I used to hate my bio link.
Every time I posted something new—a video, a product launch, a free resource—I'd have to go swap out the URL in my Instagram bio. Then I'd realize I just buried something else that was still getting traffic. It felt like I was constantly choosing what to prioritize and hoping people would scroll back to find the rest.
Then I discovered the Canva link in bio approach. Instead of forcing everything into one link, I built a simple landing page that holds all my important stuff. One link. Everything I want people to find. No more swapping, no more guessing.
The best part? It actually looks like me. Most link-in-bio tools serve up the same generic stack of buttons on a blank background. Works fine if you don't care about first impressions. But if you want someone to actually trust your page and click through, a little personality goes a long way. Canva lets me use my brand colors, upload my logo, pick fonts that fit my vibe, drop in images. It feels cohesive, not cobbled together.
Building one takes maybe ten minutes. Open Canva, search "link in bio," pick a mobile-friendly template. Add a profile pic, a short bio, then your links as clear buttons. Label them with action words—"Shop new arrivals" always outperforms "Website." Hit "Publish as Website" and you get a free my.canva.site URL. Paste it into your bio. Done.
One thing I learned the hard way: design gets people to your page, but data tells you what's working. Most link-in-bio tools hide analytics behind paid plans. I use
Biovelt instead. It's free, lets me add unlimited links, and tracks every click. Now I know exactly which links people actually tap, and I can update things in real time without paying a cent.
So if you're tired of constantly swapping links and staring at a bio page that looks like everyone else's, give this a shot. Build a Canva link in bio page that actually reflects what you do. Pair it with Biovelt so you're not flying blind. Then stop worrying about your bio link and start paying attention to what actually matters—creating stuff your followers want to see.
Your bio link doesn't have to be a compromise anymore. Mine isn't.