LinkedIn Summary Generator Your About Section in Seconds
Enter your role, experience, and goals. This free LinkedIn summary generator creates 5 ready-to-use About sections based on structures that top creators and hiring managers respond to.
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How to Generate Your Summary
Six inputs, 5 summaries, under a minute. Each summary follows a different proven structure so you can pick the one that fits.
Fill in your details
Enter your job title, industry, target audience, years of experience, key skills, and one major result you deliver. The more specific you are, the better your summaries will be.
Pick a tone
Choose between professional, conversational, bold, or storytelling. Each tone changes the structure and language of all 5 summaries to match the impression you want to make.
Copy and customize
Get 5 summary options instantly. Copy the one that fits your personality, tweak a few lines to make it feel natural, and paste it into your LinkedIn About section.
What makes a LinkedIn summary convert
Your About section is the longest piece of text on your profile, and one of the least-read because most people write it like a resume. These 4 structural choices change that.
Open with who you help and what result you deliver
The first 270 characters of your About section are all anyone sees before clicking 'see more'. If those characters contain your job title and nothing else, most visitors leave. Lead with the audience you serve and the outcome they get, because that is what makes someone click to read more.
Write in first person
Third-person bios ('John is a marketing leader who...') feel corporate and impersonal. LinkedIn is a platform where people connect with people. Writing 'I help...' instead of 'He helps...' makes your About section feel like a conversation rather than a press release, and conversations convert.
Include specific numbers or outcomes
Vague claims like 'proven track record' or 'extensive experience' mean nothing because every profile says the same thing. Replace them with specifics: '$2M pipeline generated', '40% reduction in churn', '300+ clients served'. Numbers are harder to ignore than adjectives.
End with a call to action
Your About section should tell the reader what to do next. 'Send me a message', 'connect with me here', or 'book a call at [link]' give the visitor a clear next step instead of leaving them to decide on their own whether to reach out.
LinkedIn summary before and after
Real-world rewrites showing how specific details and a clear structure outperform generic filler in every case.
Weak
Experienced marketing professional with a passion for helping companies grow. I have worked in marketing for over 10 years and I am always looking for new challenges.
Stronger
I help B2B SaaS companies build demand gen engines that produce pipeline, not just clicks. 10 years in marketing, $8M in attributed pipeline across 4 companies. Currently VP Marketing at [Company]. Let's connect if you are building a revenue-first marketing team.
The weak version could describe anyone in marketing. The stronger version names the audience (B2B SaaS), the outcome (pipeline, not clicks), includes a specific number ($8M), and ends with a clear CTA.
Weak
Results-driven sales leader with a proven track record of exceeding targets. Strong communication and negotiation skills. Team player who thrives in fast-paced environments.
Stronger
I run sales teams that close. 12 years in enterprise SaaS, 3 teams built from scratch to $5M+ ARR. My approach: hire for curiosity, train for process, then get out of the way. Looking for my next VP Sales role at a Series B+ company. Open to conversations.
Phrases like 'results-driven' and 'proven track record' are filler that LinkedIn users scroll past because every second profile uses them. Replacing them with concrete numbers and a clear philosophy makes the reader stop and pay attention.
Weak
I wear many hats. Entrepreneur, investor, advisor, mentor, speaker. Passionate about innovation and making the world a better place.
Stronger
Founder of [Company], a fintech platform that helps small businesses manage cash flow. Previously sold my first company (e-commerce, $2M revenue) after 4 years. Now I spend 80% of my time building and 20% advising early-stage founders on go-to-market. DM me if you are pre-Series A and figuring out pricing.
Listing 5 titles without context makes each one meaningless. Anchoring in a single active role with specific details (industry, revenue, time spent) tells the reader exactly who you are and what you can do for them.
LinkedIn About section character limits (2026)
Your summary gets cut off at different points depending on the device and context. The first 270 characters carry the most weight because they are visible without clicking.
| Context | Character limit | What this means |
|---|---|---|
| Full About section limit | 2,600 characters | The absolute maximum LinkedIn allows in the About field on personal profiles. |
| Visible before 'see more' | 270 characters | Everything after this is hidden until the reader clicks. Your strongest line goes here. |
| Company page About limit | 2,000 characters | Company pages have a shorter limit than personal profiles. |
| Ideal summary length | 1,200-1,800 characters | Long enough to tell your story and build credibility. Short enough that people finish reading. |
The generator shows the character count next to every summary it creates, color-coded green (under 2,000), amber (2,000-2,600), or red (over 2,600). Front-load your strongest statement into the first 270 characters and keep the total under 1,800 for a summary that people actually finish reading.
LinkedIn summary mistakes that cost you connections
Copying your resume
Your resume lists responsibilities. Your LinkedIn summary tells a story. Recruiters read your Experience section for job history. The About section is where you explain what drives you, what you are good at, and why someone should care. Duplicating your resume wastes the one place on your profile where personality is an advantage.
Writing in third person
Third-person bios ('Sarah is a marketing leader...') create unnecessary distance on a platform built for personal connections. They also make it harder for the reader to tell whether you wrote the summary yourself or someone wrote it about you. First person is the default on LinkedIn for a reason.
Using buzzwords with no backup
'Results-driven', 'passionate', 'innovative thinker', and 'proven track record' appear on millions of LinkedIn profiles. They tell the reader nothing because they carry no evidence. Replace every buzzword with a specific number, project, or outcome, and the sentence becomes 10x more believable.
Skipping the call to action
A summary without a CTA is like a landing page without a button. The reader finishes, thinks 'that was interesting', and keeps scrolling. Tell them what to do next: send you a message, visit a link, or connect. One clear CTA at the end converts lurkers into contacts.
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