Link-in-bio organizer
You have one link. Decide which link, and in what order people see your other links underneath it.
What this tool does
The link in your bio is the single highest-conversion piece of real estate on your profile. Most solo professionals waste it by pointing at a Linktree page that buries the action they actually want, or by sending traffic to a homepage that has 12 competing calls to action. The fix is to be brutal about priority.
How to use it
- List the destinations you might feature.
- Pick your current business stage.
- We recommend the single link your bio should point at, plus a priority order for any secondary links underneath.
- Implement on whichever bio-link tool you use (or — better — point straight at one URL).
Why it matters
The math: 0.5% of profile visitors tap the link. 0.5% of *those* take the action you wanted. If the link doesn't go directly to the action, conversion drops to near zero. Every layer of indirection (a Linktree, a homepage, a navigation menu) costs you 50% of the traffic.
Questions people actually ask.
Should I use Linktree?
Only if you genuinely have three or more equally important destinations. For 90% of solo professionals, a single direct link beats every aggregator — it's faster, has fewer redirects, and converts dramatically better.
How often should I change the link?
Match it to whatever you're promoting that month. If you're running a workshop in May, the link is the workshop. In June, it's something else. Static for too long means visitors stop paying attention to it.
Should I track clicks?
Yes. Either use a UTM-tagged URL or a privacy-respecting short link (your own domain works). Knowing the click-through rate tells you whether your CTAs are working or just decorative.