
You have probably clicked a link in someone’s social media bio and landed on one neat little page. Their classes, the products they love, a free download, maybe a way to book a chat, all in one spot. It is handy, and at some point you may have thought you should set one up too.
You probably should. A link in bio page solves a real problem: most social profiles give you exactly one link, and you have a lot more than one thing you want people to see. One page that holds all of it, ready to share, is one of the simplest useful things you can build for your business.
But there is a difference between a link page that helps your business and one that just sits in your profile looking tidy. Most people build a plain list of links and stop there. That list informs people and does little else. The better version does an actual job. It points the right person to the right place and gives the interested ones a way to raise their hand, so the traffic you send to your bio link becomes leads you can follow up with.
If you want to build one start to finish, you can try GetOiling for $1 and join us live at the Weekly Work Session, where we build pages like this one together every week.
What a Link in Bio Page Actually Is, and Why Yours Should Do More
If you have heard of Linktree, you already know the basic idea: one short link that opens into a simple page of buttons, each one pointing somewhere else. It is popular because it works around that one-link limit, and for a lot of people it is the first tool they reach for.
Linktree is fine at what it does. It is worth understanding what it does not do, though, especially if you are building a real business. On the free plan, your page lives at a linktr.ee web address with Linktree’s own logo on it, and how much you can change the look is limited. You can collect emails through a contact form and even export them, but connecting those sign-ups to your own email tool is a paid upgrade, and either way the page and the contacts live inside someone else’s product. If their pricing or features change, your page changes with them.
A Young Living Linktree alternative built on your own platform changes two things that matter: who owns the page, and what the page is allowed to do. When the page is yours, it carries your brand instead of someone else’s, it lives on your own site, and it can do the one thing a tidy list of links cannot. It can actually capture a lead.
Why a Plain List of Links Rarely Does Anything
Picture how someone actually uses a link page. They click your bio link out of curiosity. They land on a list. They scan it for a second, maybe click one thing, and then they are gone. You have no idea who they were, what caught their eye, or whether they will ever come back.
That is the whole problem with a directory. It hands out information and asks for nothing in return. The people clicking your bio link are some of the warmest attention you get all week, because they were curious enough to leave the feed and look closer. A plain list lets every one of them walk back out the door without a trace.
The fix is not a longer list or prettier buttons. It is giving the page a job. A link in bio page that brings in leads does two things a directory never will: it sends the right person toward a next step worth taking, and it gives the interested ones an easy way to say “I want more of this.” Everything below is about building those two things in.
Which Links Belong on Your Link in Bio Page
Not every link is equal. The ones that pull their weight all move a visitor closer to you, so think about each link in terms of where it sends people and what happens after they get there.
Start with the links that point to a form, because those are the ones that can actually capture a lead. A form works best when there is a free offer behind it that is worth signing up for. What makes a good offer is its own conversation, and we get into that in the training. The principle for your page is simple. When the top of it leads to a form instead of just another page to browse, you have given your best traffic a way to reach you.
From there, add links that keep your page useful long after you build it. A blog digest and an events digest are perfect for this, because they update themselves as you add posts and events, so the page stays current without you touching it. If you offer a discovery call or a free chat, link it. If you have a community, such as a Facebook group or a members area, include that too. A favorites page is a natural fit here as well. It is the one page that holds the products you actually use and recommend, and we walked through building one recently.
What goes on the page is your call. The goal is a short, honest set of links that each do something, rather than a giant menu that overwhelms the person who just wanted to learn more about you.
The Piece That Turns a Link Page Into a Lead-Getter
Here is the part most link pages are missing, and the part that does the heavy lifting: a sign-up form built right into the page.
A form is how interest becomes a lead. Someone reads your page, decides they want what you are offering, fills in their name and email, and now they are a contact you own instead of a visitor you lost. The trick is making the form easy to notice without making the page feel pushy. The nicest way to do that is to let the form appear at the right moment instead of sitting there from the first second. You can set it to show up as someone is about to leave the page, or after they have scrolled through a good portion of it, or after they have been reading for a few seconds. By then they have seen enough to know whether they are interested, and the invitation lands instead of interrupting.
Pair that form with a reason to fill it out. “Join my list” rarely works on its own. A specific, genuinely useful offer does, because it gives someone something concrete to say yes to. What that offer should be depends on you and the people you serve, and it is one of the things we work through together in the training.
The last step is what happens after someone signs up, and it is the difference between collecting names and actually growing a business. When you build your form, you can connect it to a follow-up so the work happens on its own: the new contact gets the tag you choose, the welcome campaign you wrote starts sending, and they land on a confirmation page that delivers what you promised. You set it up once, and it runs every time. That is the moment a link in your bio stops being a brochure and starts being something that brings people into your world while you are busy living your life.
Make It Look Like You
A page that brings in leads still has to feel like a place worth handing your name to, and that comes down to how it looks. Add your photo, so the person clicking your link sees a real human on the other side. Add your logo if you have one. Put your social links in a row so people can find you wherever they like to hang out. Choose colors and a layout that match the rest of your brand.
This is where owning the page pays off. Instead of a generic template with someone else’s logo at the bottom and their web address across the top, your page lives on your own site and looks like the rest of your business. It is a small thing that builds trust, because a page that clearly belongs to you reads as more professional than one that looks like everyone else’s.
Put Your Link in Bio Page to Work in More Than One Place
The name says bio, but once you have built a page this useful, your social bio is only the first place it belongs. Drop the link in your Instagram and Facebook bios, where it does the obvious job of opening up everything you offer from that one slot. Then keep going.
Add it to the end of your email signature, so every message you send points back to your full set of links. Pin it in your Facebook group, or mention it in your stories whenever you share something new. If you are on YouTube or you text with customers, it belongs there too. Some people even print it on a card or turn it into a QR code for in-person events, so someone they just met can click straight through to the same page.
The idea is that you build this page once and then let it work everywhere you already show up. A common mistake is treating it as a list you made one afternoon and never looked at again. Check in on it every so often. Swap the featured offer when you have something new, retire links that have gone stale, and make sure the form still points to an offer you are proud of. A page you keep current keeps earning, long after the hour you spent building it.
One Place for the Page, the List, and the Follow-Up
You might be reading all of this thinking it sounds like three or four different tools stitched together: one thing for the page, another for the form, another for the email list, another for the follow-up. That patchwork is exactly what makes most people give up. The links live one place, the sign-ups land somewhere else, and the data never quite connects.
With GetOiling, the page, the contacts, the form, and the follow-up all live in the same place, under one login and one bill. The part that surprises people most is how little work it takes to start. The page builder will draft the whole page for you from a few quick answers, layout and starter copy included, so you are reviewing and tweaking rather than staring at a blank screen. You do not need design skills or any code. And because a link in bio page comes with your account, there is no separate subscription to add on top of what you already have. The page that brings in leads is already included in the platform you are using.
A Special Guest: The Real Reason Growth Stalls
We opened this week’s session with Krissy Chin of GROworkspace, who joined us for the first fifteen minutes. She came with a take that landed like a gut punch, in her words: the real reason so many Young Living businesses stall, and a fix that does not pile more hours onto your already full week. She also shared a few genuinely easy places to start, including one tied to the Awaken tour. It is worth hearing her say it, so catch her segment at the start of the replay below.
GROworkspace is worth knowing if you do not already. Krissy and her sister Claire build done-for-you content, by and for Young Living Brand Partners, made to drop straight into your GetOiling systems. Two of the resources she shared:
Their monthly done-for-you content, so your newsletter and posts are written for you: see what’s included.
A Claude skill that writes blogs in your own voice, so it does not sound like generic AI, with your GetOiling discount applied: get the blog-writing skill.
Watch Us Build One Live
In this week’s Weekly Work Session, we built a link in bio page from scratch, start to finish: choosing the links that move people forward, adding a sign-up form with a real offer behind it, and wiring up the follow-up so new leads get handled automatically. If you want to see exactly where every setting lives and how the whole thing comes together in about an hour, the replay is the fastest way to learn it.
Your Turn
The link in your bio is the most-clicked, most-overlooked piece of space your business owns. It is worth more than a tidy list of links that lets your warmest visitors click away. With one page that points people somewhere worth going and a form that lets the interested ones raise a hand, that single link can bring you new leads week after week.
You can build yours this week. Start your $1 trial of GetOiling and join us live at the Weekly Work Session, where we build pages like this one together and help you get yours done before the hour is up.









