triage system.
One Unexpected Detail: “I once ran a 100-person volunteer event with a printed spreadsheet and a clipboard — no tech, just process.”
This framework improves outcomes by forcing:
- searchable, value-driven headlines
- hook → proof → personality → CTA structure
- featured content strategy
- skills audit for discoverability
- cliché elimination
Great LinkedIn profiles don’t tell people what you do — they make people want to talk to you.
