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Give the AI a clear profile role
Start the prompt with the account type: personal profile, creator page, fan account, gaming account, small brand, or aesthetic moodboard. This helps AI choose the right level of clarity and personality.
A good prompt can say: Write a short Instagram bio for a soft lifestyle creator who posts playlists, outfits, and small daily notes.
Include the platform and length
A TikTok bio should often be shorter and more direct. An Instagram bio can carry a little more style. Discord status text may need to feel more casual.
Tell AI the platform and ask for several versions under a specific length. This avoids bios that look good but do not fit the actual space.
Ask for a first-line hook
The first line should explain the account faster than the rest of the bio. Ask AI for bios with a clear first phrase, then choose the one that makes the profile easiest to understand.
If the hook sounds generic, ask for a version with one concrete niche word and one personality word.
Request emoji as optional accents
AI often adds too many emoji unless you set a rule. Ask for zero to three emoji and require the bio to remain readable without them.
After choosing a version, run it through the emoji combo checker or AI Profile Audit to see if the symbols help or distract.
Turn the best output into a profile audit
After generating bios, do not paste the first output immediately. Compare it with the username, platform, and emoji combo.
Use the AI Profile Audit to score the full set. The audit can suggest stronger username, bio, and emoji combinations from the same direction.
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FAQ
What should I put in an AI bio prompt?
Include platform, profile type, tone, audience, username, emoji preference, and desired length.
Why do AI bios sound generic?
The prompt is usually too vague. Add a niche, mood, and concrete content examples.
Should I ask AI for multiple bio versions?
Yes. Ask for several versions, then audit the best one against your username and platform.