Here is how to write one that works.
Start With Voice, Not Information
The first sentence of your bio is the most important. It sets the tone for everything else. A generic opener like "Welcome to my profile" does nothing. A line that sounds like you, said in your own words, immediately separates your profile from the rest.
Try writing the first line as if you were introducing yourself in person. Write it once, then read it aloud. If it does not sound like something you would actually say, rewrite it.
Be Specific About Yourself
Vague bios all read the same. Specific bios read like real people. Instead of "I love meeting new people," try "I'm at my best when a booking starts with a relaxed conversation over a drink." Instead of "I am open-minded," try "I prefer slow, attentive bookings over rushed ones."
Specifics give clients a sense of what your bookings actually feel like. They also pre-filter out clients who want a different style.
Say What Kind of Booking You Like
The bookings that go well are the ones where the client and provider want the same thing. Use your bio to signal what your style is. Are you playful? Quiet? Talkative? Reserved? Direct?
This is not about narrowing your appeal. It is about attracting the bookings that suit you. A provider who is happiest with longer, slower bookings should say so. The clients who want quick bookings will skip the profile, which is exactly the right outcome.
Mention Your Logistics
Include the practical details near the top of the bio:
This saves you from answering the same questions in every first message.
Keep It Readable
Long blocks of text get skipped. Break your bio into short paragraphs with clear topics. Two to four short paragraphs is usually the right length. Anything longer should be broken with headings or moved to the longer description section.
Avoid the Generic Phrases
Phrases that appear on every other profile add nothing to yours:
These phrases say nothing because every profile uses them. Replace them with specifics in your own voice.
Photos Set Tone Too
If your bio is warm and conversational but your photos are aggressively staged, the mismatch confuses clients. Make sure the bio voice and the photo style work together. The same person should come through in both.
Update It
Your bio should evolve as you learn what works. After a few weeks of bookings, you will know what your favourite kinds of clients are looking for and how they describe what they want. Use their language. Update your bio to match.
A bio that has been refined over a few months almost always outperforms one that was written once and left.
Final Tip
Read your bio out loud. If it sounds like a person, it works. If it sounds like a brochure, rewrite it.
Sign up or edit your profile to put this into practice.