Short Description About Yourself: 15 Samples for Every Situation
Contents
- The Simple Formula (Works Everywhere)
- Resume Summary / "About Me" Samples
- LinkedIn Bio Samples
- Interview "Tell Me About Yourself" Samples
- Short Description Samples for Students
- Social Media / Bio Samples (Short and Personable)
- Quick Tips to Sharpen Any Version
- Where Your Description Does the Most Work
- Frequently Asked Questions
Quick answer: A short description about yourself is 2–4 sentences that say who you are, what you do well, and what you're aiming for — adjusted to where it appears. A resume summary leads with your role and results; a LinkedIn bio adds personality; a dating or social profile drops the job titles for interests and tone. Below are 15 ready-to-use samples grouped by situation, plus a formula so you can write your own in a few minutes.
The Simple Formula (Works Everywhere)
Every good short self-description follows the same three-beat structure — you just change the emphasis by context:
- Identity: who you are in one phrase ("a marketing coordinator," "a final-year computer science student," "a coffee-obsessed hiker").
- Strength or proof: one thing you're good at, ideally with evidence ("who grew a newsletter to 20k subscribers," "fluent in Python and Spanish").
- Direction or hook: what you want or what makes you memorable ("now looking to move into product," "always up for a spontaneous road trip").
Formal contexts (resume, LinkedIn) weight identity and proof. Casual contexts (social, dating) weight the hook and personality. Keep it to 2–4 sentences — a "short" description that runs long stops being read.
Resume Summary / "About Me" Samples
Lead with your role and a concrete result. No first-person pronouns is the resume convention.
LinkedIn Bio Samples
First person, a little warmth, and a line on what you're open to.
Interview "Tell Me About Yourself" Samples
Spoken, so it's a touch more conversational — a quick past-present-future arc. (For the full method, see our guide on how to answer "tell me about yourself".)
Short Description Samples for Students
No work history? Lead with your field, a skill or project, and your goal.
Social Media / Bio Samples (Short and Personable)
Drop the job-speak. Personality, interests, and a bit of rhythm.
Quick Tips to Sharpen Any Version
- Cut the throat-clearing. "I am a hard-working, passionate individual who…" says nothing. Start with the concrete noun.
- Show, don't claim. "Grew the list to 20k" beats "great at growth."
- Match the length to the medium — a Twitter bio is one line; a resume summary is three.
- Read it aloud. If it sounds like a robot wrote it, rewrite the first sentence.
- Tailor the direction to what the reader wants — the strength you highlight for a recruiter differs from the one you highlight for a client.
Where Your Description Does the Most Work
A sharp self-description on your resume and profiles is what gets you noticed — but it only pays off if it reaches enough of the right people. That's the tedious part: putting a strong profile in front of every relevant opening. LoopCV automates it — you set your profile and target roles once, and it applies to matching jobs across 30+ job boards for you, so the description you just polished actually gets seen.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I write a short description about myself?
Use a three-part formula: identity (who you are in a phrase), strength (one thing you do well, ideally with proof), and direction (what you want or what makes you memorable). Keep it to 2–4 sentences and shift the emphasis by context — role and results for a resume, personality for a social bio.
What is a good short description about yourself for a resume?
Lead with your role and a quantified result, then your goal — for example: "Detail-oriented marketing coordinator with 4+ years in B2B SaaS, specializing in campaigns that lifted qualified leads by 35%. Seeking a marketing manager role owning multi-channel strategy." Skip first-person pronouns, which is the resume convention.
How long should a description about yourself be?
Two to four sentences for most uses — a resume summary or LinkedIn bio. Social media and dating bios can be a single punchy line. The moment a "short" description runs past four sentences, people stop reading it.
How do I describe myself in an interview?
Use a quick past-present-future arc: where you started, what you're doing now with one concrete achievement, and what you're looking to do next — tied to why this role fits. Keep it under 60 seconds and conversational rather than a recited resume.
What should a student write as a short description?
Lead with your field and year, add a skill or project (a club you ran, an app you built, a relevant course result), and state your goal — such as an internship. With little work history, projects and initiative carry the description in place of job titles.