A link-in-bio page is the one clickable URL you get in a social profile — the bridge between your audience and everything you actually want them to do. The difference between a link page that collects dust and one that drives real bookings and sales isn't design; it's what you put first. Here are ten examples by profession, and the pattern behind each.
1. The musician
Top of page: "Listen now" to the latest release. Below: tour dates with ticket links, merch, and a mailing-list signup. The lesson: lead with the newest thing, and always capture emails — streaming platforms don't give you the fan; your list does.
2. The coach or consultant
First button: "Book a free intro call." Then a short proof line ("helped 200+ founders"), a link to testimonials, and a lead magnet. Lesson: for service businesses, the bio link exists to book the call — make that the only obvious action.
3. The online shop
Featured product up top with a "Shop now," then best-sellers, then a discount-for-signup. Lesson: show product, not a menu of links — pictures sell, link lists don't.
4. The restaurant or café
"View menu," "Order / reserve," "Directions," and today's hours. Lesson: answer the three things a hungry person needs before they'll come in — what, how, where.
5. The photographer
A portfolio thumbnail grid, then "Check availability" and package pricing. Lesson: let the work do the talking, then make enquiring effortless.
6. The fitness instructor
"Book a class" and a class schedule up top, then a free workout as a lead magnet, then socials. Lesson: recurring businesses should surface the schedule first.
7. The freelancer / designer
One line on what you do and who for, "See work," then "Start a project." Lesson: position clearly in the first sentence — a vague bio link converts no one.
8. The content creator
Latest video/post at top, then the one product or sponsor link that matters this week, then a newsletter. Lesson: rotate the top link to whatever you're pushing now; don't let it go stale.
9. The local service (salon, trades, tutoring)
"Book now," reviews, service list with prices, and a WhatsApp/call button. Lesson: local buyers want to book or message immediately — remove every step in between.
10. The multi-brand or agency
A clean split to two or three audiences ("For clients" / "For talent"), each leading to its own path. Lesson: when you serve different people, segment at the top rather than dumping every link on everyone.
The patterns that separate good from forgettable
- One primary action, up top. Decide the single thing you most want a visitor to do, and make it the first, biggest button.
- Capture something. An email or a booking beats a click that leaves and never returns.
- Keep it fresh. The top slot should reflect what you're doing this week, not this year.
- Look like you. Your own colors, photo, and ideally your own domain — a generic template reads as unserious.
- Sell, don't list. A wall of identical links converts far worse than two or three visual, action-led blocks.
Build yours
You can put these patterns to work in a few minutes. Mewayz includes a link-in-bio builder with your own branding and domain, a store, bookings, and email built in — so a visitor can go from your bio link straight to buying or booking without leaving your page. It's on the free plan.