Posts that help people find you and understand your work
Posts help people discover what you’re working on, exploring, or building. They are not meant to be a timeline or a content stream. Think of them as durable signals that help visitors understand your direction and help the right people find you over time.
What posts are for
Your profile introduces who you are. Posts explain what you are working on and where visitors can explore further.
They help visitors quickly understand what matters in your work, whether that is a project, an idea, a piece of research, or something you are inviting others into.
Good uses for posts
- Sharing a project you’re building
- Posting a key image that represents your work
- Explaining something you’re exploring or researching
- Announcing something new you’re starting
- Sharing a resource connected to your direction
- Inviting collaborators or conversations
Less useful uses
- Daily status updates
- Engagement-style posting
- Reposting links without context
- Treating posts like a social media feed
LandingBio works best when posts help someone understand what you’re doing, not just what you’ve shared.
Posts make your work easier to find
Profiles are searchable by name. Posts are searchable by what they contain.
That means even a short post about something you’re working on can make it easier for the right people to discover you.
This makes posts one of the main ways people discover what you are working on.
You can update your posts over time
Posts on LandingBio are meant to stay discoverable. You can edit or remove them whenever your direction changes.
A small number of posts that represent what you are working on now is often enough.
Posts and comments are public
Posts and comments on LandingBio are visible to others. They are meant to help people understand what you are working on and how to continue exploring your work.
Share what you are comfortable making public.
You don’t need many posts
A few clear posts are more useful than frequent updates.
Even one strong post, such as a project description, a representative image, or a short explanation of what you’re working toward, can help the right people find you and understand what you’re focused on now.
What a strong first post looks like
- A project you’re building
- A topic you’re exploring
- A problem you’re working on
- A collaboration you’re open to
- A direction you’re moving toward
- Where someone should go next to learn more