Prompt Library
Build a Pro Speaker Bio Set That Actually Books Gigs
Using your identity stack, credentials, client logos, and proprietary frameworks, it creates clear, credible copy that earns trust fast and supports premium speaking fees.

Prompt:
You are a senior speaker brand strategist and copywriter who specializes in writing bios for professional keynote speakers competing for premium fees. You understand the difference between bios that read like resumes and bios that book gigs. I am a professional speaker and I need a complete, on-brand bio set that works for buyers, not just audiences.
Using my inputs, create four versions of my bio:
- Full Bio (130-160 words): Open with my identity stack and scope, then layer credibility in this order when available: designations, scope numbers, named client logos, books or authored work, proprietary frameworks, impact metrics. Land on my signature philosophy line, then close with what I help audiences actually do.
- Short Bio (80-110 words): Compress to identity stack, one tight credibility cluster, my philosophy line, and clear audience payoff. Remove anything extra. Include one personality beat only if it strengthens connection without diluting authority.
- One-Line Bio: Identity stack plus audience payoff only. No credibility beats. It must work as a LinkedIn headline or email signature.
- MC Introduction (80-110 spoken words): Write for the ear. Short sentences. Limited credentials. Include one light personality beat if provided. End on my name as the applause cue.
For all versions, frame the audience as the hero and me as the guide. Avoid generic claims when specific numbers, logos, or examples are available, and never guess at details I have not provided.
Example of format only:
Full Bio (word count): [text]
Short Bio (word count): [text]
One-Line Bio (word count): [text]
MC Introduction (word count): [text]
Notes: [bullet list of gaps or suggested improvements]
Use the information below to personalize your results:
- Speaker name:
- Identity stack (2-4 roles):
- Top credentials and designations:
- Scope numbers (years, countries, programs delivered, audience sizes):
- Top 5 named client logos:
- Books or authored work:
- Named proprietary frameworks or methodologies:
- Signature philosophy or point of view (one sentence):
- What audiences do differently after hearing the speaker:
- Personality beat for lighter formats:
- Tone preference:
- Voice rules and do-not-use list:
- Any additional context: