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How to Create a Killer Musician Profile OnlineThe four-element formula that gets you booked — photo, bio, media, availability

TL;DR — the profile that books gigs

Four essentials: a live performance photo (not a selfie), a short specific bio, 2–3 audio tracks + one live video, and clear availability and pricing. Update recent gigs monthly — an out-of-date profile reads as “not active”.

Reviews from venues beat anything you write about yourself. Once you have gigs under your belt, ask for a review the next day — most people won’t leave one unless you ask. Pair this with the first gig guide to turn the profile into bookings.

Photo
Live shot, good light
On stage, instrument in hand, vibe visible. Communicates genre before the bio loads. Skip selfies and white-wall headshots.
Format: 1500×1500px min, landscape + portrait crops
Bio
Four-beat formula
Who (1 line), what you offer (2 lines), notable venues (bullets), what you bring (PA / backline / lights).
Avoid: life story, “I play everything”, “music is my passion”
Media samples
2–3 audio + 1 live video
Lead with your strongest. Live performance footage beats studio video every time for bookers. Quality over quantity.
Best for: proving you can handle a real room

Every venue owner, promoter, and booking agent does the same thing before reaching out to an artist: they look at the profile. Your photos, your bio, your media, your reviews — that’s your first audition, and most artists blow it.

I’ve reviewed thousands of musician profiles over the years, both as a fellow artist and while building GigXchange. The difference between profiles that get booked and profiles that get ignored comes down to a few simple things. Getting the profile right then stacks neatly with the get more gigs playbook.

The Profile Photo

This is the single most important element. Venue owners are scrolling through dozens of profiles. Your photo is what makes them stop.

The Bio

Keep it short, specific, and focused on what you offer. Nobody reads a 500-word life story. Here’s the formula:

  1. Who you are — name, genre, location. One sentence.
  2. What you do — what kind of gigs you play, what a booker can expect. Two sentences max.
  3. Social proof — notable venues you’ve played, any press, festival appearances, or support slots. Bullet points work well.
  4. What you bring — own PA? Full backline? Lights? This is practical information that venues need.

Bad example: "Hi I’m Steve and I’ve been playing guitar since I was 12. Music is my passion and I love performing for people. I play a bit of everything really."

Good example: "London-based acoustic duo covering 60s to present day. 2x45min or 3x30min sets, own PA for rooms up to 150. Regular at The Half Moon, The Spice of Life, and The Bedford. Available across London, Kent, and Essex."

Media: Audio and Video

Your profile needs both. Audio shows how you sound. Video shows how you perform. They’re different things.

Genres and Tags

Be specific. "Rock" tells a booker almost nothing. "Classic Rock & Blues (Hendrix, Clapton, SRV)" tells them exactly what to expect. Use the genre tags and description to paint a clear picture.

If you’re versatile, that’s fine — but lead with your strongest suit. A profile that says "I play everything" often translates to "I don’t have a clear identity" in a booker’s mind.

Availability and Pricing

Two things that should never be hidden or vague:

Reviews and Social Proof

Reviews are the most powerful element on any profile. A venue owner will trust a review from another venue owner over anything you write about yourself.

The Details That Matter

Small things that separate professional profiles from amateur ones:


Your profile is working for you 24/7. It’s the first thing a venue sees, and it’s often the only thing they see before deciding whether to reach out. Invest an hour getting it right, and it’ll pay for itself many times over.

Ready to build yours? Create your free profile on GigXchange.

Naumaan
Naumaan — Founder & Builder
Tenured musician on the UK circuit since 2009. Built GigXchange to democratise the live music industry.

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