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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.supadir.com/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Your bio is the most read piece of text on your profile. A weak bio — “I am a physiotherapist with many years of experience” — does nothing. A strong bio tells the right visitor: “this is exactly who I need to call.”

The anatomy of a strong bio

A good professional bio has three parts:
  1. Who you are and what you do — your role, specialization, and area
  2. Who you help — the specific type of client or patient you work with
  3. Why choose you — your approach, credentials, or a key differentiator
Example (physiotherapist):
I’m a physiotherapist specializing in sports injuries and post-operative rehabilitation, working with patients in Warsaw Mokotów. With 8 years of clinical experience, I help active people return to sport faster after injury — whether it’s a torn ACL, a running overuse issue, or recovery from orthopedic surgery. I work with a hands-on manual therapy approach combined with individualized exercise programs.
This bio tells you: what they do, who they help (active people with sports injuries in Warsaw), and how they do it.

Length

Aim for 100–250 words. Shorter than that, and you’re not giving visitors enough to evaluate whether you’re the right fit. Longer than that, and most people won’t read it. Break it into 2–3 short paragraphs. A wall of text reads as effort — short paragraphs read as clarity.

Keywords that help you get found

Visitors search for things like “physiotherapist Warsaw sports injuries” or “lawyer family law Kraków”. If those words are in your bio, you’re more likely to appear in the catalog’s internal search and in Google. Include naturally:
  • Your profession/role
  • Your main specializations
  • Your city or area
  • Your target client type
Don’t stuff keywords unnaturally — write for humans first, search engines second. A bio that reads naturally but includes the right terms will outperform one that’s crammed with keywords.

Common mistakes to avoid

Too vague:
“I offer professional services with a client-focused approach and many years of experience.”
This tells the visitor nothing. What services? For whom? What does “client-focused” actually mean? Too modest:
“I’m just a small practice, but I try my best.”
You’re not asking them to lower their expectations. You’re presenting yourself as a professional worth contacting. Too long:
[Five paragraphs covering your entire career history]
Visitors decide in seconds whether to contact you. Give them the key information, then let them reach out to learn more.

The bio checklist

Before saving your bio, check:
  • Does the first sentence clearly state your profession and specialization?
  • Is your location or area of service mentioned?
  • Does it describe who your ideal client/patient is?
  • Is it between 100–250 words?
  • Does it use the words your clients would actually search for?
  • Would you contact this person based on this description alone?