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How to Write a Professional Bio That Wins Clients

How to Write a Professional Bio That Wins Clients

Awesome W.C
Awesome W.C
March 19, 2026
14 min read
93 views


Welcome one again to freetta. |today we will be talking about - how to write professional bio. Ia m writing from Nigeria, but the content of this post applies to people from any country.

Now, your professional bio is one of the most  important pieces of writing you will ever produce as a professional. It is your first impression on every potential client who finds you online, the first thing your referral network reads when they look you up, and the primary determinant of whether someone who lands on your profile decides to make contact or moves on to the next result.

Despite this, most you may have a bio that reads like a CV summary — dry, generic, and entirely focused on you rather than the client. bios like this fail to do the one job a bio must do: convince a potential client that you are exactly the right person for their situation.

This guide will give you a  formula for writing a professional bio that actually wins clients — one that is engaging, specific, credible, and designed to make the right people pick up the phone.

Why Your Professional Bios Fail

Before we get to the formula, it's worth understanding why your bios may be missing the mark.

The most common mistake you may be making is writing a bio that is entirely about the YOU— your qualifications, your years of experience, your professional memberships — with no mention of what this means for your potential  client.

Consider this bio (representative of what you'll find on some professional profiles):

*'Adaora Okafor is a qualified Chartered Accountant with 12 years of experience. She holds a degree in Accounting from the University of Lagos and is a fellow of ICAN. She has worked with various clients in multiple sectors.'*

Every sentence is about the Afaora. Not a single sentence addresses a potential client's situation, the problems Adaora solves, or the outcomes she produces. A potential client reading this has no idea whether Adaora is relevant to them.

On the Flip side, a client-centric bio doesn't ignore credentials — but it leads with the client's perspective. Here's the transformation we should be aiming for:

*'Adaora Okafor helps Nigerian SMEs reduce their annual tax burden and navigate regulatory compliance without stress. A Chartered Accountant with 12 years of experience (ICAN Fellow), she has helped over 80 businesses restructure their tax position — saving clients an average of 15-22% on their tax liability. Based in Lagos. Available for consultations across Nigeria.'*

Notice the difference? Same person. Same credentials. Completely different impact.

Part 1: WHO You Help (Be Specific)

The first sentence of your bio should clearly identify your ideal client. Not 'businesses' or 'individuals' — but a specific description that makes the right reader think 'that's me.'

Compare the following:

  • ❌ 'I work with businesses across various sectors.'
  • ✅ 'I help Lagos-based technology companies and startups navigate corporate law and commercial contracts.'

The second version does something important: it self-selects. A Lagos tech startup founder reads it and thinks 'that's exactly me.' An agricultural company that needs a different kind of lawyer reads it and knows this isn't the right match — which is also valuable, because it prevents wasted consultations.

Your formula for Part 1: 'I help [specific type of client] who [are in this situation or have this goal]...'

Be specific about:

  • The type of client (industry, size, location if relevant)
  • The stage or situation they're typically in when they need you
  • Any demographic factor that's relevant

Part 2: WHAT Problem You Solve

The second element of your bio should describe the core problem or challenge you address for clients. This is where you make the client feel understood.

The most effective professional bios demonstrate empathy with the client's situation before demonstrating expertise. When a potential client reads a bio and thinks 'they understand exactly what I'm dealing with,' trust is immediately established.

Examples:

  • For an immigration lawyer: 'navigating the complex, constantly-changing UK and EU visa landscape'
  • For a financial planner: 'building a clear financial plan for retirement and wealth transfer amid Nigeria's economic uncertainty'
  • For a web developer: 'creating websites that actually convert visitors into paying clients, not just look good'

Notice how each of these descriptions of the problem carries an implicit understanding of the emotional weight of the situation. This resonates with clients at a gut level.

Your formula for Part 2: '...who need to [solve this specific problem] without [the common fear or complication]...'

Part 3: HOW You're Different

Part three is where you briefly differentiate yourself from the alternatives your ideal client might consider. This doesn't mean attacking competitors — it means articulating your specific approach or advantage.

Some examples:

  • 'Unlike general practitioners, I focus exclusively on fintech and payment companies'
  • 'My approach combines tax compliance with proactive financial planning, so clients don't just avoid problems — they build wealth'
  • 'I complete most contract reviews in 24-48 hours because I know time is critical in deal-making'

Your differentiator might be your speed, your specialisation, your approach, your network, your specific methodology, or your unusual combination of skills.

Your formula for Part 3: '...using [your distinctive approach/advantage] to deliver [specific outcome]...'

Part 4: PROOF — Credentials and Results

Now, and only now, do you introduce your credentials — but framed as proof of your ability to deliver on the promise you've made, not as a list of achievements for its own sake.

Compare:

  • ❌ 'LLB (Hons), BL, 15 years experience, former partner at [Firm]'
  • ✅ 'A called-to-bar barrister with 15 years of commercial experience, including 6 years as partner at [Firm], where I led the corporate transactions team on over 40 M&A deals.'

The second version takes the same credentials and turns them into evidence of capability. The emphasis shifts from 'I have these qualifications' to 'here's what those qualifications mean I can do for you.'

Include results wherever possible — not just credentials. Specific numbers ('helped 80 clients', 'average tax saving of 18%', 'completed 40 M&A transactions') are powerfully convincing because they are concrete and specific.

Part 5: CALL TO ACTION — Make the Next Step Easy

The final element of an effective professional bio is a clear, low-friction call to action that tells the reader exactly what to do next.

Most professional bios simply end after the credentials section, leaving potential clients to figure out how to make contact on their own. This is a missed opportunity.

A strong bio should end with something like:

  • 'Book a free 30-minute consultation: [link]'
  • 'Connect with me on LinkedIn: [link] or reach me at [email]'
  • 'View my full profile and client reviews on Freetta: [link]'
  • 'Available for new client consultations. Contact me at [phone/email].'

The call to action should be:

  • Specific (what exactly should they do?)
  • Low-friction (can they do it in one click or one call?)
  • Clear (no ambiguity about what happens next)

A bio with a clear call to action consistently outperforms one without — even when all other elements are identical.

Putting It All Together: Your Complete Bio Template

Here is a complete template you can customise for your own practice:

[Your Name] helps [specific type of client] who need to [solve specific problem] without [common fear/complication]. Using [your distinctive approach], [he/she] has [specific proof of results — numbers where possible].

[Your Name] is a [qualification] with [X] years of experience in [specific area], including [impressive specific experience].

[Optional: quote or testimonial reference]

[Available for / Accepting new clients / Based in X / Contact: phone | email | Freetta profile link]

Run your current bio against this template. Identify what's missing and fill the gaps. The difference in response rate will be immediately noticeable.

Key Takeaways

Your professional bio is not a formality — it is a conversion tool. The difference between a bio that wins clients and one that loses them is not the quality of your credentials. It is whether you've written it for the client rather than for yourself.

Use the five-part formula: WHO you help, WHAT problem you solve, HOW you're different, PROOF of your credentials and results, and a clear CALL TO ACTION. Apply it to your Freetta profile today, and to every platform where potential clients might find you.

The right clients are looking for you. Make sure your bio helps them recognise that you're exactly who they've been searching for.

Ready to Get Discovered by Nigerian Clients?

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Frequently Asked Questions

How do you write a professional bio for a Nigerian lawyer?

A Nigerian lawyer's professional bio should follow the 5-part formula: specify who you help (e.g., 'Lagos technology startups'), what problem you solve (e.g., 'corporate law and fundraising documentation'), how you're different, proof of credentials and results, and a clear call to action. The bio should be written for the client, not as a credential list.

What should a professional bio include for a Nigerian accountant?

A Nigerian accountant's bio should include a specific description of the clients you serve, the financial problems you solve (tax planning, compliance, audit, etc.), your qualifications and professional memberships (ICAN, ACCA), specific results you've delivered for clients, and a clear way for potential clients to contact you or book a consultation.

How long should a professional bio be for a Nigerian professional?

A professional bio for a Nigerian professional should be between 80 and 150 words for most platforms. The goal is enough detail to establish expertise and specificity, but short enough to be read in full. Your Freetta profile allows for a longer 'About' section where you can expand, while your LinkedIn headline and social media bios should be concise summaries.

What makes a professional bio stand out in Nigeria?

A professional bio stands out in Nigeria when it is specific rather than generic, client-focused rather than self-focused, supported by concrete results and numbers, and includes a clear call to action. Bios that describe exactly what you do, who you do it for, and what results clients can expect consistently outperform generic credential lists.

Should a Nigerian professional write their bio in first or third person?

Third person is conventional for formal professional profiles and directories like Freetta. First person works well for LinkedIn and social media where a more conversational tone is appropriate. The most important consideration is not the person used but whether the bio is specific, client-focused, and compelling regardless of format.
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