Module 9

About Me page

YOUR OBJECTIVES:

[progressally_objectives]

While creating your home page, you started writing a concise introduction of yourself, now let’s dive into the ABOUT ME page.

Your About Me page is a way to share:

 

What are you passionate about what you do

“I love seeing people regaining confidence. They have so much to offer to others…”

What do you stand for

“I truly believe that online courses are a great tool to make personal growth and healing even more accessible to the masses.”

How do you believe it helps others?

“I want you to feel empowered and ready to rock your job interview with confidence.”
“I want you to get free from your back pain so that you can again spend quality time with your friends, kids, or enjoy walks in the countryside.”

Your About Me page is not

Your CV and career full history.
A long story about your life, a full description of your family, nor a list of every challenge we faced in life to become who we are

What you would want with your About Me page is to help people realize you understand them. But to do that, you need to be clear on who your clients are. You probably already worked on that with the past modules challenge; if not, it’s time to get on it.

 

The structure of the “About me”

Let’s take a real example to deconstruct how you can tell a story that will engage people.

1st paragraph describes the pain/problem you can help them with. You don’t have to be overdramatic, sometimes discomfort can be painful enough for example:

“Do you feel you spend your time trying to make people happy and never being valued or cared for?”

2nd paragraph addresses how you will help them with your experience. Here you bounce from the problem they have to show your expertise will help them like:

“I feel you!
I spend part of my life taking care of others. I was a good girl, then a good employee, a good partner… But I felt transparent, unseen, unrespected…”

3rd paragraph shares a story about you (but not a novel). Rather than telling your story from school playground to today, pick a specific event or transformation.

There are ways you can bring up your story without having to tell all about yourself. You can use bullet points or checkmark emojis to bring some life to the narration:

“After years of doing what I thought was expected of me, I:
– learned to listen to what I wanted
– experimented saying no and choosing me
– grew my self-confidence
– learned to value myself as much as I valued others
– learned to listen to what I wanted
– experimented saying no and choosing me
– grew my self-confidence
– learned to value myself as much as I valued others
And it changed my life!

What was crazy to notice was how the more I respected my needs, the more others were respectful. The more I valued myself, the more people reckoned me…

And you might see where I’m going, but I’m going to say it anyway. The more you love yourself, the more you feel others’ love.

Wouldn’t you love to enjoy too great relationships where you feel free to be you 100%? It’s just magic!

Do you see what I did there?

I talked about one experience from my heart and spoke to the reader a bit as if I helped out a friend to motivate her or him to leap at a change. I spoke about what I felt and how I now feel.

I’m pretty sure some of you could relate to part or all of the story. And that is important.
If a reader doesn’t connect, you serve them as they would know without wasting anyone’s time you aren’t for them.
If they do, they will see a way out of their discomfort and connect with you.

4th paragraph call to action
Now, it is time to invite the people connected with your story to meet more of you.

“If you too want to experience being YOU without guilt or fear, jump on….”

Service page
Booking an appointment with you
Discover your upcoming workshop
Access free content you created
Read your article
Pick the one that works for you)

Et VoilĂ !
You are now ready to rock!