Most speaker bios get rejected for the same reason: they sound like résumés.

A speaker bio’s only job is to make an event organizer think I want this person on my stage. That decision happens in less than 60 seconds of reading. So the bio has to be designed for that 60 seconds — not your full résumé in shrunk-down form.

Here’s the structure that consistently gets clients booked:

Sentence one — the credibility hook. The single most impressive credential you have, in plain language. Not “Award-winning consultant with 20+ years of experience.” Try “Author of [Book Title], which has generated [specific outcome] for [specific client type].”

Sentence two — the audience promise. What the audience will walk away with. Not what you’ll cover. The transformation. “Audiences leave with a clear framework for [specific outcome] they can implement on Monday.”

Sentence three — the social proof. One sentence of where you’ve spoken, who’s hired you, or what publications have featured you. Names matter; vague descriptions don’t.

Sentence four — the personal hook. One human detail that makes them remember you. A hobby, a hometown, an unexpected fact. It softens the bio and makes you feel pickable, not just qualified.

That’s it. Four sentences. Under 100 words. Designed to do one job: get you to “yes.”

If your current speaker bio is longer than this, it’s working against you. Cut it.

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