A good âAbout Meâ Page doesnât have to be fancy or complicated. In fact, it just needs to communicate a few key things. And yet people keep making these same 7 mistakes over and over again on their About Pages.
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1: Surprise! Your âAbout Meâ Page isnât about you.
Nope. Itâs about the person who visits the page. This is where you tell that person why they should bother with you, or products or your site.
Talk about their problems which you solve. Talk about how you can help them to achieve their goals. Let them know whatâs in it for them. And only talk about yourself in the context of how you help your readers.
2: Youâre talking too much.
Your About Me Page should be interesting, not mundane; just long enough, but no longer. Write your rough draft for your About Page. Set it aside for a day or two. Come back and remove everything that doesnât move your prospect closer to knowing you, liking you and trusting you. Then have a friend read it and tell them to point out all the parts where they were losing interest, and either fix or remove those.
3: Your writing is boring.
Borrrrrringgggg. Snooze… Write in your own voice, lose the hype and the jargon, be a little funny and most of all, be your real self and not some drone.
4: Youâre using only video.
Sure, video is great for establishing rapport… with those people who like video. But youâll have visitors who donât want to have audio blasting for everyone around them to hear, and youâll have other visitors who donât want to sit through a 5-minute video.
If you do use video, keep it short and be sure to include text, too.
5: Your picture is AWOL.
Okay, having your photo on your About Page is optional. I know some people like to keep their face on the down-low because, well… trolls. But if you donât mind having your photo online, then by all means put it on your About Page to give people a better sense of who you are. It will also help them to remember you, too.
6: Your name is missing.
Have you ever been on a website with awesome writing and you wanted to know who is writing this stuff, but the About Page just has some corporate mumbo-jumbo and nobodyâs NAME? I have. You need a first name and a last name, so donât just say, âBobâ because I want to know, Bob WHO?
If your name is too generic, such as John Smith, you might add a middle name to everything you do online to make it easier to find you in the search engines, such as John Vincent Smith. If you donât want to use your REAL name, thatâs okay, too. Many people work under professional pseudonyms. Also, remember to add any professional, relevant credentials you might have.
7: You donât have an About Page.
If youâve read this far, then Iâm guessing you understand the importance of an About Page, even if you donât have one yet. If youâre hoping no one has noticed that you donât have one, well… we have.
And if youâve given it some totally clever name like, âGuess What?â âThe Deetsâ or âCheck This Outâ then it would be a great idea to rename it to âAboutâ or âAbout Me.â Why? Because if Iâm looking for the âAbout Meâ page then Iâm going to pass right over all those âcleverâ names and assume you didnât bother to create an About page.